by 3 veesinarow »
03 Apr 2007 14:10
This picnic hamper thing is another dimension, really. Most of the chatter on this thread, as with the gazillion other threads about the same subject, accuses kids, families, older people, people with some disability that prevents them standing for longer periods - and, actually, people that simply do prefer to sit now that they have a seat to sit on - of destroying the shared experience of attending football matches, home or away.
The trouble is, those type of people have been going to games since time immemorial and that won't change. It's the set-up of the stadia and the attitudes and policies of clubs/health & safety zealots that have changed the experience, not the people attending as fans and spectators.
It's not picnic hamper carriers that sit in the open stands, is it? (and FFS, drop the lunchbox/colours & shirt-wearing observations - they are so tedious and irrational). It's the soulless corporate boxes and their client entertainment that are taking over the stadia, using up space that would otherwise have been occupied by ordinary seats and dare I say, ordinary folk. They're only going to increase, you'll never see a box taken out except to be improved/expanded.
In the Good Old Days (copyright - Elm Park folklore), the ground was 80% terracing, 20% recycled wooden benches and the only executive boxes were the ones the kids used to stand on to see. Most people didn't have a choice about whether to stand or sit and it was all part of the accepted norm.
Reserved seating is, of course, the bane of the away supporter as it does not allow groups of like-minded supporters to congregate together and perhaps more lobby groups should ask for this policy to be dropped for away fans. It won't happen, however, as they will tell you it's easier to control a crowd when the hoolies and standers are spread out across the away end and unable to come together. This, of course, works against the sitters for the very same reason, as with almost no exception, they will not move someone to a seat nearer the front, as that allows the standers to move together into the swopped seats.
Bemoan the way the modern game is run, rage at the money being thrown at the top end of the game, rail against the souless corporate branding of stadia, yearn for nostalgia - which it ain't what it used to be - but please, please leave alone the individuals who are just trying to watch a game of football and have spent as much hard-earned cash as you to get there or have been taken by their parents because they want to be there. If they're at an away game, they've put in some effort to get there. They deserve much better than they get from "fellow" fans.