Guy Fawkes
The voice of treason
- Sep 29, 2007
- 8,297
I entirely sympathise with people who cannot stand easily, but the 'solution' to this 'problem' has been idiotic catch-all legislation which makes absolutely no difference to the safety inside grounds (apart from, possibly, endangering it by having people stand in seated areas when they could be standing safely in an area designated for it) and is merely a knee-jerk reaction to something which didn't solely cause the problems ascribed to it in the first place.
In my case, it's about choice - I prefer to stand. I don't do so at home games but would if there were a safe standing area, which can be achieved, as Dortmund so ably demonstrate. We're paying customers, to use Barber's own term, but we've been denied the choice of how watch the game by idiotic, ignorant law-makers who'd rather simply deprive us of that choice than address what we want safely.
You could improve the atmosphere, get more people in the ground, stop the constant conflict with clubs and stewards and open up that choice to people* simply by having a safe standing area behind the goal, especially in new stadia. But the authorities won't have it, and this programme piece is symptomatic of what you get instead.
*And, in the process, prevent people who can't or don't want to stand having their view of the game ruined by others who do.
You still have a choice when it comes to watching football in all seater stadiums, you either go and sit when told or don't go. No-one is forcing you to go in the first place and there are other levels of football in this country where you can go and stand to watch the game.
What you and those like you are not getting is that the club don't really have a choice either, so instead of trying to do something about the situation that could deliver results (by trying to bring about a change in the law through a campaign) they instead choose to abuse the stewards who can't change the law and those who abuse them and fail to follow their instructions still think its the stewards or the club to blame.
The club could eventually be forced to find funds to pay for the Police to enforce the law on seating rather than using stewards who are far cheaper or risk having their capacity cut at a time when the club can sell every seat in the ground - meaning lost revenue?
A lot of the problem is a lack of respect towards the stewards, would those refusing to sit when being asked by a steward still refuse if it had been a Police officer asking them instead? The problem lies with those individuals who think that they are above the law and that the rules shouldn't apply to them. my favourite is that i have paid my ticket so i should be able to do what i want! -If that was applied to say motoring, does paying for your fuel, MOT and road tax allow you to speed? or does it allow you able to drive faster along a stretch of road where the speed limit has been cut for safety reasons?
Had you been brought up in an era of all seater stadiums and that is all you have known, then there wouldn't be an issue either because it is what people are used to. The claim that an atmosphere can only be generated by standing is another complete myth too, you eith er go and want to make some noise or you don't and seated or standing makes no difference - its all pyschological to some.
Why don't people sit when told for now but campaign to get this law changed, surely there is enough support up and down the country to put some pressure on for a reform?