by The 17 Bus » 14 Dec 2008 11:00
by rabidbee » 14 Dec 2008 11:51
The 17 Bus PS their manager haas gone down in my estimations after seeing this on WK,He moved from Glentoran to Burnley, a far cry from his native city of London. 'Glenda' as Little became known was a key player in the Burnley side for many years, despite being frozen out during Chris Waddle's spell as the Clarets' manager. Waddle's assistant, Glenn Roeder famously commented that Little 'wasn't fit to lace Waddle's boots'.
by bcubed » 14 Dec 2008 16:56
working class heroGo support swindon and you will have a taste of a real fan base. All you have said is trying to make us look like the typical 'green street' crew. And it's a load of bollocks.
Grow up junior.
Green street is a sanitised version of what film makers would like to believe hooligans were like. And kids seem to aspire to being that 'hard'.
The peak hooligan years were the late 60s and 70s. No segregation and the away hooligans would pay to go into the home end in an attempt to 'take' it. Knives were a frequent weapon [makes you wonder why the media think knife crime is new!]. Bottles, lumps of wood, knuckledusters, darts - you name it it got used.
Really hard places to go were Stoke, Wolves, Newcastle, Anfield, The Manchester clubs, Brum, any Welsh club, Chelsea, West Ham - and probably Leeds [but as a Leeds fan I saw a different angle].
Y26 might like to think it is hard - but the fans from there would not last 2 minutes in the old style environment.
No I am not glorifying it - life is MUCH better now, but some perspective is needed....
by LWJ » 14 Dec 2008 18:15
working class heroGo support swindon and you will have a taste of a real fan base. All you have said is trying to make us look like the typical 'green street' crew. And it's a load of bollocks.
Grow up junior.
Green street is a sanitised version of what film makers would like to believe hooligans were like. And kids seem to aspire to being that 'hard'.
The peak hooligan years were the late 60s and 70s. No segregation and the away hooligans would pay to go into the home end in an attempt to 'take' it. Knives were a frequent weapon [makes you wonder why the media think knife crime is new!]. Bottles, lumps of wood, knuckledusters, darts - you name it it got used.
Really hard places to go were Stoke, Wolves, Newcastle, Anfield, The Manchester clubs, Brum, any Welsh club, Chelsea, West Ham - and probably Leeds [but as a Leeds fan I saw a different angle].
Y26 might like to think it is hard - but the fans from there would not last 2 minutes in the old style environment.
No I am not glorifying it - life is MUCH better now, but some perspective is needed....
by working class hero » 14 Dec 2008 18:22
by Sharpy » 15 Dec 2008 18:25
by TFF » 15 Dec 2008 19:54
Sharpy At the Coventry game head tango doyle came up top to me and 3 mates in y25/y26. basically warned us about standing and then we had a conversation for the whole of half time.
he claims that Reading Borough Council provide a safety certificate for the stadium and therefore appear unannounced at games to observe whether stewards are ensuring supporters are seated. due to persistant standing at an earlier game the club was told to reduce the number of stewards manning y26, meaning fewer fans are allowed to sit in the block for safety regulations. this has happened in parts of the north stand too and away end.
its all down to the fans who insist on standing, not the clubs fault or stewards fault.
by Skin » 18 Dec 2008 15:48
by Huntley & Palmer » 18 Dec 2008 16:01
by biscuitsrus » 18 Dec 2008 18:20
by RoyalBlue » 19 Dec 2008 18:06
Skin http://www.star-reading.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=192&Itemid=26
Meeting between RFC and Supporters concerning Y26 policy
Wednesday, 10 December 2008
Present for RFC Clive and Jackie, Julie and Andy representing stewards and briefly Graham Benham police liaison officer, and for STAR Paula and Michele with supporters Matt, Jim, Ann, Kathryn and Greg.
Clive started with thanks for coming as he respected people willing to discuss the issues rather than just criticise.
Matt stated that the change in policy in Y26 was concerning, Clive replied that today he had banned someone for racial abuse of a member of staff, there were also bannings for abuse of staff and abuse of away fans and alcohol has a part as people who are perfectly acceptable when sober can be completely unacceptable after a few drinks. He is aware that the vast majority of fans are brilliant but he has to deal with those that are not. The idea is to change the culture as a whole which has been successful since Elm Park when there was a fight somewhere in or around the ground every game
Huntley & Palmer Big C spot on as always
by Huntley & Palmer » 22 Dec 2008 13:31
RoyalBlueSkin http://www.star-reading.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=192&Itemid=26
Meeting between RFC and Supporters concerning Y26 policy
Wednesday, 10 December 2008
Present for RFC Clive and Jackie, Julie and Andy representing stewards and briefly Graham Benham police liaison officer, and for STAR Paula and Michele with supporters Matt, Jim, Ann, Kathryn and Greg.
Clive started with thanks for coming as he respected people willing to discuss the issues rather than just criticise.
Matt stated that the change in policy in Y26 was concerning, Clive replied that today he had banned someone for racial abuse of a member of staff, there were also bannings for abuse of staff and abuse of away fans and alcohol has a part as people who are perfectly acceptable when sober can be completely unacceptable after a few drinks. He is aware that the vast majority of fans are brilliant but he has to deal with those that are not. The idea is to change the culture as a whole which has been successful since Elm Park when there was a fight somewhere in or around the ground every game
With respect to Mr Doyle, I would suggest the statement that there was a fight every game at Elm Park is something of an exaggeration! How long was he at Elm Park for anyway?Huntley & Palmer Big C spot on as always
Is this yet another case of he of Sounness fame being mixed up with said Mr Doyle?
by Big Foot » 22 Dec 2008 13:49
by madreadingfan » 22 Dec 2008 18:53
Big Foot Clive Doyle is an ex-copper
by working class hero » 22 Dec 2008 20:41
madreadingfanBig Foot Clive Doyle is an ex-copper
and a twat!
by fridays child » 22 Dec 2008 21:52
madreadingfanBig Foot Clive Doyle is an ex-copper
and a twat!
by M U R T Y » 22 Dec 2008 22:00
by Dirk Gently » 22 Dec 2008 23:13
M U R T Y Y26 now available for Cardiff game - again, profit >> safety???
In the duplicate thread of this in the STAR Forum, STAR Campaigns .....
As to the process of not selling Y26 until the rest of the stadium is sold, if you think about it this does achieve the club's objective pretty well. Their objective is to calm this area down and stop it being a flash-point. There are two ways of doing that - for the less well-attended games it's by not selling tickets in Y26 at all, and for the better-attended games it's selling that area to a cross-section of supporters, not particularly those who want to sit there for their own reasons. You might argue that that's poor for the "ordinary" supporters who find themselves in Y26, but the club would say that using that argument just supports their view that behaviour of some in Y26 is unacceptable.
......
by T.R.O.L.I. » 23 Dec 2008 07:34
by RoyalBlue » 23 Dec 2008 08:15
fridays childmadreadingfanBig Foot Clive Doyle is an ex-copper
and a twat!
and I expect you'll tell him that to his face (from 100 yards away)
M U R T Y Y26 now available for Cardiff game - again, profit >> safety???
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