Bladepicker
Paul Coutts Fan Club Founder Member
Referring to the OP, I didn't see any evidence of anyone getting crushed at the turnstiles, not on that video, or from my own experience on the day. I think if we want to talk about the mishandling of the crowd by police, which caused fans to miss a significant part of the game, then fair enough. But let's not dress this up like some kind of Hillsboro disaster mark II, because it wasn't, and whilst the OP gained good dramatic effect for the subject title of the thread it doesn't appear to be what this topic is actually about?
I arrived on Leppings Lane about ten to one. There were lots of Wednesday supporters around at that time and the police were filtering United supporters over to the away turnstiles on the right hand side. There were no queues at the turnstiles at that time and no one getting crushed. In the period between then and kick off, there were frequent announcements to the fans on Leppings Lane, asking them to make their way into the ground immediately as the game was starting shortly. In other words, there were a lot of Wednesday fans just hanging around to goad the United fans and generally make life unpleasant as we entered the ground.
It was that presence of Wednesday fans in large numbers outside the turnstiles on Leppings Lane that was the problem. I think if the police had marched the tram loads of Blades towards the ground at that point all hell would have broken loose. The Wednesday fans were not outside the turnstiles because there weren't enough turnstiles open for them to enter the ground. They were outside the turnstiles because they wanted to be there and taunt incoming United fans.
I don't know what powers the police have to make fans enter the ground who don't want to - I suppose they have none? But they do have powers of dispersal. I would imagine if they'd tried to exercise those powers of dispersal they'd have created an even bigger problem though. It seems to me that they decided to let natural dispersal take place, knowing that most fans would move to enter the ground before kick off - and then advance the visiting fans to the ground. I can understand why they would do that - but I can't understand why the kick off wasn't delayed or why Wednesday didn't have more turnstiles open to minimise delays for the fans and possible injury.
Maybe I'm missing something here, but I don't really see what the police did wrong - it seems to me they were just trying to preserve law and order? Same with the keeping fans in at the end. I was quite happy to stay behind 15 minutes in the knowledge that I would be able to walk back safely to my car.
I think the blame here should not be that fans were held back as I get why they did that, but that they didn't have appropriate plans in place for crowd management AGAIN which allowed this situation to arise.
That is the fault of SWFC and SYP - why only have that awful flimsy barrier?
Why not form a wall of officers between the crowd? And, if none of that was an option, why allow Wednesday to even open the lower tier for home fans so there was a mix - it was the first derby for 6 years? It was never going to be fans swapping stories of memries past over a clotted cream scone and a brew was it? Why not have more trams on for a special occasion - why not make sure officers clear potential flashponts on the tram route? And only 2 turnstyles open? What a joke.
Fact is hundreds of Blades not wanting to cause any trouble have missed nearly a 5th of an event they paid £42 quid for when they set off an hour before the game to get there on the tram due to issues that anyone with a modicum of common sense could have anticiapted beforehand.
It is unfair and they deserve a refund from Sheffield Wednesday and an apology from South Yorkshire Police.