by frimmers3 » 13 Sep 2012 20:52
Rev Algenon Stickleback HNo Fixed Abode So a crowd will act like a crowd and that makes it's ok does it?
Are you deliberately misunderstanding, or are you just a bit thick?
Acting like a crowd doesn't mean "acting like a mob". It means that when you have a large number of people in a confined space, they way people move and act is different to what they do if they have a load of space.
As a result, anywhere where there's large crowds in confined areas, those crowds need to be managed to control the flow of people so dangerous situations don't develop.
Do you remember the early days of the Madejski Stadium, when there used to be a staircase down the slope in the south east corner. After a couple of games it got fenced off and eventually removed, as it was realised it was a disaster waiting to happen. It's not that Reading fans were acting like a mob and pushing people down the staircase in their impatience to get away, but simply that when people get confined into a space like that, it's much harder to control your exact movements.
by MmmMonsterMunch » 13 Sep 2012 20:54
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 13 Sep 2012 21:06
MmmMonsterMunch I read an article online at work today from a steward. He'd estimated there could have been as many as 74k in there when it held 54k.
I will try to find it.
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 13 Sep 2012 21:07
No Fixed AbodeRev Algenon Stickleback HNo Fixed Abode So a crowd will act like a crowd and that makes it's ok does it?
Are you deliberately misunderstanding, or are you just a bit thick?
Acting like a crowd doesn't mean "acting like a mob". It means that when you have a large number of people in a confined space, they way people move and act is different to what they do if they have a load of space.
As a result, anywhere where there's large crowds in confined areas, those crowds need to be managed to control the flow of people so dangerous situations don't develop.
Do you remember the early days of the Madejski Stadium, when there used to be a staircase down the slope in the south east corner. After a couple of games it got fenced off and eventually removed, as it was realised it was a disaster waiting to happen. It's not that Reading fans were acting like a mob and pushing people down the staircase in their impatience to get away, but simply that when people get confined into a space like that, it's much harder to control your exact movements.
Completely disagree with you there.
I was out driving today and you know what, you get some selfish drivers doing all they can to overtake/undertake you by going in incorrect lanes etc. They're only thinking of themselves and how they can get from A to B as quickly as they can regardless of anyone else's safety on the road. So I'll use this analogy for Hillsborough.
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 13 Sep 2012 21:08
IdealMmmMonsterMunch There is evidence they were storming the gates in Athens but ssssh don't mention that as you're not empathising apparently.
God forbid that anyone should be even partly responsible for their own actions!
by From Despair To Where? » 13 Sep 2012 21:15
by bobbybottler » 13 Sep 2012 21:19
soggy biscuit Interesting interview with David Mellor on R5 this morning who was sports minister at the time. He said 'Thatcher didn't like football or football fans'
Was quite surprising as he just seemed to throw it in there without being asked about it. Maybe there is some significance in there, maybe not.
by DelBoyRodders » 13 Sep 2012 21:41
MmmMonsterMunch My 2 pence worth.
Hillsborough was a terrible tragedy. The police were complete arseholes, covered it up & many were left to perish that could have survived.
HOWEVER
Despite all this, a large chunk Liverpool fans continue to 'bunk' into European away games by having fake or photocopied tickets, even stealing them off kids!!! This is an article written by an LFC fan:
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Athens was very different. Whatever the rights and wrongs of the ticket allocation – and few could argue that 17,000 was enough to satisfy Liverpool fans’ demand – there were people at the stadium who were determined to get into the match by whatever means necessary.
In recent years, there have been a number of incidents – mostly unreported – where Liverpool supporters have charged turnstiles in massive numbers, setting up dangerous situations.
At Stamford Bridge in the Champions League semi-final two years ago, a very dangerous crush ensued when Scousers broke through the gates. Away to PSV Eindhoven in the quarter-final this season, there were frightening moments outside the ground and the behaviour of ticketless fans provoked some harsh exchanges on the internet forums.
It is a problem that will not go away. “Bunking-in” is not just the last resort of the desperate fan; there are a substantial minority among Liverpool’s travelling support who see getting into a game without paying as a badge of honour. A number of books written about the experiences of Liverpool fans in the 1970s and 1980s have mythologised bunking-in and the younger generation, seeking to emulate their elders, have little compunction about sneaking into a ground and occupying someone else’s seat.
Mostly, they are young Scousers – and those with out-of-town accents and tickets who try to get their seats back can find themselves in unpleasant confrontations.
As the game moves upmarket and seeks to keep its traditional constituency outside the stadium while the corporate fans feast like kings inside, bunking-in will become a bigger problem.
Some Liverpool supporters even see it as a guerrilla act, the ultimate revenge of the disenfranchised fan. Priced out of the game? That’s OK, it’s free to the bunkers and they have the added satisfaction of making sure that they are not putting any money in the filthy-rich coffers of football’s billionaires. It is a class war statement for some.
But what they forget is that such behaviour gives the police licence to crack heads – and invariably, like on Wednesday night, it’s not the Scallies and bunkers who suffer. Having seen their lines swamped earlier in the day, the police were taking no chances with a second humiliation and took out their frustration on people with tickets.
That horde swarming over the gates are the flip side of the fanaticism we saw at Anfield against Barcelona and Chelsea. The bunkers want to get into the ground and all the police in Athens could not stop them. It might take a disaster to do that.
If it does, then it will be a very different tragedy to Hillsborough. Because then we – the men and boys whose desperation to get into the game makes us take wild risks – will have to shoulder the blame. And that’s too high a price to pay to see a football match.
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If LFC 'fans' want to honour the memories of those that lost their lives, then perhaps they should stop acting like cnuts and realise they don't have a divine right to get in free to football matches. No other club in the UK behaves like that. Feel free to have a go at me - I don't give a shit. A large proportion of their fanbase are cnuts.
by sam1 » 13 Sep 2012 21:48
by Wimb » 13 Sep 2012 21:48
by sam1 » 13 Sep 2012 21:54
by Jerry St Clair » 13 Sep 2012 21:55
MmmMonsterMunch I read an article online at work today from a steward. He'd estimated there could have been as many as 74k in there when it held 54k.
I will try to find it.
sam1 Whether any Liverpool fans contributed to the disaster by their actions or not, the Police and the grounds staff had a duty of care to them. It's like saying if a fan had started a fire then it was acceptable to allow 96 to burn to death cos it was one of their fault.
by sam1 » 13 Sep 2012 22:05
by sam1 » 13 Sep 2012 22:11
sam1 Of course not. The Police WERE there that day and thus had a duty of care.
by Wimb » 13 Sep 2012 22:19
No Fixed Abodesam1 Of course not. The Police WERE there that day and thus had a duty of care.
Yes - but that's the point. They were there but they also need the public's co-operation too.
So if a fan got in the opposing end and started stabbing someone to death it's the stewards fault or police's fault someone got in the ground with a knife?
by exileinleeds » 13 Sep 2012 22:19
cmonurz You know for a fact, do you, that no other club ever sees ticketless fans arrive at games. You know that?
And much more pertinently, what on earth does that have to do with this terrible tragedy, for which the fans have been completely absolved of blame.
WimbNo Fixed Abodesam1 Of course not. The Police WERE there that day and thus had a duty of care.
Yes - but that's the point. They were there but they also need the public's co-operation too.
So if a fan got in the opposing end and started stabbing someone to death it's the stewards fault or police's fault someone got in the ground with a knife?
If the stewards and police were required to check the spectators for weapons and knives on admission than yes they'd have to take a large portion of the blame for failing to do their jobs.
The difference here is that those you're accusing of being unruly or not acting with due care, had no intention to hurt or injure anybody. if the relevant safety procedures and policing had been done right then the greatest sin of those you're criticising for not being decent enough, would have been to deny somebody else the chance to watch a game they'd paid for.
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