outsider wrote: lights on phones???????
Morecambe Jack wrote:Poor home numbers, vocally non existent until we went 2-1 up and decided actually we are all supporting the same team. Shame that most of those who create the atmosphere have been banned from the ground. Overzealous stewarding not helping matters, God help them if they actually encountered any real football hooliganism.
Teams like Morecambe wrote:Are smoke bombs banned by clubs through choice or are they breaking the law. I ask this because the group of police who stand by the segregated area didn't react. At Hartlepool we were thoroughly searched and even had an inflatable ball confiscated.
Keith wrote:Teams like Morecambe wrote:Are smoke bombs banned by clubs through choice or are they breaking the law. I ask this because the group of police who stand by the segregated area didn't react. At Hartlepool we were thoroughly searched and even had an inflatable ball confiscated.
Yes, it is a criminal act. At Hartlepool, when their fans set off their smoke bomb, the police at the end of our stand spent about twenty minutes videoing the group that did it and talking with stewards to identify the culprit. I assume they would be acting later. Perhaps our stewards & police acted later rather than risk causing a problem by arresting someone in a crowd?
The inflatable ball that was confiscated, was that the inflatable ball that had gone on the pitch twice? The first time Barry handed it back, the second time a steward confiscated it. Or were there two balls confiscated?
Teams like Morecambe wrote:Keith wrote:Teams like Morecambe wrote:Are smoke bombs banned by clubs through choice or are they breaking the law. I ask this because the group of police who stand by the segregated area didn't react. At Hartlepool we were thoroughly searched and even had an inflatable ball confiscated.
Yes, it is a criminal act. At Hartlepool, when their fans set off their smoke bomb, the police at the end of our stand spent about twenty minutes videoing the group that did it and talking with stewards to identify the culprit. I assume they would be acting later. Perhaps our stewards & police acted later rather than risk causing a problem by arresting someone in a crowd?
The inflatable ball that was confiscated, was that the inflatable ball that had gone on the pitch twice? The first time Barry handed it back, the second time a steward confiscated it. Or were there two balls confiscated?
Just the one. I see your point about the ball potentialy interfering with play (remember Liverpool at Sunderland?) but it just seems petty to me. At no other sporting event in this country will you find spectators being treated like football fans are. Entering a football stadium is like going through airport security, tense and intimidating. Carlisle last season was the perfect example of this. 'Random searches' which were only given to those under a certain age and a police escort also for the same group of people. It's hardly surprising attendances are falling. Who wants to pay £17 to watch fourth tier football with no atmosphere whilst being watched constantly by a group of jobsworths.
Teams like Morecambe wrote:Keith wrote:Teams like Morecambe wrote:Are smoke bombs banned by clubs through choice or are they breaking the law. I ask this because the group of police who stand by the segregated area didn't react. At Hartlepool we were thoroughly searched and even had an inflatable ball confiscated.
Yes, it is a criminal act. At Hartlepool, when their fans set off their smoke bomb, the police at the end of our stand spent about twenty minutes videoing the group that did it and talking with stewards to identify the culprit. I assume they would be acting later. Perhaps our stewards & police acted later rather than risk causing a problem by arresting someone in a crowd?
The inflatable ball that was confiscated, was that the inflatable ball that had gone on the pitch twice? The first time Barry handed it back, the second time a steward confiscated it. Or were there two balls confiscated?
Just the one. I see your point about the ball potentialy interfering with play (remember Liverpool at Sunderland?) but it just seems petty to me. At no other sporting event in this country will you find spectators being treated like football fans are. Entering a football stadium is like going through airport security, tense and intimidating. Carlisle last season was the perfect example of this. 'Random searches' which were only given to those under a certain age and a police escort also for the same group of people. It's hardly surprising attendances are falling. Who wants to pay £17 to watch fourth tier football with no atmosphere whilst being watched constantly by a group of jobsworths.
Teams like Morecambe wrote:At no other sporting event in this country will you find spectators being treated like football fans are. Entering a football stadium is like going through airport security, tense and intimidating. Carlisle last season was the perfect example of this. 'Random searches' which were only given to those under a certain age and a police escort also for the same group of people. It's hardly surprising attendances are falling.
Keith wrote:When I arrived at Hartlepool I was told they had extra stewards on and were being particularly strict on where our fans could go "because we've been warned about your trouble-makers". This 'warning' about a club that used to have a fantastic reputation for being trouble free and friendly wherever we went.
Keith wrote:Teams like Morecambe wrote:At no other sporting event in this country will you find spectators being treated like football fans are. Entering a football stadium is like going through airport security, tense and intimidating. Carlisle last season was the perfect example of this. 'Random searches' which were only given to those under a certain age and a police escort also for the same group of people. It's hardly surprising attendances are falling.
As I said in the Notts County match thread:Keith wrote:When I arrived at Hartlepool I was told they had extra stewards on and were being particularly strict on where our fans could go "because we've been warned about your trouble-makers". This 'warning' about a club that used to have a fantastic reputation for being trouble free and friendly wherever we went.
Unfortunately, we've now developed a reputation for having trouble makers, so we are stewarded in that manner. We reap what we sow.
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