The Cube Dirk Gently handbags_harris Clive Doyle's speech to stewards on Wednesday evening: "Right then boys and girls, we're going to have a non-confrontational policy this evening, by that I mean that if away fans rip up seats, that's fine, let them do it. If they piss on the seats, that's perfectly acceptable behaviour. If they encroach onto the pitch, then allow them to run around a bit and then politely return them to the away section please. Finally, if any home fans stand for more than 20 seconds you must speak to them like 8 year old children, and threaten them with ejection and removal of their season ticket."
One can only wonder when a major incident will happen with the approach we take towards potentially troublesome away fans.
The alternative view is to order half a dozen stewards to wade into a crowd of 4,000 potentially and violent supporters. As well as risking injury to those stewards it'd probably only make a volatile situation worse. And it would require about 1,00 stewards for a game like Wednesday's - if you could find them. Would you be a steward under those circumstances - I know I wouldn't.
As said so many times before, it's a numbers game. If 2,000 Cardiff supporters want to stand/swear/be abusive/whatever they will get to. If the half a dozen Reading supporters who aren't sitting on their hands, banging their rumblesticks or tucking into their baguettes and thinking about the Volvo, their 2.2 children and Labrador and their next shop at Waitrose do the same they'll be picked off easily.
I have to say Dirk that I am exceptionally disappointed that you have swallowed the stewards' line on this. It is completely unacceptable for stewards to adopt double standards as they do. In fact, it makes their job in home areas considerably more difficult than it needs to be. It is even more unacceptable that in this case the approriate method for a group to ensure less stewarding is to behave worse. (And I might add that it is even more unacceptable that stewarding is disproportionately biased towards home fans.) It's very simple - if the stewards are unable to perform their job, then they should not be there and they should be replaced by some who can perform the job.
It's also poor that the comments on page 1 of this thread effectively degenerated into yet another tedious safe standing debate. This is completely irrelevant - there is legislation in place and it is up to the club to enforce it. That does not given any excuse for the unacceptable methods described earlier in the thread. (And I plead guilty to introducing a digression of my own earlier.)
The safety people have clearly adoted a deliberate policy to distract from fans's legitimate complaints by weasly comments like "if only our hands weren't tied by the local authority" or "You can't get the staff". Again, it is very simple - if you're unable to enforce what you are supposed to enforce, then you should not be there.
I'd disagree with all except your last sentence!
I don't think that there are double-standards at all - I think people are wanting to see them, and are seeing them by making the assumption that stewards will "take action against everything that is against ground regulations."
But that is never going to happen in the real world - and it's consistent with stewarding (and indeed policing) everywhere - unless there is something extremely serious no stewards, tangoes or police are going to wade in and arrest or evict someone where they will be risking escalating a nasty situation or their own safety.
Instead, the tactics are for a much more pragmatic - the stewards will "take action against everything that is against ground regulations which it is realistic to tackle." And this is where the numbers game comes in - they will tackle what is safe to tackle, and the more who break ground regulations en masse then the more likely it is that they will not be tackled in the stands. But a few home supporters are an easy target so no wonder they are dealt with - even more so in that the home club has an extra weapon because the supporters in the home stands are known to them and want to come back. Why should they not use all the weapons at their disposal?
But - and despite the idea that people like to cling to of being so badly treated whilst the away fans do what they like - there frequently is action taken against away supporters. It's just not done in public, though - it's done in the concourses when a marked out person goes to the loo or whatever. In fact, every time I go to a supporters' meeting it's becoming clear that the stewards in the away end a the MadStad are consistently getting much worse and much more heavy handed - I've seen loads of complaints from away supporters who have been treated outrageously by them. It's clear that in the League table of bad away stewards Reading is pushing for third-place, behind 'Boro and Charlton. But because the home supporters don't see this they think there's never anything done against away supporters.
As to the last sentence :
if you're unable to enforce what you are supposed to enforce, then you should not be there. - in an ideal world you're right, but this isn't an ideal world, and the way to do this would be to adopt the Italian/East European crowd-control method of large-numbers of police (expensive), all armed with shields and batons. Or maybe you could bring back fences, too, to stop people getting on the pitch.
Personally, I'm happy to see an occasional "incident" and have low-key stewarding rather than such heavy-handed tactics that tend not to target the actual problem individuals but instead reinforce the stereotype that "all supporters are hooligans."
I'm also looking forward to the noise and vibrancy that a full Cardiff end will bring on Wednesday - remembering that whilst a small minority of them might be idiot trouble-makers, the vast majority will be ordinary supporters like us all who just want to support their team and have a good time.