by puroresu » Fri May 25, 2007 11:55 am
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/football/premiership/liverpool/article1837968.ece
Stadium free-for-all that could have been a ticket for disaster
Tony Evans in Athens
All over Athens in the early hours of yesterday morning, small groups of Liverpool fans were meeting up and commiserating with each other. There were a lot of hugs, rueful smiles and the same words exchanged again and again. "It's all right. We only lost. Nobody died."
Three hours after the game, Liverpool fans were much more ebullient than the AC Milan supporters. Scouse laughter was ringing around the bars of the Greek capital as thoughts turned to home and next season. Memories of Hillsborough, where defeats on the pitch were put into perspective in the most horrible manner, ensure that there will be few tears after Liverpool lose a mere match.
But yesterday morning there was little to laugh about. William Gaillard, Uefa's mouthpiece, has laid the blame for the chaos outside the Olympic Stadium squarely on the shoulders of Liverpool fans. Uefa does not need the help of anyone to make a mess of an event, but the controversy throws up a number of questions for Liverpool supporters and, sadly, gives ammunition to those whose version of events in Sheffield on April 15, 1989 involves ticketless fans storming the gates.
Yes, some people wearing "Hillsborough Justice Campaign" badges probably rushed police lines yesterday in the quest to get into the ground. On the face of it, that would appear to be a crass conflict of ideologies. However, there are few parallels between Wednesday in Athens and that dreadful Saturday in Yorkshire.
In 1989, there were plenty of tickets available for the FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest. Lord Justice Taylor's report into the tragedy found that the design of the terracing was fatally flawed and that South Yorkshire police made a series of mistakes that led to the 96 deaths.
Liverpool fans were not to blame for the disaster and those who, like me, stepped over dead bodies that day resent any suggestion that we were the guilty parties. Sadly, few people remember the Taylor Report. They do recall the stories of drunken, ticketless fans that dominated the media in the aftermath of the disaster, however. The stories were untrue, but people still believe the ludicrous lies that had us stealing from our own dead.
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.
— Tony Evans is Deputy Football Editor of The Times and author of Far Foreign Land: Pride and Passion the Liverpool Way .