William Henry Foulkes
Big Member
I thought this post by Hurby deserved a thread of its own
It shows some of the bad and some of the good that happened yesterday - and raises many questions, one of which is:
How can we make away games family friendly?
"My 12-year-old son was caught in the middle of the action today and by all evidence was very frightened and upset. The Rochdale stewards took him and his dad away from the fights and hostilities, and led him to the United dressing room, telling Adkins: "Here is one of your lads who was scared by what is happening over there". All credit to Adkins, he spent time to console him, took selfies on my child's phone, asked him who his favourite player was and fetched him (Billy Sharp) to come and say hello and give some comfort as well. Billy took the shirt off his back, signed it and gave it to my son. All this consoled my child somewhat - normally, it would have been the highlight of his week! - but until he went to bed, he wouldn't stop repeating who punched whom, what words were shouted, how hostile people came across to be. And this comes from a child who holds a season ticket and goes to away matches at least once a month! In all honesty, I am starting to think that there may be better ways to organise his weekends. And I am not thinking about the poor United scoring record (I don't think my child remembers anything different in his lifetime!), but about wanting to keep him away from some spiteful mob that I would not characterise as a 'community'. This, I think, is sad."
Posting from my phone and can't do the subject justice but a few thoughts:
It should be a day out at a football match not a traumatising experience of drunkenness, aggression, violence, and civil war.
It's not just about families - we should all be able to enjoy the day out.
It's like a return to the 80s - we've moved on from there before so this problem is not insoluble.
Banning the perpetrators where possible could be a start - does this work?
What can the club do?
They need to make a statement acknowledging the issue and steps forward
Credit to stewards, NA, Billy, and Hurby.
I hope the club can do something about this.
It shows some of the bad and some of the good that happened yesterday - and raises many questions, one of which is:
How can we make away games family friendly?
"My 12-year-old son was caught in the middle of the action today and by all evidence was very frightened and upset. The Rochdale stewards took him and his dad away from the fights and hostilities, and led him to the United dressing room, telling Adkins: "Here is one of your lads who was scared by what is happening over there". All credit to Adkins, he spent time to console him, took selfies on my child's phone, asked him who his favourite player was and fetched him (Billy Sharp) to come and say hello and give some comfort as well. Billy took the shirt off his back, signed it and gave it to my son. All this consoled my child somewhat - normally, it would have been the highlight of his week! - but until he went to bed, he wouldn't stop repeating who punched whom, what words were shouted, how hostile people came across to be. And this comes from a child who holds a season ticket and goes to away matches at least once a month! In all honesty, I am starting to think that there may be better ways to organise his weekends. And I am not thinking about the poor United scoring record (I don't think my child remembers anything different in his lifetime!), but about wanting to keep him away from some spiteful mob that I would not characterise as a 'community'. This, I think, is sad."
Posting from my phone and can't do the subject justice but a few thoughts:
It should be a day out at a football match not a traumatising experience of drunkenness, aggression, violence, and civil war.
It's not just about families - we should all be able to enjoy the day out.
It's like a return to the 80s - we've moved on from there before so this problem is not insoluble.
Banning the perpetrators where possible could be a start - does this work?
What can the club do?
They need to make a statement acknowledging the issue and steps forward
Credit to stewards, NA, Billy, and Hurby.
I hope the club can do something about this.