God, I'm feeling depressed just thinking about that season..... [emoji85][emoji2357]
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I Couldn't Be Hyypia that he has gone and it is fading into a distant memory.
God, I'm feeling depressed just thinking about that season..... [emoji85][emoji2357]
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Carting him off seemed a bit harsh.
In the aftermath I would have just booted him out and told him not to be so silly, in future.
No names no pack drill.
There were definitely petitions being used in the Archer / Belotti era
That's right. Tony Bloom runs an evil empire just to make money at our expense and his staff spend their time planning how to upset home fans. Pathetic take.
I feel for the lad if banned just for this, however, it has been mentioned on this thread there may also have been an issue with the same person at the CPFC game.
We see every home game a montage on the screen of a fan running on the pitch celebrating promotion to the Premier League so the offence is a fan encroaching on the pitch therefore I doubt that fan (along with a possible 10,000 others) was/were banned so what's the difference if pitch encroachment is the offence ?
More out of frustration this one, its quite annoying as have emailed the club several times, one which was clearly a 1901 member who passed on his ticket to Aston Villa fans, who spent 90 minutes shouting homophobic abuse at our players from the home end (albeit this was a few years ago, and nothing was done). I've been repeatedly told that they pay their money and that it is fine. It would be incredibly useful if the staff on the day actually did something about this, as even on tuesday there was at least 1 Chelsea fan in the home end who spent his time singing Chelsea songs. The season ticket seats next to me have repeatedly been given to opposition supporters this season, and I've been told they are complimentary seats from the club. I don't think he runs an evil empire, which is a ridiculous over exaggeration, but certainly at the moment some decisions that have been made (probably not by Tony Bloom himself) have upset the fans, which could be perceived as money orientated.
Totally agree. That was the way I was dealt with at the Goldstone on more than one occassion; thrown out by the OB, waited until the gates opened and went back in. But that was then. We didn't have an authoritarian CEO then who saw banning fans for very minor indescretions like this as a badge of honour.
I wasn't aware we did have a CEO who saw banning fans for very minor indiscretions like this as a badge of honour.
I wasn't aware anyone had been banned yet.
I didn't realise that when writing about multiple cases, the club were actually specifically talking about only one of them, the one that was the most minor.
We do now know that one minor infraction isn't an exuberant one off.
More out of frustration this one, its quite annoying as have emailed the club several times, one which was clearly a 1901 member who passed on his ticket to Aston Villa fans, who spent 90 minutes shouting homophobic abuse at our players from the home end (albeit this was a few years ago, and nothing was done). I've been repeatedly told that they pay their money and that it is fine. It would be incredibly useful if the staff on the day actually did something about this, as even on tuesday there was at least 1 Chelsea fan in the home end who spent his time singing Chelsea songs. The season ticket seats next to me have repeatedly been given to opposition supporters this season, and I've been told they are complimentary seats from the club. I don't think he runs an evil empire, which is a ridiculous over exaggeration, but certainly at the moment some decisions that have been made (probably not by Tony Bloom himself) have upset the fans, which could be perceived as money orientated.
I wasn't aware we did have a CEO who saw banning fans for very minor indiscretions like this as a badge of honour.
I wasn't aware anyone had been banned yet.
I didn't realise that when writing about multiple cases, the club were actually specifically talking about only one of them, the one that was the most minor.
We do now know that one minor infraction isn't an exuberant one off.
As always posters are getting over excited and using their spare time to compare today’s football/Albion with that of the 70s and to have a pop at the club we all say we love.
People are criticising the punishment before, i believe one has been dealt. On the surface the over excited fan was just that but from reports (on here) it’s not the first time and he was possibly on a warning.
Where do we draw the line on entering the pitch? Is it ok to go on the pitch “a little bit”, or on the pitch perimeter? Or should the boundary be the perimeter wall/fence? I know what is less ambiguous.
My bigger concern was the casual stewarding approach to the Chelsea fans that wandered on the pitch unchallenged at the end of the match and approached numerous players. Who knows what a drugged/boozed up nutter might do? Similarly the idiots who went on the pitch at the Palace game, potentially inciting other fans to do the same. I’d like to see a hit squad deployed to deal with them very very robustly.
So where do we draw the line? I would say any encroachment is an offence with each case being judged on its merits with the starting point being you should have been behind the wall.
As always posters are getting over excited and using their spare time to compare today’s football/Albion with that of the 70s and to have a pop at the club we all say we love.
People are criticising the punishment before, i believe one has been dealt. On the surface the over excited fan was just that but from reports (on here) it’s not the first time and he was possibly on a warning.
Where do we draw the line on entering the pitch? Is it ok to go on the pitch “a little bit”, or on the pitch perimeter? Or should the boundary be the perimeter wall/fence? I know what is less ambiguous.
My bigger concern was the casual stewarding approach to the Chelsea fans that wandered on the pitch unchallenged at the end of the match and approached numerous players. Who knows what a drugged/boozed up nutter might do? Similarly the idiots who went on the pitch at the Palace game, potentially inciting other fans to do the same. I’d like to see a hit squad deployed to deal with them very very robustly.
So where do we draw the line? I would say any encroachment is an offence with each case being judged on its merits with the starting point being you should have been behind the wall.
I wasn't aware we did have a CEO who saw banning fans for very minor indiscretions like this as a badge of honour.
I wasn't aware anyone had been banned yet.
I didn't realise that when writing about multiple cases, the club were actually specifically talking about only one of them, the one that was the most minor.
We do now know that the one minor infraction isn't an exuberant one off.
We have a number of ground regulations which are common at most stadiums and then there are criminal offence. Leeds were pretty clear about this in their recent statement https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/59896151. I'm sure the club have a legal obligation to provide details of any individuals breaking laws whilst at the stadium no matter how minor supporters may feel these are, similarly anything that people may have done in the 70's isn't the same measure of standard that is used now
As always posters are getting over excited and using their spare time to compare today’s football/Albion with that of the 70s and to have a pop at the club we all say we love.
People are criticising the punishment before, i believe one has been dealt. On the surface the over excited fan was just that but from reports (on here) it’s not the first time and he was possibly on a warning.
Where do we draw the line on entering the pitch? Is it ok to go on the pitch “a little bit”, or on the pitch perimeter? Or should the boundary be the perimeter wall/fence? I know what is less ambiguous.
My bigger concern was the casual stewarding approach to the Chelsea fans that wandered on the pitch unchallenged at the end of the match and approached numerous players. Who knows what a drugged/boozed up nutter might do? Similarly the idiots who went on the pitch at the Palace game, potentially inciting other fans to do the same. I’d like to see a hit squad deployed to deal with them very very robustly.
So where do we draw the line? I would say any encroachment is an offence with each case being judged on its merits with the starting point being you should have been behind the wall.
I'd just like to highlight this isn't a Brighton problem, its a PL problem, I can think of the last 4 or 5 games I've been to of all clubs there have been idiots on the pitch after late goals / final whistle. Sunderland v Arsenal there were 3 going around asking for shirts after Patino's late goal and again after the final whistle. Even at Boreham Wood v St Albans there were 4 pitch invaders in injury time, I think its the fault of viral videos of it actually working to get shirts. PL need to make a statement about it as it is happening every game.
I'm sure I've mentioned this before, but I was always amused on the last days of the seasons at the Goldstone where you would often get warnings over the PA system telling us that under no circumstances were we to run on the pitch, do not do it. Immediately followed by "In the event of a fire, please make your way onto the pitch."