Fury. Grief. Embarrassment. Horror. Resignation. The emotions run hot for supporters of West Ham and Tottenham right now as the two grand old clubs stare at potential relegation from the Premier League.With their spiritual homes demolished at the altar of progress and profit, first Upton Park in 2016 and then White Hart Lane in 2017, both clubs had visions of glory days ahead. Instead they have been consumed by greed, mismanagement and false promises. Key perpetrators such as Karren Brady at West Ham and Daniel Levy at Spurs have exited the scene, but David O’Sullivan is still the Hammers chairman and the damage remains.The London Stadium – which West Ham now rent for a knock-down price – is universally panned as stale and unsuited to football, while the sparkling Tottenham Hotspur Stadium looks like a monument to hubris. One of these 60,000 seater stadiums will be hosting Championship football in August.Defeats on the pitch this season have been calamitous and bruising (they’ve endured 34 league losses between them); protests have been loud and fuming. Two points separate the teams, with two games remaining. The equation now is very simple: it’s either them or us.As the Tottenham Supporters Trust put it on their website: “The arithmetic is stark, the stakes unmistakable. This is no longer a conversation about style or long-term trajectory; it is a question of survival.”So where did it all go wrong? How does it feel to watch your club lose its soul? How much more can supporters take? We asked six fans for their perspectives as the season draws to a nervy climax.