life on mars 73
New member
- Oct 19, 2010
- 264
If the fences hadn't been at Hillsborough, the slaughter wouldn't have occurred. People could have escaped in time.
So why were the fences there ?
So why were the fences there ?
I remember some Birmingham (zulus?) steaming into the back of the north west terrace when the gates had been opened near the end of a game, one sunny saturday, not sure when, and to my amazement being fought off by a few terrace regulars at the back.
Ocotober 1984, the North Stand roof was still under construction so it was shut, the Zulu's 'top boy' was a 20 stone coloured gentleman called Keith Cuddles, he and his family once appeared on Family Fortunes with Les Dennis, I recall seeing him, bedecked in denim, looking like Shakin Stevens in negative, leading the assault on the north west, it was the small passage way between the main stand and the lego stand.
Aas luck would have it someone had left a milk crate of empties out for the uNiagte man to collect at some point so the Brighton failthful had relevant ammo to ward off their attackers.
Once the volley of milk bottles had been despatched Sussex Police moved in and broke it all up.
If the fences hadn't been at Hillsborough, the slaughter wouldn't have occurred. People could have escaped in time.
So why were the fences there ?
game also memorable for pensioner being crushed and dieing at the front of the NS....!!!
I originally said "indirectly caused" by hooliganism, not directly.
Fences went up at grounds as a direct consequence of hooliganism. That's why those poor fans were caged in like wild animals on that awful day. That's why they couldn't escape the overcrowding, which of course was caused by incompetent policing.
A horrible combination of circumstances, in which the preceding history of 20 years of hooliganism played a part.
Sure, we all know that football hooliganism wasn't invented in the 1960's.
And there are plenty of stories of unruly behaviour by young Englishmen going back many hundreds of years. Londoners used to live in fear of the "mob" back in the 18th century. Back in ancient Rome, there used to be massive riots between supporters of rival chariot teams that used to last for days.
And so on....
But the fact is that English football hooliganism became a particular problem in the years after 1966 (now, is that purely co-incidental ? hmmm...) to the point in the mid-1980's when it was seriously suggested that the game should be shut down.
I lived through that era, and I'm interested to discuss how and why it all came about.
Tim Carder wrote a superb series for the Collectors & Historians Society called (I think) 'A History of Crowd Disorder' which covers many of the 'offs' mentioned above.
If I can dig it out later (and Tim gives me permission to reproduce it), I'll get it on here.
The bigger blight on football in my opinion is today - the "Champions League" and keeping the G14 clubs in the money pot at the expense of the have-nots, billionaire owners, Sky/Murdoch, extortionate ticketing schemes, dickhead overpaid footballers, sanitised all-seater stadiums, the list goes on and on.
Hooligans were a small part of the game culture, and the game itself was definitely in better health back when a few lads belting each other was seen as the nadir of the history of the beautiful game. My opinion of course, but you can generally stick your post-'Soccer AM' '3-D Super Sunday' football and the majority of your nouveau (rich) fans up your all-seated jacksies
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