Saturday 29 December 2012

HARRY Redknapp reckons only ‘mugs’ need apply to join the QPR cause in January.

The Rangers boss had his tongue firmly in cheek when he said it, but admits getting new recruits is going to be hard.

The Hoops manager had only one word last night for the daunting task of crevicing Rangers out of the relegation mess – ‘massive’.

“It’s every bit as hard as I expected, but it would be fantastic if we could pull it off,” he added. “I’ve been no fun over Christmas and I put my family through it, but it’s all that occupies me – keeping this club up.

“We’ve got a very difficult run but we’ve got to believe we can do it.”

The Rs gaffer (pic) is desperate for fresh faces when the transfer window opens on January 1, but insists he expects few favours while he wheels and deals.

“If clubs get a chance to inflate the price, they’ll take it – that’s how it works,” he said. “But the sort of player we’re looking for are mugs like me. Well, maybe not mugs but ones who want to come and have a challenge.

“If we can keep this team up they’ll have a fantastic end of the season like I did with Portsmouth at Wigan on the last day of the season.”

The escape artist pulled off the trick at Pompey in 2006 when he signed five players in one hit. But he has poured cold water on signing Robbie Keane and Tim Cahill on loan from the MLS because they would only be available for two months before rejoining their clubs in the States.

Redknapp said: “I’ve not spoken to anyone connected with Robbie – but it’s (just) two months. Tim Cahill, he’s a good player - it’s just two months, and what do you do after two months?”

Monday 24 December 2012

Hillsborough single VAT 'waived', Prime Minister indicates

Sales of a Hillsborough charity single will not be subject to VAT, the Prime Minister has indicated.

Calls were made to waive the tax after a cover of The Hollies' He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother, was released.

Relatives of the 96 football fans who died in the 1989 disaster are continuing legal action after a report found 41 could have been saved.

David Cameron told the Commons he could "confidently predict" the VAT decision would "go down well on Merseyside".

His announcement, during Prime Ministers' Questions, came as the High Court quashed the inquest verdicts of accidental death and Home Secretary Theresa May ordered a new police inquiry into the disaster.

The celebrity-backed single is currently favourite to become the Christmas number one.

Sir Paul McCartney, Robbie Williams, former Spice Girl Mel C and Gerry Marsden are among the line-up.

‘C’mon Theo, sign’, Wilshere tells Liverpool and Man City target

Transfer news: Arsenal midfielder Jack Wilshere has urged team-mate Theo Walcott to follow his lead and sign a new contract at the club.

Wilshere, 20, was one of five young British players to sign new deals with the Gunners last week, alongside Kieran Gibbs, Aaron Ramsey, Carl Jenkinson and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain.

Walcott, whose contract expires in the summer, is reportedly being monitored by Liverpool and Manchester City, with the 23-year-old holding out for higher wages and a change in position to striker.

Wilshere told The Sun: “Everybody at the club wants Theo to re-sign. I’m always winding him up, saying ‘C’mon Theo, sign’.

“But that is something he has got to sort out. It is up to him and the club to reach an agreement and I hope they do.

“Theo’s been great for us and he knows what he means to us and the fans. Five of us British boys have just signed so hopefully he can be the sixth and cap it off.”

He added: “We’re all great friends, the British boys. We all go out together, have meals together and we all sit together when we’re on the road.”

Walcott proved his worth to Arsenal on Saturday, winning the penalty which Mikel Arteta scored for the only goal of the game in a 1-0 win at Wigan.

Sunday 23 December 2012

Redknapp blasts ‘average’ QPR high earners after Newcastle defeat

QPR manager Harry Redknapp lambasted ‘average’ players earning far too much money.

The R’s are in the relegation zone after picking up just 10 points from 18 games and it appears that the 65-year-old has run out of patience with a few individuals.

He said: “There are an awful lot of players at this club who earn far too much money for what they are.

“Far far too much money for what they are. Not all of them but an awful lot of them. I don’t want to see the owners have their pants taken down.

“There are a lot of average players here. I fined a player last week and he was earning more than anyone at Tottenham.

“They’ve got a stadium that holds 18,000 people and you shouldn’t paying massive wages when you have 18,000 people.

“This club [Newcastle] holds 55,000 people and I bet their players aren’t earning as much as some of ours.”

Saturday 22 December 2012

Arsenal boss reveals what he believes will be his legacy

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger believes that his legacy will be the Gunners’ style of play.

Despite winning the FA Cup and Premier League on multiple occasions, it is not that that Wenger believes that he will be remembered for.

The north Londoners are revered for the way they play the game, although fans have grown frustrated after seven years without a trophy.

“Our legacy will be our style of play,” Wenger said. “A way to see football. A way to see the development of the game and overall a happy attitude towards the game.”

FERGUSON GIVES BROADEST HINT YET THAT RONALDO COULD MAKE MANCHESTER UNITED RETURN

Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson has given his broadest hint yet that Cristiano Ronaldo becoming a Manchester United player again, ahead of the star's eagerly anticipated return to Old Trafford with Real Madrid in February.

There has been a lot of talk this last three months about Ronaldo returning to United as he is said to be unhappy at Real and only last week Spanish newspaper AS were reporting that Real are planning to price Ronaldo out of any move and suggested that they will place a whopping £160million price tag on him to put off potential suitors.

Last month Ferguson described the player he sold to Real Madrid for a world-record £80million in 2009 as 'unbuyable' and the United manager is not about to read too much into speculation in Spain that Ronaldo feels unappreciated over the lack of progress in contract negotiations.

Whatever the circumstances and however possible it might be, Ferguson hopes that Ronaldo would consider a move back to United. "You never know," he said. "I don't know when his contract finishes. He may want to go to another club at some point in his career and I'd hope he would want to come here. But that's a long way off.

"I'd love to see that, but it's fanciful thinking really. First of all, how much it would take to get him from Real Madrid and, secondly, I don't think there's any chance they would want to sell him."

Ronaldo, too, has fond memories: "It is thanks to Manchester United that I play for Real Madrid," he said. "Without them, I wouldn't be the player I am today. I still speak with Sir Alex Ferguson. I miss him a lot and I miss Manchester United.

"I felt very good there, it was like a family. I had six great years there and am still friends with my team-mates."

Ronaldo will play United for the first time since 2003 as two of the world's most glamorous clubs face each other in the first knockout round of the Champions League.

And Ferguson is proud that he transformed the magician from Madeira into a player who bears comparison with the greatest players in history.

Ferguson said: "There are different forms of courage, but the courage to take the ball all the time is the best one. He's always had that.

"Great players have got that. Denis Law, George Best, Pele, Johan Cruyff, Eusebio: all the great players can do that. They take the ball, no matter the challenges.

"I've been very fortunate in having Scholes, Giggs and Cantona. He's certainly in that bracket.' Which begs the question, how are United going to stop him? It was after Ronaldo tormented United in a friendly nine years ago that Ferguson's players urged him to sign the Sporting Lisbon teenager.

"I'm putting Giggs against him - he knows more about him," said Ferguson. "Giggs would love to play against him. We'll have a way."

"It wasn't disloyalty [when he left United] because I got another year out of him when he wanted to go the previous year," added Ferguson. "He honoured that and was fantastic for us. He went with our blessing.

"I was sorry when he left, don't get me wrong, but he always had a hankering to go to Madrid in his career and we helped him on that way.

"My way of looking at it is we were lucky to have him for six years and the United fans would share that.

"One thing is for sure, he'll get a great reception when he comes to Old Trafford and quite rightly so when he comes on the pitch - after that, they can boo all they like!

"It will be a fantastic tie. We've not had a really good European game for quite a while, having not qualified last year. This is a big opportunity for United to kick on and step forward in European football again."

Alex Ferguson and Cristiano Ronaldo were quoted in Sportsmail.

QPR boss ready to sign 'difficult' striker

NICOLAS Anelka might be known as ‘Le Sulk’ – but QPR boss Harry Redknapp is prepared to ‘bite the bullet’ and sign the tempestuous French striker anyway.

Redknapp needs recruits – and he needs them fast.

According to the man who ended a winless run at the 17th attempt against Fulham last weekend, signing players on the last day of the January transfer window will be too late.

He needs them to hit the ground running and carve out six points every four games from now until the end of the season to save Rangers from relegation.

Into that frame comes Anelka (pic), who even at his latest club, Shanghai Shenhua in China, fell foul of respected rituals at the beginning of a match and reportedly squared up to a fan in a hotel lobby as a result.

Before that, the 33-year-old was sent home in disgrace from World Cup 2010, and not the first time he rowed with a France team manager.

But Harry admits Rangers might have to take what they can get in a January window smeared by lack of choice.

When asked whether Anelka came into the difficult personality category, the Rs manager made it plain he was bracing himself for a few more Gallic tirades if he can get him to W12.

“What do you think? He’s (Anelka) a good player,” said Redknapp. “But it’s very hard to get the full package (of personality and talent). We’ve got to hope they fit in.

“There are lots of players about who have got no personality. I can’t afford the likes of Lampard and Gerrard who train hard, play well and tend to avoid injury.

“The problem is we need to do any business by the start of January – it’s no good waiting until the last day.

“Daniel (Levy, Spurs chairman) will be ringing you up at 10pm on deadline day offering you a three for one deal from those he can’t give away.

“You can’t wait for that, and the QPR chairman knows we have to bite the bullet.”

East End ‘Tribute 2 A Legend’ soccer matches to charge fans 50p a goal

Football mad youngsters are being asked to get sponsors to cough up 50p for every goal they score in a New Year tournament being set up in London’s deprived East End.

It’s part of a charity drive to open a free ‘Working Class Heroes’ stage academy in Bow for disadvantaged youth of all abilities and backgrounds.

The five-a-side tournament which kicks off the fundraising appeal was the brainchild of the ‘Tribute 2 A Legend’ charity’s founder, Joe Leslie, who runs Mimi’s charity shop in the Roman Road.

“Getting sponsorship for every ball in the net is just one fundraising idea,” he said. “We’re also planning family football parties and pub nights.

“A ‘Working Class Heroes’ drama academy can help youngsters who have had a tough start in life get involved in the community.”

Those interested in taking part in the tournament starting in March are being asked to pop into The Albert pub in Roman Road where the players’ registration is open from January 4 to 26.

link
http://www.eastlondonadvertiser.co.uk/news/east_end_tribute_2_a_legend_soccer_matches_to_charge_fans_50p_a_goal_1_1751390

Arsene Wenger reflects on the most difficult part of his reign

Manager Arsene Wenger insists he will never be satisfied with what he has achieved at Arsenal.

The Gunners head to Wigan tomorrow looking to climb back into the top three of the Barclays Premier League, after what has been one of the most testing spells of Wenger’s 16 years at the helm.

While Arsenal may be a club transformed from the side the French coach walked into back in October 1996, Wenger feels his work is far from done.

“I am never satisfied. I just try to do my best,” said Wenger, who current deal runs until 2014.
“I have been the most criticised in the last seven years (without a trophy), but I feel for a manager it was more difficult in the first years.”

Asked to reflect on how history would remember his time at Arsenal were civilisation to have fallen today, Wenger joked: “The Mayans were wrong - the end of the world came at Bradford!”

Defeat at Valley Parade in the Capital One Cup was unquestionably a major setback to Arsenal’s hopes of silverware this season, although there is still the FA Cup to play for and the Champions League.

QPR boss pours ice cold water on Lampard rumour

QPR manager Harry Redknapp has quashed any reports that the R’s are going to sign Frank Lampard in January.

The Chelsea midfielder had been tipped for a surprise move across west London as his time at Stamford Bridge comes to an end, but the 65-year-old does not have the funds to complete such a deal.
He confirmed: “I can’t afford [Steven] Gerrard or Lampard.

“They’re not going to come there. It’s difficult for us to bring players in”

Monday 17 December 2012

Russian soccer fans demand club not sign homosexuals, blacks

The largest fan group of Russian champions Zenit St. Petersburg have demanded the club refrain from buying black and gay players following turmoil surrounding the acquisition of Brazil striker Hulk.

“We’re not racists but we see the absence of black players at Zenit as an important tradition,” Zenit fan club Landscrona said in a letter, called the “Selection 12 manifesto”, posted on its website (www.landscrona.ru) on Monday.

“It would allow Zenit to maintain the national identity of the club, which is the symbol of St Petersburg.”

Zenit have been the only top club in Russia to have never signed an African player while the northern city of St Petersburg is known to have a strong right-wing nationalist influence.

The fans said they want more home-grown or European players in the team.

“We only want players from other brotherly Slav nations, such as Ukraine and Belarus as well as from the Baltic states and Scandinavia. We have the same mentality and historical and cultural background as these nations,” the letter said.

They also expressed their opposition to having “sexual minorities” in the team and demanded that each player would give “101 percent effort” in every match.

Several prominent black players have turned down lucrative offers from the wealthy club over the past 12 months after receiving death threats from Zenit fans, local media reported.

A Zenit spokesman said on Monday the club would not comment on the fans’ letter.

Former Zenit and Russia striker Alexander Panov said the fans have no right to influence the club’s selection policy.

“If we don’t have enough good players from St Petersburg, then what should the club do?” the St Petersburg native was quoted as saying by local media.
Should FIFA step in and demand an apology from Zenit?

“All clubs around the world have black players. If they are absent from Zenit – it’s Zenit’s problem. I don’t think fans should demand the club buy or don’t buy certain players. The fans have the right to go to the stadium or stay home.”

Zenit have been in turmoil for the past few months with several senior players unhappy after the wealthy club splashed out more than $100 million on Brazilian Hulk and Belgium midfielder Axel Witsel just before the transfer deadline.

Zenit demoted Russia skipper Igor Denisov to the reserve team in September after he refused to play, issuing an ultimatum to renegotiate his contract in line with what Hulk was making.

Denisov was later allowed to rejoin the first team after making an apology.

link

Sunday 16 December 2012

Police Probe Toon Fan With Albanian Flag!

Each and every week we read about racist abuse at football matches. From players, referees and fans. And now a Newcastle fan has been reported for having an Albanian flag!

Police are investigating an allegation of racist abuse after Manchester City star Aleksandar Kolarov became involved in a heated exchange with a Toon fan at St James' Park.

aNorthumbria Police spokesman: "Northumbria Police has received a report of racist language having been used at the St James' Park stadium during the Newcastle United v Manchester City match.

"Northumbria Police takes such allegations extremely seriously and enquiries are ongoing into the incident."

It is understood 27-year-old Serbia international Kolarov became involved in a lengthy exchange with a supporter carrying an Albania flag as he warmed up on the sideline during the game.

There is a long history of tension between Serbia and Albania, particularly over the disputed Kosovo region.

Neither club was commenting on the matter, although it is understood that Kolarov will be spoken to by police next week.

The defender was introduced as a 37th-minute replacement for the injured Samir Nasri, but was also substituted 18 minutes from time.

link

Thursday 13 December 2012

Around 600 Watford tickets left for Manchester City FA Cup clash at the Etihad Stadium

Watford have around 600 tickets remaining for sale ahead of the Hornets’ FA Cup Third Round tie with Manchester City at The Etihad Stadium on Saturday, January 5.

From 9am this morning tickets are going on sale with a one-per-person rule to anyone on the club’s ticketing database.

link 

Outrage at Uefa let-off for Serbia's latest race controversy

FA 'disappointed' as European body hands out 'paltry' fine for England Under-21 abuse

The Football Association was tonight at the forefront of widespread condemnation of Uefa's decision to impose just a £65,000 fine on Serbia, while also ordering their Under-21 side to play a single match behind closed doors, as punishment for racist chanting and violence during and after their defeat to England in Krusevac in October.

Alex Horne, general secretary of the Football Association, said: "We are disappointed with the sanctions levied by Uefa with regards to the racist behaviour displayed towards England's players. Racism is unacceptable in any form and should play no part in football. The scenes were deplorable and we do not believe the sanction sends a strong enough message."

Lord Ouseley, chair of Kick It Out, called the outcome "paltry", while Rio Ferdinand accused Uefa of not being "serious at all on racism".

Four Serbian players and two coaches were also banned for their part in the after-match fracas which marred the European Championship play-off. Two England players, Thomas Ince and Steven Caulker, were given bans of one and two matches respectively.

The lengthy statement released by Uefa outlining the sanctions made no mention of racism. Uefa delayed its decision for a month to give its control and disciplinary unit more time to consider the case but the severity of punishment still fell well below expectations, not least because the fine is £16,000 short of the amount Nicklas Bendtner was penalised for displaying a sponsor's name on his underpants during Euro 2012.

Horne had previously suggested the FA would consider refusing to play in Serbia in future if the sanctions were not tough enough. The FA is likely to appeal the bans issued to Ince and Caulker but will wait to receive Uefa's written reasons before determining its next course of action.

"It is the FA's vehement belief that its players and staff acted correctly in the face of provocation, including racist abuse and missiles being thrown," Horne added. "We are therefore surprised to see that two of our players have been given suspensions. We shall await Uefa's reasoning but it is our intention, at this stage, to support our players and appeal these decisions."

Hugh Robertson, the Sport Minister who wrote to Michel Platini, the Uefa president, calling for "tough sanctions" in October, also expressed his disappointment "given the widespread racist abuse aimed at England's players".

Stuart Pearce, the Under-21 manager, insisted that his players had not been at fault. He said: "I am concerned to see our players suspended. From what I witnessed our players were forced to protect themselves in the scenes that followed the game." During the match, England players were subjected to monkey chants, with Danny Rose saying he was targeted. Rose was sent off after the final whistle for kicking the ball away before a melee broke out.

Lord Ouseley said: "Kick It Out shares the concerns of many in football that abuse aimed at black players isn't taken seriously enough. This is a paltry slap on the wrist and again we haven't seen decisive action from Uefa."

Serbia has had problems with racism and fan violence in the past. They were forced to play a Euro 2012 qualifier behind closed doors after fans rioted and caused a game against Italy to be abandoned in Genoa in 2010. In June 2007, a fine of £16,500 was imposed because of racist chants at another Under-21 match against England.

Police set to be questioned over Hillsborough

THE questioning of hundreds of police officers over their role in the Hillsborough cover-up will begin within weeks, the Government has said as new powers for investigators are fast-tracked through Parliament.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) announced yesterday that it has begun consulting the families of the 96 football supporters who died in the tragedy on their provisional terms of reference ahead of what will be the biggest-ever inquiry into British policing.

New laws to give the IPCC powers to compel serving officers to give evidence as witnesses should be passed before Christmas, but will not be extended to retired police, the Government said.

Speaking in the Lords, Home Office spokesman Lord Taylor of Holbeach revealed the IPCC will begin questioning both serving and retired officers from South Yorkshire Police and up to 30 other forces across the country “early in the new year”.

The development came as a provisional High Court date was set next week for the Attorney General’s bid to quash the original inquests into the victims’ deaths, held in Sheffield in 1991 but now seen as widely discredited.

The families of those who died have campaigned to have the original verdicts of accidental death overturned, and for a new coroner to take a broader look at how many victims might have been saved.

A spokesman for the Judicial Office said: “The Attorney General’s application to quash the Hillsborough inquest verdicts has been listed for a substantive hearing before the Divisional Court on Wednesday, December 19, subject to any applications by interested parties to adjourn.

“The Lord Chief Justice, sitting with two other judges, will hear the application.”

Attorney General Dominic Grieve announced in October he would make an application for fresh inquests after beginning a review of the evidence.

Yesterday’s developments are a clear signal of the Government’s stated intent to move as quickly as possible “from truth to justice” following the bombshell report published by an independent panel in September which revealed a huge cover-up and smear campaign at South Yorkshire Police following the 1989 stadium disaster.

Deborah Glass, the IPCC deputy chair who is leading the inquiry, confirmed the investigation would be looking into the actions of more than 2,000 police officers.

She said: “At present we have a list of 1,444 names provided by South Yorkshire Police covering officers who were apparently on duty at Hillsborough, who responded to the disaster or who were involved in the aftermath.

“In addition we are aware that 30 more police forces or police-related bodies had officers or staff who played some kind of role in relation to Hillsborough – that covers more than 400 officers.

“And we are aware there may be more officers whose details we have not had yet. We estimate we will have in excess of 2,000 names to analyse.”

She added: “I understand that many people want to see quick action after all these years. But completing the full picture for the families of those who died, were injured and were traumatised by the terrible events at Hillsborough is not going to be a quick or easy process.

“We are making real progress, and within the next month we expect the shape and integration of this complex and multi-faceted investigation will be clearer.”

The IPCC will be assisted in its inquiry by the new power to compel serving officers to give evidence – but Lord Taylor made clear it will not be extended to officers who have retired.

“Once officers retire, they are in the same position as any other member of the public,” he told peers.

“The police themselves do not have the power to compel an ordinary member of the public to attend an interview as a witness.

“To give the IPCC powers of compulsion over retired officers would be to extend the commission’s powers beyond those held by the police.

“I do not think that any member of this House would be comfortable with that, and such a matter would require careful and detailed consideration.

“Let us remember that the IPCC can, and will, investigate retired officers for misconduct and criminal behaviour, and it has the powers to compel such individuals to attend interview.

“The IPCC is currently scoping its investigation, and intends to start calling witnesses early in the new year.”

Wednesday 12 December 2012

Football hooliganism, Islam and me

Football hooliganism, Islam and me – the story of an Asian lad in Leicester’s notorious Baby Squad

  1.  Riaz Khan
    Riaz Khan

Riaz Khan was a shy Muslim boy who became a member of the notorious Leicester City hooligan firm, the Baby Squad. He speaks to Lee Marlow about honour, violence and Slazenger jumpers.

This is a story of multi-culturalism Leicester, of white and black and Asian coming together as one; overlooking their differences and standing shoulder to shoulder to fight for a common cause.

Leicester is a city that is built on stories of multiculturalism. This one, says Riaz Khan, is one you’ve probably never heard.

“It sounds almost noble when you put it like that – black, white, Asian, coming together as one. But it was like that,” says Riaz, a 46-year-old English teacher from Evington, Leicester.

“We were one. The colour of your skin didn’t matter. That didn’t happen elsewhere in the country, but it happened here. And it only happened here for one reason.”

The reason? Football hooliganism.

Twenty five years on, Riaz – a softly-spoken, easy-going father of four – still winces at the term “football hooliganism.”

Riaz and his brother, Yusuf, were members of the Leicester Baby Squad, the notorious Leicester City firm.

The TV and the papers called them football hooligans. Riaz shakes his head. “We weren’t hooligans. We were casuals. That’s the word.

“We were fun-loving casuals. We weren’t yobs. It wasn’t mindless

violence, not in the way it was portrayed in the media. It was violent, occasionally, yes – but it was orchestrated; one like-minded firm against another.”

He’s not defending it, he says. He’s redefining it. And, besides, it wasn’t just about the fighting. It was about much more than that. “If it was just about the fighting, I wouldn’t have stuck it. It was about the camaraderie, the fashions, the clothes.”

For six years, from the autumn of 1983 until the end of 1989/90 season, Riaz lived this life.

He watched City home and away. Sometimes he fought. Sometimes he didn’t. Sometimes he won. Sometimes he took a beating.

He was arrested. He was convicted. He bought the finest clothes from the most expensive designer shops and was the coolest kid on the block. And then he did it all over again, season after season.

All of that – the football, the clothes, the camaraderie, the fighting – became the fabric of Riaz’s life.

But why? It’s a question you could ask any young member of the Baby Squad. Why? What did you get from it?

But for a young Muslim boy growing up in Rushey Mead with ambitious parents and a strict culture which forbade it – how on Earth did that happen? Sit yourself down, he says, brushing down his beard. It’s a lo-o-ong old story.

What you have to remember, says Riaz, is the context. The era. The story starts in Leicester in the mid-70s. It was a very different city to the one we live in today.

Riaz and his brothers and sister grew up in Rushey Mead. It was white then, he remembers, with only a smattering of Asian faces. The Khans stuck out. They were different.

He went to school at Wreake Valley. Casual racism seemed like it was almost part of the syllabus to Riaz. “I remember walking to and from school and seeing swastikas sprayed on walls and NF signs and slogans like ‘Pakis Out’. It was everywhere. It was just part of your life.”

The racism was never physical. It never spilled over into brawls or fights. But it was incessant.

“I took it day after day,” he says. “It made me feel inferior. I rejected who I was and where I was from. I didn’t want to be that person. I wanted to be white. I wanted to belong.”

He found a teenage identity in music and fashion: jazz funk initially, then the New Romantics and the fashions of the time.

“It only really made sense to me when I read a story in the paper about the Leeds Service Crew – a group of Leeds United fans, Leeds casuals, who dressed in a certain way.”

He cut the feature out and read it over and over again. This is what he wanted. The clothes. The hair. The bond, the camaraderie.

“I worked at Walkers crisps in the summer and all my money would go on Lyle & Scott jumpers and Patrick cagoules and Puma G.Vilas trainers. I was out and about, wearing this stuff, when one day, while walking through Leicester I saw a group of lads dressed in the same stuff.”

They started talking. We’re football trendies, they said. Come and join us. It was a chance to be part of something – although what that was, he wasn’t exactly sure – and Riaz took it. He was in. For the first time in his life, he was in.

“I was never into football, but they told me about the football and the fighting and how it was all part and parcel of it and well, that was it for me. I can’t say that was what I was looking for, but, also, it wasn’t enough to make me walk away.”

His first football game was in October 1983, away to Birmingham. City lost that day 2-1. Lineker scored for Leicester. Riaz doesn’t remember this. He didn’t see his first game. He was arrested before the match kicked off.

“I didn’t even make it to the ground. We ran into some Birmingham lads near the Bull Ring and that was that.”

It kicked off.

He came home late that night. “Why are you so late?” his father wanted to know. There was some trouble, Riaz said. His strict father banned him from going to a match again.

“And yet,” recalls Riaz, “although he didn’t approve, we were from a long line of Pathans. They were warriors, fighters. It was a proud heritage. If I’d have been in trouble for theft, my dad would have been appalled. Fighting? Well... it didn’t seem quite so bad.”

His parents wanted him to study; to be a lawyer or an accountant.

“Asian families in Leicester in the 1970s, they were all desperately keen for their children to do well,” he says.

His parents were no different. It made no difference. “I didn’t listen. I thought I knew best. It happens with boys and adolescence – it’s a form of temporary insanity isn’t it? I rejected everything they tried to give me – advice, religion, everything – and set out on my own way.”

The ban didn’t last. He wriggled out of the curfew and started going to the football every week. He started to learn about Leicester City, the football, the players – Lineker and Lynex; Bobby Smith and Andy Peake – but, and this always seemed more important, he admits, he learned about everything else that came with it: terrace culture, mates, fashion trainers and how to handle himself.

“For that first season, I was scared. I’d see other lads coming and I’d stand aside or run off. I was too scared to get involved.”

But the way you got accepted in this strange new world, the way you earned your stripes, was by standing your ground, covering your mate’s back, proving yourself.

“So that’s what I started to do,” says Riaz.

There was a moment, one incident during a lads’ day out in Skegness when Riaz knew, finally, that he’d been .

They bumped into a small group of skinheads who, immediately, started shoving Riaz around. “One of them hit me over the head with a steel-framed newspaper A-board. It was kicking off and it was kicking off for no other reason than because I was Asian.”

One by one, his new Baby Squad mates, who were drinking nearby, poured out into the street and set about the skinheads. It was a clear message: you fight him, then you fight all of us.

“There was a bit of a skirmish: Baby Squad lads versus these National Front lads. They didn’t want me to get beaten up because of the colour of my skin, because I was Asian. They saw me as one of them.”

Amid the flying fists and violence, Riaz was aware something significant had just occurred. It was, he says, a beautiful moment.

“A few years earlier and that just wouldn’t have happened.”

The Baby Squad was the collective name of the Leicester City hooligan firm. It was one big group on a Saturday afternoon, but made up of a combination of smaller gangs from all over Leicestershire – Braunstone, Thurnby Lodge, Netherhall, the West End, New Parks, St Mark’s and St Matthew’s, as well as county areas such as Coalville and Hinckley.

“Before the advent of the Baby Squad, these groups fought each other. The BS brought them together.”

For six years, that’s what he did. Home and away, although not always away. “I never really enjoyed travelling too far,” he says.

He bought his clothes from Scotney’s, on London Road, or MC Sports, in Humberstone Gate. Occasionally, Riaz and some of this friends would take the train to London for a shopping spree at Nik Naks and Lilywhites.

“There weren’t many places to go in Leicester, really,” he says. “I knew some lads – some of the more middle-class members from Oadby – who would fly over to Italy to get kitted out.”

How you looked was important, he says. It set you apart.

Riaz left that world a long time ago, but not all of it, it seems.

On the day we meet, Riaz is wearing black Adidas Gazelles, a Ralph Lauren shirt, Armani jumper and Stone Island hat and coat.

“Yeah,” he says. “Once you’re into that, I don’t think it ever leaves you. I’m not as daft as I was back then, though. This stuff will last me a couple of years now. Back then, I’d wear it for a month then sell it.”

Which is all very nice and glamorous – but it wasn’t always like that, was it?

“No, it wasn’t,” he says. “There were a few hairy moments. I remember lots of City fans getting a police escort from Villa Park one Saturday afternoon.

“Somehow, the small group I was with ended up outside the Holte End at Villa Park with no escort – just as the Villa fans were coming out.

“We were spotted and a gang of 300 or so Villa fans chased us for miles. We ran and ran until we couldn’t run any more. I remember someone saying, ‘Look, we’ve got to stop, let’s just get this over with’. We knew we were going to take a beating.”

And then, as if from nowhere, the West Midlands Police arrived. “I don’t think I have ever been so relieved to see a policeman in my life,” says Riaz.

Another Saturday afternoon: the Haymarket, 1984, Leicester versus Arsenal. “We confronted the Arsenal fans near the Haymarket. It was bedlam. I remember one of our boys, a nice lad from Birstall, was slashed with a Stanley knife.

“I saw the blood and I saw the wound. He never came back after that. I never saw him again.”

There were others, he says. Fights and slashings and brawls and beatings. They all kind of blend into one big bloody brawl of testosterone and designer gear.

“West Ham was always a bit hairy. Chelsea were always very racist. Millwall were just mad. I don’t know why.”

It stopped as quickly as it started for Riaz. In 1989, he was 23, nearly 24. “I was bored of it. I didn’t want to fight every weekend.

“I started going to raves instead. I enjoyed it. It was a completely different thing – driving out to a big field in the middle of nowhere and dancing all night with blokes who supported other teams and having a great time.”

He’d changed. “I grew up,” he says. “That adolescent/teenage period was over. Temporary insanity, you see.” Riaz started to think about who he was, what he’d done, and what he wanted to be.

“The religion I turned my back on as a teenager started to appeal to me. I read about Islam and started going to the mosque on Loughborough Road.”

Riaz is now married to Maryam and has four children.

He went back to college and studied. Today, he’s an English teacher and studying for a Masters Degree in English language teaching at university.

Education, he says. That’s what counts. Education changes everything. His pupils know nothing of his past. “I guess they’re in for a bit of a shock,” he says.

Four years ago, as the EDL started to garner support from the terraces of English football grounds, Riaz thought about writing a book.

“When the EDL came here, I saw people I used to know from the Baby Squad and it just stopped me in my tracks.

“Had it really come to this?

“I thought they were better than that. I wondered what they were thinking.”

The book – Khan: Memoirs of an Asian Football Casual – is out next weekend. It tells the story of a nice little Muslim boy from Leicester who ran with the Baby Squad.

It attempts to explain what that was like, to put what he did in those years into some sort of context. There was a justification for it, he says.

“There is no justification for the thinly-veiled racism you see in the EDL, though,” he says.

And what if one of your sons comes home and says, ‘Dad, I want to be a casual, a football hooligan?’

“I won’t allow that,” he says. “I know what happens. I’ve seen it. I don’t want that for them.”

• Khan – Memoirs of an Asian Football Casual, published by Countdown Books is out on December 15 and is available at HMV in Leicester, priced at £7.99.

link
http://www.thisisleicestershire.co.uk/story-17558145-detail/story.html

Comments worth a read

Sunday 9 December 2012

'MONKEY JIBES' SWANSEA FAN ARRESTED

Bassong speaks to Howard Webb in Norwich's match against SwanseaA SWANSEA fan accused of making racist ‘monkey gestures’ at black Norwich star Sebastien Bassong has been arrested.
Bassong, who had to be restrained by his team-mates, reported the incident to referee Howard Webb during the Premier League clash at the Liberty Stadium yesterday. The fan was identified from CCTV.


link

Saturday 8 December 2012

Wenger preaches patience over splashing cash

Arsene Wenger has hinted yet again that Arsenal will be keeping their cheque book under lock and key during the January transfer window.

 The Gunners are no closer to resolving the contract saga of Theo Walcott, while the manager is hopeful of tying Bacary Sagna to a new deal.

But the possibility of new faces coming through the door at the Emirates Stadium next month appears slim as Wenger maintains just simply buying a few new players is not the answer.

“Football is not only to splash money out and work, it’s also about patience and the pride to create your own players,” he said.

“There are some important aspects in the game we never get credit for, but I find them very important.

“For example, in the last 10 years, we have brought more players out than any other club together at Champions League level. You can look all across Europe.

“That is part of our pride as well - to give a chance to players to show their talent at that level.”


link 

Sunday 25 November 2012

STABBED BRIT ASHLEY MILLS: TWO YOBS LET OFF

 FOOTBALL fans were seething last night as two thugs accused of knifing a Spurs fan had their attempted murder charges dropped.

Ashley Mills was sliced across the head and groin in the vicious attack before Tottenham’s Europa League game with Lazio last week.

A mob of 50 ambushed The Drunken Ship pub in Rome as the 25-year-old builder enjoyed a pint with fellow Spurs fans.

Italian detectives charged Francesco Ianari, 26, and Mauro Pinnelli, 25, with attempted murder after the bloody brawl.

But yesterday their lawyer Lorenzo Contucci said the charges against the two men had been cut to aggravated wounding with a weapon.

He also revealed the controversial judge had decided the violence in the pub had not been racially motivated and was instead a “football related crime”.

Hours later fans hit online forums to vent their anger, branding the decision “disgraceful”.

Johnathan fumed: “Disgusting. What do you need to do to someone to get an attempted murder charge then??”

Kevin Hayes added: “It’s disgraceful. The Italian authorities should be ashamed of themselves.”

And Steve said: “Not been racially motivated but that it was a ‘football-related crime’ – so that makes it ok then?”

Initial reports suggested masked far right Lazio Ultras were to blame for the cowardly attack. But the two men were understood to be supporters of cross-town rivals, AS Roma.

At least 11 people were injured in the attack, including an American and a Bangladeshi.

Police named other injured British fans as Dave Lesley, Stephen Tierney and Christopher Allen.

Ashley, from Brentwood, Essex, who had travelled to the Italian capital with his interior designer brother Bradley, 30, remains in hospital after losing huge amounts of blood.

http://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/view/284526/

Saturday 24 November 2012

Four Britons facing lengthy prison sentence in Greek jail after attack on ex-footballer

Robert Hughes, 31, from Croydon, was left in a coma after the assault while he was on holiday in Crete in 2008
Hit with a bottle and left for dead outside a nightclub in Malia
Mr Hughes was left in a coma and had to undergo three life-saving brain operations after the attack

link
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2237467/Robert-Hughes-attack-4-Britons-facing-lengthy-prison-sentence-Greek-jail.html

Thursday 22 November 2012

Only serving police officers must answer Hillsborough investigation questions under new law

ONLY serving police officers - not those that have retired - will be compelled to give evidence to an investigation into the Hillsborough cover-up, it emerged yesterday.

A fast-track law will be passed by Christmas, enabling the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) to begin quizzing witnesses early in the New Year, the Home Secretary said.

But ministers are believed to have decided it is better to act swiftly than to be dragged into a dispute about whether the powers can be extended to former officers, who are now civilians.

Whitehall sources said ex-officers would be expected to attend an interview as would any "conscientious member of the public" - given the huge importance of the investigation.

And they did not rule out toughening up the law further next year, if it emerged that further action was needed to ensure no-one involved in the cover-up escapes justice.

Announcing the Police (Complaints & Conduct) Bill - revealed by the ECHO yesterday - Theresa May said: "I made a commitment to ensure that the IPCC has the powers and resources it needs to carry out its investigations into the Hillsborough disaster.

"This commitment was made in the knowledge that the families of the victims and the survivors have waited 23 years for the truth about the disaster to be revealed.

"The IPCC has indicated that as part of its ongoing investigations, it will likely be in a position to call witnesses early in 2013."

The Bill will also allow the IPCC to probe any matter previously investigated by its predecessor, the Police Complaints Authority, the Home Secretary added.

Labour - which first pushed for the IPCC's powers to be strengthened - is believed to agree that it is better to get a simpler Bill through
parliament quickly.

However, it will continue to push for the appointment of a 'senior lead investigator' to pull together all the Hillsborough inquiries and ensure
they do not drag on for years.

The investigator would co-ordinate inquiries by the IPCC, by the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) and an expected probe by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE).

The landmark findings of the Hillsborough Panel have left the IPCC carrying out the largest inquiry ever into police conduct in the UK.

It is examining the role played by up to 2,444 police officers, who served at 25 different forces - not including South Yorkshire Police.

The Bill published yesterday will cover officers who have moved to a different force since the 1989 tragedy, as well as current civilian
employees.

link
http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/liverpool-news/hillsborough/hillsborough-news/2012/11/22/only-serving-police-officers-must-answer-hillsborough-investigation-questions-under-new-law-100252-32288171/

Stabbed Spurs fan recovering in Rome hospital

A Tottenham Hotspur fan is recovering in hospital after being stabbed when a gang of 50 Italian hooligans stormed a bar in Rome and attacked supporters of the English football team.

Spurs fans were drinking in the Drunken Ship pub before last night's Europa League game with Lazio when trouble flared.

Italian sources told the Press Association that Tottenham fan Ashley Mills, in his mid-twenties and believed to have been stabbed, was seriously injured during the attack and was being treated in hospital.

A spokeswoman for Rome police said Mr Mills had received injuries to his "skull and thigh", was "not in danger of death" and would be kept in hospital for observation.

Wednesday 7 November 2012

13 year-old Millwall fan given ban for racial abuse

A 13 year-old boy has been banned from attending Millwall games "for the foreseeable future" after admitting racially abusing the Bolton Wanderers player Marvin Sordell during a match last month. In a statement, the club said the boy had now written a letter of apology to Sordell.

Dinamo Zagreb fans arrested ahead of PSG match in Paris

European football was plunged into a fresh hooligan problem yesterday when police detained scores of Dinamo Zagreb fans in the French capital ahead of the UEFA Champions League group game against Paris Saint Germain.

Reports said police arrested up to 125 fans who defied a French Government ban and were involved in street fights with rival PSG supporters.

The French Interior Ministry had banned visiting Zagreb fans on Sunday (November 4) because of a serious chance of unrest – and their fears were realised.

If French prosecutors pursue a case against the Croatian fans, each could face up to six months in prison and €30,000 (£24,000/$39,000) in fines for ignoring the travel ban.

The Croatian Football Federation (HNS) backed the arrests.

"We support any action that leads to the prevention of violence or punishing of those who committed violent acts," at sports events, HNS spokesman Neven Cvijanović was quoted as saying.

This is not the first time Croatian football fans have been under the spotlight.

The national association was fined during the 2012 UEFA European Championship for unruly behaviour by hardcore supporters.

Football fans need free speech, too A man has been jailed for singing a song that mocks a religious leader, yet liberty campaigners have said nothing.

Imagine the scene: a young man is led away in handcuffs to begin a prison sentence as his mother is left crying in the courtroom. He is 19 years old, has a good job, has no previous convictions, and has never been in trouble before. These facts cut no ice with the judge, however, as the crime is judged so heinous that only a custodial sentence is deemed appropriate. The young man in question was found guilty of singing a song that mocked and ridiculed a religious leader and his followers.

So where might this shocking story originate? Was it Iran? Saudi Arabia? Afghanistan? Perhaps it was Russia, a variation of the Pussy Riot saga, without the worldwide publicity? No, the country in question is Scotland and the young man is a Rangers fan. He joined in with hundreds of his fellow football fans in singing ‘offensive songs’ which referred to the pope and the Vatican and called Celtic fans ‘Fenian bastards’.

Such songs are part and parcel of the time-honoured tradition of Rangers supporters. And I have yet to meet a Celtic fan who has been caused any harm or suffering by such colourful lyrics. Yet in sentencing Connor McGhie to three months in a young offenders’ institution, the judge stated that ‘the extent of the hatred [McGhie] showed took my breath away’. He went on: ‘Anybody who participates in this disgusting language must be stopped.’

Several things strike me about this court case. For a start, if Rangers fans singing rude songs about their arch rivals Celtic shocks this judge to the core, I can only assume he does not get out very much or knows little of life in Scotland. Not that his ignorance of football culture is a surprise - the chattering classes have always viewed football-related banter with contempt. But what is new about the current climate is that in Scotland, the middle-class distaste for the behaviour of football fans has become enshrined in law.

This new illiberal climate has created a situation where football supporters are increasingly viewed as a public-order incident waiting to happen. Tragically, young fans like Connor McGhie are now fair game because those in powerful positions don’t like what they sing. They have been demonised and criminalised for many years, a trend which reached its logical conclusion last year with the introduction by the ruling Scottish National Party (SNP) of the Offensive Behaviour at Football and Threatening Communication Act, which made it a criminal offence to shout or sing offensive slogans. The consequence is that to be a Celtic or Rangers fan today is to be watched over, regulated, censored and generally treated like a threat to society. There is no discrimination towards different groups of fans – all are treated equally badly. It was this time last year that I wrote on spiked about a dawn raid on the home of a 17-year-old Celtic fan, who was remanded in custody for allegedly singing a republican song the police objected to. In short, the civil liberties of Celtic and Rangers fans alike are now fair game to be trampled on.

What is also noticeable about the imprisonment of McGhie for singing songs is the response of civil-liberties activists and religious-freedom campaigners. Or rather, the lack of response. There has been complete silence. Where are all those who protested vehemently against the detention of Pussy Riot for making similarly profane statements in a Russian cathedral? Where are all those newspaper editorials howling in rage against the incarceration of this young Rangers fan? Perhaps if he stormed into St Andrew’s Cathedral in Glasgow, the spiritual headquarters of the Catholic Church in Scotland, and hurled obscenities at worshippers, he would attract more support.

The other thing that strikes me is how anti-Catholic prejudice seems to be tolerated when it comes from our ‘national treasures’, like Stephen Fry or Richard Dawkins, but not when it comes out of the mouths of football fans. When the pope visited Britain two years ago, liberal campaigners lined up to accuse him of everything from hatred of women to paedophilia. To my knowledge, none of these words were deemed offensive enough to the UK’s Catholic community to prompt arrests or detentions, yet when a Rangers fan shouts of his hatred for the pope, that fan is locked up.


 Tolerance, it seems, exists for those safely ensconced in polite society but not for Rangers or Celtic supporters, the great majority of whom are just ordinary working-class guys who love their team and enjoy expressing their passion for 90 minutes a week. True, they are not observing polite dinner-party etiquette when at a football match, and those of a more delicate nature should perhaps avoid Celtic or Rangers games. But part of the ritual of supporting a team is to wind up your rivals and, for some, this involves being raucous and boorish and hurling the occasional insult.

At the time of writing, Connor McGhie has been released on bail pending an appeal. Young men like him need and deserve the support of people who claim to care about free speech and civil liberties. This support should not be reserved for nice, respectable people, and withheld from those deemed less respectable. Despite my fanatical support for Celtic and my deep loathing for Rangers, there are things that cut through football rivalry. The right to shout the slogans we choose during the game is one of them. 

Tuesday 6 November 2012

Police arrest 100 after Dinamo yobs defy travel ban to brawl in centre of Paris

Fear: Dinamo Zagreb fans have a history of troubleDinamo Zagreb fans brawled with Paris Saint-German supporters in the centre of Paris despite a government ban on Croatian fans attending Tuesday's Champions League clash.



At least 28 people were arrested and one was seriously injured after rival supporters fought a running battle near the Bastille.

link 

Heavy-handed police threats to travelling Toon fans



NEWCASTLE United fans heading to Belgium face "aggressive and illegal" police actions, a senior politician has warned.

Conservative MEP Martin Callanan has written to Belgian police chiefs both nationally and locally to make clear that their expected heavy-handed approach to travelling Toon fans risks breaking the law.

Mr Callanan, a North East MEP, intervened after fans were threatened with a night in the cells for actions which would not result in an arrest back home.

Advice handed out to some 10,000 fans set to head abroad for United’s Europa League game against Club Brugge on November 8 includes a Draconian warning that supporters without a valid ticket for the match will be prevented from travelling to the stadium, and anyone found in the vicinity of the stadium during the whole of match day without a ticket will be arrested.

Police also said that anyone who arrives at any border control point in Belgium with alcohol in their possession will have it taken off them. Mr Callanan has told the local Brugge police commissioner and a Belgian federal police commissioner that the threat of "arbitrary arrest and detention" breaks EU rules on free movement.

As the Euro MP pointed out to officers, Newcastle fans have a record of good behaviour and do not constitute a threat.

Mr Callanan said: "I cannot accept the threat of arbitrary arrest and detention of Newcastle United supporters or indeed anyone from the UK simply exercising their right of free movement within the EU.

"There are long links between the people of Flanders and my constituency and many visitors to Brugge from the North East of England bring considerable economic benefits to the city.

"I would not like to see the goodwill fostered by this history of exchange lost through aggressive policing tactics and illegal threats."

Mr Callanan is set to raise the issue with European Commissioners to ensure police do not break EU law.

link
http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/communities/newcastle/2012/10/30/heavy-handed-police-threats-to-travelling-toon-fans-72703-32122675/

LOCAL businesses and police were today getting ready for the visit of Newcastle United fans with scores of Geordies expected in Brugge in the next 24 hours.

Pubs and bars in the main square area of town were today briefed that drinks must be served in plastic glasses and that tables and chairs outside must be cleared away by midday as police look to stay on top of travelling fans.

Fans travelling without tickets were curious to see if a big screenwould be put in place in the main square but there was no evidence of this early this afternoon as Brugge prepares for the big game.

Saturday 3 November 2012

Football Gossip

Manchester City defender Kolo Toure targets French move

link 

 Short-sighted Manchester City left hamstrung by pointless Garcia, Rodwell & Sinclair signings

link 

 Di Matteo: Manchester United are favoured by referees

 Suarez treatment hypocritical, claims Liverpool boss Rodgers

 Swansea City v Chelsea: Swans Showing Signs Of Finding Feet Again

 Norwich City v Stoke City: Promise Of Goals At Carrow Road

 Refs 'could boycott Chelsea'

Wenger wary of deadly Van Persie

Arsenal know precisely how dangerous Robin van Persie can be, but Arsene Wenger does not think that will make it any easier to stop the Manchester United forward.
The Gunners are set to face off against their former captain for the first time since his £24million summer move to Old Trafford on Saturday lunchtime.

Van Persie netted some 132 goals in eight seasons with the north London club, and Wenger said: "Robin Van Persie has a great quality in the fraction of a second that he understands where to go - you can talk and talk and talk, but defenders have to read that at the same time. His speed of analysing those little pockets around the box are absolutely exceptional."

He continued: "The team know him as well because they have played against him in training. But in the game it is a question of timing - how quickly will they read it as well as he reads it?"

The Gunners were humiliated 8-2 on their last visit to United in August 2011.

However, they were crippled by injuries to key men for the game, in which then rookie full-back Carl Jenkinson was sent off, with Aaron Ramsey the only likely starter on Saturday from the XI that miserable afternoon.

Wenger insists while painful at the time, that freak result under "exceptional circumstances" following an energy-sapping Champions League qualifier in Udinese is now well and truly out of the squad's system.

Nevertheless, the Arsenal manager insists damage limitation was never part of his footballing psyche.
"There is purely an emotional aspect in the 8-2, but there is no mathematical consequence. We lost a game, that is all," he said.

"The football aspect was easy to explain. We gave everything in Udinese three days before in 35 degrees at night and I knew that we would be dead. We lost vital defensive players in that game. We went out very exposed, but the most important game of the week was at Udinese."

Source: PA

Sheffield Wednesday's Gary Madine charged with affray

Gary MadineA Sheffield Wednesday footballer has appeared in court charged with affray and intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

Striker Gary Madine appeared at Sheffield Magistrates Court in connection with an incident on Carver Street in March.

The 22-year-old former Carlisle United player was granted bail.

Mr Madine is due to appear at Leeds Crown Court on 13 November.

Sunday 28 October 2012

'Embarrassed? Nothing about Hillsborough embarrasses me':

'Embarrassed? Nothing about Hillsborough embarrasses me': What controversial police chief told Merseyside councillors

The disgraced officer, who has quit after claims he smeared Liverpool fans in the aftermath of the disaster, told the police authority the most awkward moment of his career was falling over on his first day as a constable

 Disgraced police chief Sir Norman Bettison infuriated Merseyside councillors, it emerged this weekend, when he told them the episode in his career he would most like to forget was not the Hillsborough disaster, but falling over on his first day as a constable.

Sir Norman, who resigned last week as chief constable of West Yorkshire, told an interview panel in October 1998, when he was applying for the top post at Merseyside Police, that the incident he would most like to forget was "that fall on my first day in uniform".

The following month, during an "informal meeting" with all members of the police authority, he was challenged over why he had not used the opportunity to express regret for the Hillsborough disaster. He insisted instead: "Nothing about Hillsborough embarrasses me." The exchange came only months after he had been named as a member of a South Yorkshire Police unit set up to "deflect blame" away from senior officers in the months following the crush that killed 96 Liverpool fans at the FA Cup semi-final in April 1989.

Relatives of Hillsborough victims, and the MP who first revealed Sir Norman's role in the aftermath of the disaster, condemned the revelation yesterday, but said it was entirely in line with his refusal to accept any responsibility for the behaviour of South Yorkshire Police after Hillsborough.

The Hillsborough Independent Panel reported last month that the force had amended scores of witness statements to remove criticism of the police, in an attempt to shift blame on to the fans. In Sir Norman's resignation statement last week, he said that an inquiry into his role after Hillsborough was "a distraction" to the West Yorkshire force.

Sir Norman's appointment to head policing across the Liverpool area only nine years after Hillsborough sparked huge protests from victims' relatives and MPs, who complained that the decision was "insensitive to say the least".

Six months earlier, Liverpool MP Maria Eagle had told the House of Commons that Sir Norman was part of a South Yorkshire team set up to orchestrate "a black propaganda campaign which aimed to deflect the blame for what had happened on to anyone other than themselves". He has always denied this.

At least four councillors on the nine-strong appointments panel subsequently claimed they had been given no idea of Sir Norman's Hillsborough connections before they rubber-stamped his appointment in October 1998. Three later resigned. Sir Norman's application form, submitted while he was assistant chief constable at South Yorkshire, referred to his policing experience only from October 1989, six months after Hillsborough.

Minutes of an "informal meeting" between Sir Norman and the full police authority on 2 November 1989, released by the Hillsborough Independent Inquiry, show that councillor Frank Prendergast queried the new chief constable on the answer he had given to the interview question about "the incident you would most like to forget".

Mr Prendergast said: "I cannot understand how your Hillsborough experience could not have been touched on in your answer."

Sir Norman replied: "I considered [the question] to relate to my proudest achievement and my most embarrassing incident as a police officer. I did not interpret it to mean the most traumatic. The embarrassing moment that flashed in my mind was that fall on my first day in uniform.

"Nothing about Hillsborough embarrasses me. I didn't think of Hillsborough when the question was posed, I still believe it to be tangential. Humour was an approach that I adopted to that part of the question."

Mr Prendergast added: "I find it hard to believe that a major catastrophe was not the issue you would most wish to forget."

Phil Hammond, whose 14-year-old son Philip was one of the youngest to die at Hillsborough, said yesterday: "Well that's Norman Bettison all over. He doesn't think; he just ploughs ahead.

"The day he came down to the police authority he was just all smiles, as though nothing had happened. He should have been prosecuted. He needs to pay for what he has done wrong."

Ms Eagle said: "This is in line with Bettison's attitude towards Hillsborough. His application was very cleverly written, and did not make any reference either to him being at the ground on the day or his involvement afterwards."

Sir Norman's resignation came two days after Ms Eagle accused him in Parliament of boasting about making up false stories to blame Liverpool supporters for the Hillsborough disaster while he was serving with South Yorkshire police.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC), which is undertaking two investigations into Sir Norman, issued a statement saying: "Retirement or resignation does not prevent criminal prosecution should the investigation identify criminal offences, including misconduct in a public office."

link

Wednesday 24 October 2012

Police arrest fans prior to Ajax v Man City game

Amsterdam police made 25 arrests during the build-up to Ajax's Champions League clash at home to Manchester City.

Fans of both clubs clashed in the city and the arrests were made for public violence offences, a spokesman confirmed, after troubled flared around 5pm.

"There have been 25 arrests before the Champions League match for public violence, mostly in the red light district," the spokeswoman said. "Police first took action at 5pm. Most of the fans that have been arrested are from Ajax.

"The city centre was very busy but now as the match approached it is getting calmer and more quiet as the fans head to the stadium. We were aware that it would be busy before and after the match and we had deployed extra police to deal with this.

"We hope that it will remain calm after the match."

Tuesday 23 October 2012

Police chief 'boasted' about smearing Liverpool fans in Hillsborough disaster

A West Yorkshire Police Chief Constable "boasted" about smearing Liverpool fans in the aftermath of the Hillsborough disaster, a senior Labour MP has claimed.

 

Sir Norman Bettison, who was a chief inspector with South Yorkshire Police at the time of the 1989 tragedy, said he had been asked to help "concoct" the force's version of events, it is claimed.

Shadow transport secretary Maria Eagle used parliamentary privilege to make the allegations, which were based on new evidence from a witness who discussed the disaster with Sir Norman.

Ms Eagle, a Merseyside MP, said Sir Norman had "always denied any involvement in the dirty tricks campaign".

But she alleged he was behind the "black propaganda" campaign.

 Hillsborough: '1,400 police named' 

The police watchdog has been given the names of more than 1,400 officers as it investigates South Yorkshire Police's role in the Hillsborough tragedy in which 96 Liverpool fans died, MPs have been told.

Home Affairs Select Committee chairman Keith Vaz said the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) received the names from the force's top officer.

Mr Vaz added: "The South Yorkshire chief constable wrote to me on Friday to say he sent a list of 1,444 names of former and serving officers of South Yorkshire to the IPCC. This is a huge number of names - more than we expected."

Ninety-six Liverpool FC fans died following the crush at Sheffield Wednesday's Hillsborough stadium in April 1989.

The "thorough and wide-ranging" IPCC probe will focus on "potential criminality and police misconduct in respect of police officers, both both serving and retired", Home Secretary Theresa May said.

She was opening a Commons debate on the Hillsborough Independent Panel's report, which last month revealed some fans could have survived if emergency services had responded sooner, and blamed police for an official cover-up designed to smear innocent supporters.

Attorney General Dominic Grieve last week asked the High Court to consider ordering fresh inquests into the 96 deaths.

Prime Minister David Cameron apologised to grieving families for the "double injustice" of their relatives dying in the disaster and their names being blackened for 23 years.

Mrs May told MPs: "After the truth must come justice and after the apology, accountability."
 

Sunday 21 October 2012

Hillsborough: Now CPS is under fire

Senior prosecutor was at 1990 meeting that decided not to read all the eyewitness evidence

One of the most senior officials at the Crown Prosecution Service –which will decide whether South Yorkshire Police should be put in the dock over the Hillsborough disaster – was present when prosecutors decided in 1990 that they did not need to read all of the evidence before ruling out criminal charges.


Mike Kennedy, operations director at the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), warned colleagues at the time that it could be "particularly embarrassing" if the public found out that the body had failed to read all the witness statements before reaching their momentous decision on who should be blamed for the tragedy, in which 96 Liverpool fans died.

The Independent on Sunday understands that the CPS did not consider all the witness statements so they could reach a "speedy conclusion", during a meeting in London nine months after the crush. Rather, they allowed the police to choose the evidence on which prosecutors based their decision.

Minutes of the meeting, released to the Hillsborough Independent Panel, reveal that: "Mr Kennedy indicated that he would be unhappy if that were to occur, particularly as there was a possibility of being discovered at a later stage [that not all the statements had been seen] … this might be particularly embarrassing if a decision not to prosecute was reached." A subsequent legal ruling recorded that the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) was sent "approximately 11 per cent" of the Hillsborough witness statements.

The revelations put the legal establishment in the spotlight over the official failure to get to the truth of what happened when 96 people died at the FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest on 15 April 1989. They also raised questions over whether Mr Kennedy should have any involvement in discussions over what happens next.

The present DPP, Keir Starmer, ordered a fresh inquiry this month after the panel revealed police had changed scores of statements in an attempt to push blame on to the fans. More than 200 serving and former officers are expected to be investigated.

But the CPS "Joint Opinion", issued in August 1990, ruled out charges against any organisations or individuals. The advice, from the late Lord Justice Williams and Peter Birts QC, has been used as a reference point ever since. The Hillsborough panel's report, released last month, stated that the Joint Opinion "was accepted by the CPS, apparently without further consideration".

Minutes from the meeting between Mr Birts, police officers and the CPS in January 1990, state: "There was considerable discussion to whether all the documentation, ie statements should be submitted to counsel [Mr Birts]." The document adds: "Mr Birts indicated he would be quite happy to read everything." The minutes also state that police should be told to "edit out superfluous material" from the statements.

A CPS spokeswoman last night insisted that a fresh team, not including Mr Kennedy, would review Hillsborough. She added: "There were no criticisms of the CPS in the panel report, and we are not specifically reviewing the previous decision-making. The DPP at the time took the advice of two highly distinguished counsel, Peter Birts QC and Gareth Williams QC … However, if when reviewing the material disclosed by the panel we reach different conclusions to those arrived at by the CPS previously, we will inevitably assess how and why any earlier decisions were taken."

Sheila Coleman, of the Hillsborough Justice Campaign, said the revelations about the original CPS review were "absolutely disgraceful". She added: "To only go through 11 per cent of the witness statements – it's unbelievable." Neither Mr Birts nor Mr Kennedy was available for comment yesterday.

link

 

200 arrested at Dortmund and Schalke derby

Around 200 people were arrested as ugly scenes marred the 141st Revier derby between Borussia Dortmund and Schalke on Saturday.

Despite repeated appeals by both clubs for their fans to behave during the week, violent skirmishes were reported in the build-up to a game which Schalke won 2-1 in Dortmund.

This comes after some high profile recent supporter incidents, including Serbian fans racially abusing England U21 players and a Leeds fan smacking Sheffield Wednesday goalkeeper Chris Kirkland in the face.

Confrontation: Dortmund fans face riot police before the game
Confrontation: Dortmund fans face riot police before the game

According to local police reports, a restaurant was gutted by Dortmund followers 'with furniture ripped apart and used as missiles against opposition fans and police'.
One police car was damaged as mounted police, riot police and agents with dogs were brought in to keep the spectators apart.

Flare up: Smoke fills the stadium
Flare up: Smoke fills the stadium
Flare
Hours before the game kicked off at 15.30 local time, followers of both clubs attacked police who tried to segregate them in the Westphalian city and water cannons and tear gas had to be deployed to keep them at a safe distance.

Mounted police were 'attacked by Dortmund hooligans with cobble stones', according to a police report.

The first reports of trouble were circulated almost three hours before kick-off when 'a group of around 100 masked Schalke fans left the underground station and went on the rampage, lighting flares on their way towards the stadium'.

'This has nothing to do with football supporters and we don't want to see them in Dortmund,' said the Dortmund police chief director Dieter Keil.

Face off: Fans stand before the police
Face off: Fans stand before the police

There was further trouble inside the Westfalenstadion with Schalke fans lighting flares and displaying offensive banners, despite bans on such material.
The culprits were all caught on video, however, and will be prosecuted, according to the police statement.

Victory: Schalke celebrate their win
Victory: Schalke celebrate their win

The majority of those arrested were Schalke followers, with the police suspecting the clashes had been organised by the rival groups.

Disturbances were kept to a minimum after the game with the police successfully able to keep both sets of fans apart.

Saturday 20 October 2012

Sheffield Wednesday manager Dave Jones brands Leeds United fans as ‘vile animals’

SHEFFIELD Wednesday manager Dave Jones has described Leeds fans as “vile animals” after Owls keeper Chris Kirkland was attacked on the pitch during Hillsborough’s Yorkshire derby.
 Owls keeper Chris Kirkland receives treatment by Wednesday medical staff after being punched by a Leeds United fan.

Jones also objected to chanting by a larger number of away supporters and said seats had been damaged in the West Stand where they were accommodated.

The furious Owls manager felt that the away supporters’ behaviour marred a “great game” and an impressive performance by his team.

Leeds issued a statement apologising for the assault on keeper Kirkland and said they would co-operate with the police and football authorities in identifying him.

Disgrace: The fan attacked Chris Kirkland

Jones also criticised Leeds boss Neil Warnock for encouraging his players to applaud the away fans after the game.

The Owls manager, referring to the Leeds fans, said: “You can’t let them get away with that - they’re vile animals.

“They need to clean their house and get it in order. They should be banned from every away game from now until they sort it, because that was an absolute disgrace.

“If I’ve got three subs on, and Chris Kikrland is carried off, what happens? We have to go down to 10 men and put an outfield player in goal. That’s not right.”

Kirkland was struck in the face by a fan who came on to the p itch from the away end moments after Leeds had equalised in the 76th minute.

The keeper was floored and there was a four-minute hold-up while he received attention.

Jones said Kirkland, who completed the game was sore and dazed, and probably concussed.
“It spoils it, because it was a really good derby game,” added Jones.

“I said to Neil, and I’m not talking behind his back, that to send his players to clap them [the fans], no, I’m sorry, that’s not right.

“If you’re going to make a stand, make it in your own house.

“How many fans did Leeds bring? (It was 5,000). They’re all going to get tarred with the same brush, and that’s not right, but they will do, because from what I could hear, it wasn’t one person chanting the vile things, there were quite a lot of them.

“I thought those days had gone.”

A Leeds United statement said: “Leeds United would like to publicly apologise for the actions of the fan who went on to the pitch and attacked Chris Kirkland.

“The club will fully co-operate with the police and the football authorities to identify the individual concerned.
“After the week that football has endure, there is no place place for this behaviour, and the majoprity of Leeds fans will be ashamed of his actions.”

Friday 19 October 2012

Chelsea refuse to reveal details of John Terry 'disciplinary action'

Chelsea have refused to elaborate on the ‘further disciplinary action’ they have taken against John Terry after he decided not to appeal against his four-match ban for racially abusing Anton Ferdinand.

Terry has apologised for the language he used after announcing he will not challenge the ban and fine of £220,000 issued by an independent Football Association regulatory commission two weeks ago.
Terry has not, however, apologised directly to Ferdinand.

In a statement released by his agent, Terry said: ‘After careful consideration, I have decided not to appeal against the FA judgment.

‘I want to take this opportunity to apologise to everyone for the language I used in the game.
‘Although I’m disappointed with the FA judgment, I accept that the language I used, regardless of the context, is not acceptable.’

Chelsea said they have taken further steps against their captain but were coy on exactly what punishment they have imposed.

A club statement said: ‘The board has taken further disciplinary action in addition to the four-match suspension and fine imposed by the FA.

'That disciplinary action will remain confidential.’

Terry will now miss the Blues' next four domestic matches, starting with a trip to Tottenham on Saturday, followed by two home ties against Manchester United in the league and Capital One Cup and Swansea away in the Premier League on November 3.

 

 

Wednesday 17 October 2012

Officers Accused In 'Football Conspiracy' Trial

Detectives face charges of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice after football altercation.

Three serving Merseyside Police detectives have gone on trial accused of conspiring to pervert the course of justice in connection with an altercation between rival football fans.

Det Sgt Greg Symon (40), of Allerton, Det Con Christopher Sheron (43), of Liverpool city centre, and Det Con Mark Scarratt (43), of Tuebrook, went on trial with five other men at Preston Crown Court this week.

The allegations relate to an altercation between rival Liverpool and Everton fans outside a pub in Anfield, as they made their way to the stadium on January 16 2011, when the two teams played. Two of the officers were off duty at the time and involved in the incident, it is alleged.

PoliceOracle.com understands the charges centre on the group allegedly applying pressure to have a witness withdraw his evidence over the altercation.

The officers were initially placed on restricted duties but were suspended after being arrested. They were charged in January this year.


The trial, which is ongoing, is expected to last eight weeks.

All three officers deny the charges, which were brought following a Merseyside Police Professional Standards investigation.

Angry Barcelona chief hits out at Arsenal and Man City

Barcelona president Sandro Rosell has accused Arsenal and Manchester City of attempting to ‘destabilise’ the Spanish club by approaching their players.

Arsenal have signed several youngsters from Barcelona in recent years, most notably former captain Cesc Fabregas, who rejoined the Catalan giants last summer.

Man City, meanwhile, are rumoured to have attempted to start transfer negotiations with Fabregas and fellow midfielder Sergio Busquets.

Rosell has reacted angrily to the situation, claiming the Premier League duo are deliberately unsettling their players.

He told Mundo Deportivo: “Manchester City want to take our players and destabilise us. It also happens with Arsenal, who come after our young players and offer them lots of money.

“Now City have joined in,” he continued. “We are the enemy to beat.

“There are a lot of people who don’t want Barca to do well and don’t want us to win.”

Video: Violence overshadows England Under-21’s win over Serbia


Millwall and West Ham fans mass brawl at Camden gig


Police in riot gear halted a rock concert in north London and arrested six men after a fight broke out between rival football fans on the dance floor.

The performance by Kid British, who were playing their last gig in London before they split up, was just three songs in when the fight started.

Witnesses told of seeing around 50 Millwall and West Ham fans enter the Camden Barfly and chant at each other before a mass brawl broke out.

One music fan at the gig wrote on a website that “all hell broke loose” when a moshpit started three songs into the set by the Manchester band.

He wrote: “[The football fans] just all started beating the c**p out of each other, there were four older men in Burberry suits at the back standing trying to act hard who were somehow involved and initiating it.
“The men from the mosh kept coming to them and these men were telling them to beat up these innocent guys, it was disgusting.”

Police rushed into the venue in Chalk Farm Road at 9.55pm and arrested six men for public order offences and being drunken and disorderly.

The blogger wrote: “[They] continued to chant and shout about f**king Millwall and West Ham as the police literally dragged them out of the venue. “The Barfly shut down we were forced outside by police, who were trying to control the pricks who had all formed a group in the middle of the road jumping up and down.”

The band, who announced they were splitting up earlier this year and are currently playing their farewell tour, retweeted angry comments by fans on their Twitter page.

A Scotland Yard spokesman said six people had been arrested on suspicion of causing violent disorder.

Sunday 14 October 2012

Fan riot halts Senegal-Ivory Coast football match


Arsenal Prepare £8m Bid for French International Winger

Arsene Wenger may well be looking for possible additions to his Gunners attack and appears to have identified the French international wide-man as a feasible option.

 Payet Arsenal

 The 25 year old former Saint-Etienne attacker enjoyed a solid, if unspectacular, first season at the Stade Metropole and may well be the latest in a long line of talents that boss Rudi Garcia has seen leave the Lille in recent seasons.

Indeed Arsenal already raided the club to bring in Gervinho in the summer of 2011 and the likes of Yohan Cabaye, Eden Hazard and Moussa Sow have also been allowed to leave the club following their title success of 2010/11.

Payet is a speedy wide-man with an eye for goal and a player Wenger may see as a possible option if the North London club elects to sell contract rebel Theo Walcott in January in preference to losing the England man on a free transfer next summer.

Dmitri Payet forced his way into the French national team set-up under Laurent Blanc but has had less success on this front since the appointment of Didier Deschamps as Les Bleus boss.

Man City duo fine after Senegal outbreaks

The Senegalese Football Federation (FSF) has confirmed via its official website the "very sombre circumstances" that forced their nation's meeting with Ivory Coast to be abandoned due to rioting.

Ivory Coast were leading the African Nations Cup qualifier 2-0 at the Stade Leopold Senghor and 6-2 on aggregate - a result which appears likely to stand, sending Senegal out - when the match was stopped in the 72nd minute.

 

After former Chelsea striker Didier Drogba had scored his second goal of the game from the penalty spot in the 70th minute, there were disturbances from the home fans in the stands, with small fires being set alight and objects thrown.

Players and staff from both teams grouped together in the centre circle, while the Ivorian supporters had to flee onto the pitch, joining their national team, before being led to safety by the police. The match was abandoned 40 minutes later.

The incident was confirmed on the official website of the Senegalese Football Federation: "Unfortunately the match ended in very sombre circumstances.

"The referee was forced to stop the match in the 72nd minute with the score at 2-0 because of serious outbreaks in the stands by very unhappy Senegalese supporters. The police took the public out after many confrontations."

There have been no reports of injuries sustained to players, with Manchester City issuing a statement on their official website that both Kolo and Yaya Toure were unharmed in the disturbances.

Should the result stand, Ivory Coast's qualification for January's African Nations Cup will be assured, meaning the likes of Arsenal's Gervinho, City's Yaya and Kolo Toure, and Newcastle midfielder Cheick Tiote are likely to participate at the tournament.

Newcastle pair Demba Ba and Papiss Cisse were also lining up for Senegal, along with West Ham's Mohamed Diame in the match.