by Top Flight »
06 Mar 2017 12:09
Hampshire Royal Royal Lady Hampshire Royal The law states that PL and Champ clubs must provide seating , not that spectators must sit in them. Each individual club can make their own rules re spectators having to sit, but this is then a civil rather than a criminal matter.
Are you absolutely sure about that - persistent standing is an offence - or people wouldn't be campaigning for safe standing areas....
Yes, i am absolutely sure about that. People are ejected from grounds not due to the Law, but because they contravene the regulations pertaining to the ground itself. As I said earlier, that then is a civil rather than a criminal offence.
My opinion is why should anyone want to 'persistently stand' while watching a game when there is a perfectly good seat provided for them? As someone said above, the disaster at Hillsborough wasn't caused by hooliganism, unlike the Heysel disaster, and football hooliganism has largely died out in grounds, mainly due to separation of opposing fans.
The reason
some people want to stand is because they want to sing, shout and support their team vocally for longer periods in a game. In my opinion they should be allowed to do that. It doesn't happen every where in the ground. Just in blocks Y25 and Y26. Designate those areas as places where people can stand. Anyone who wants to sit can move to any other part of the ground.
I won't go in blocks Y25 and Y26 because if everyone stands then my 7 year old won't be able to see without perching on and balancing himself on his seat. He has had to do that at several away games this season including Fulham and QPR where it can get very cramped in their seats and it is tiring for me making sure he doesn't stand on the wrong part of the seat and fall off causing himself an injury.
Therefore I will avoid blocks Y25 and 26. But, people who want to stand must be accommodated. Just because I don't want to stand doesn't mean that no one should be allowed to stand. The club have to think about this and not alienate certain sections of our support. We should be welcome at RFC at every stage of our lives. Younger fans must not be discriminated against. In ten years time my 7 year old will be 17 and he will want to stand with the lads and sing for the Royals. The yoof are fans like all the rest of us and must be looked after and encouraged otherwise the future will be bleak.
Marching out some of our younger enthusiastic fans in recent weeks is an absolute disgrace. I'm ashamed of our club for doing that to people who's only crime is to stand and support the team. Be Loud, be proud and back the boys and make some noise is all they were doing.