Is that one nil a reference to them having less strict rules?CPFC 1 - 0 BHAFC
Not a ban but...
A condition of sale is that the ticket may only be used by the purchaser and is not transferable and you may be asked for proof at the ground therefore it is advisable that you take with you either;
a. Your membership Card
b. Season Ticket Card
5) Failure to produce proof that the ticket is yours could result in refusal of entry to the match.
Read more at Ticket News: Away Leg
im pretty sure these are the normal rules for any all-ticket games, at all clubs. its law that you cant sell on a football ticket. whats happening here is people dont normally bother to check the terms and conditions, but everyones having a little paddy this time because the club asked for ID checks. blame the mugs we have in our support who like to vandalise locals cars (aint palace fans, they dont have that many )
Apparently according to Darren Balkham, the stringent criteria were set down by both clubs NOT the police, which is staggering
The Last Word: Orwellian curb on fans Comment - Football - The Independent
You are a law-abiding football supporter. You pay your taxes and adhere to your responsibilities as a good citizen. Your basic rights are challenged without recourse and you are treated with contempt, as a threat to public order.
The next time you attend a high-profile match as an away supporter, be sure to carry proof of your identity. You will be filmed, ostentatiously, by police and subjected to the attention of sniffer dogs. You will be contained and controlled.
Do you, like most right-thinking people, believe these Orwellian aberrations cannot happen in 2013? Do you assume the dogma of demonisation died with Thatcherism and the mayhem of the eighties? Then think again. Consider the indignities the authorities are seeking to impose on fans of Crystal Palace and Brighton when they meet in the Championship play-offs.
The clubs should be ashamed of themselves for their complicity in agreeing to a uniquely draconian set of eight conditions, encouraged by the Metropolitan and Sussex Police. They have succumbed to the restriction of natural freedoms by stealth and have sanctioned an ID system by default.
Anyone wanting to watch the next instalment of what is, despite its suburban connotations, a surprisingly intense derby must be a season-ticket holder. They will be allowed a solitary ticket, which must only be used by the purchaser, whose details and seat number will be passed to the police.
All away fans must carry a separate document which confirms their identity. This, together with the ticket, must be handed over for examination by police or stewards at any time at the ground, and when travelling to and from the game.
Failure to comply will result in refusal of entry to the match and any other matches this season. One-year bans will be imposed on anyone who has sold, or given away, a ticket registered in their name, and on anyone found with someone else's ticket.
Pause for a second and let that sink in. Imagine the outcry if similar restrictions were in place at London's O2 Arena next Saturday, to choose another act of mass entertainment at random. The Garage Nation music event will go on until 4am without the authorities being in Defcon 1 mode.
Yet football grounds are, to use police jargon, "sterile areas". Our national game is a fashionable and profitable target. Cowed by perceptions of vulnerability to a new generation of hooligans, it is further compromised by lack of care and consideration for its natural audience.
Bayern Munich's midweek success invited recycling of a quote from their president, Uli Hoeness: "We do not think fans are like cows who you milk. Football has got to be for everybody. That's the biggest difference between us and England."
Yet Uefa are equally indifferent to the exploitation of Chelsea's fans by the licensed touts of the so-called secondary ticketing industry. Paltry allocations for the Europa League final in Amsterdam have pushed ticket prices as high as £2,400.
Meanwhile, the casual criminalisation of fans gathers momentum. "Kettling" techniques are being used in crowd control. When Brighton fans last visited Selhurst Park, on 1 December, they were kept behind for nearly an hour after the game. Supporters were forbidden from making their own way to local stations and some were prevented from returning to their cars. Crystal Palace fans complained of similar restrictions at Brighton.
"Bubble" matches, in which freedom of movement is suspended and independent travel not allowed, are becoming more prevalent. Over 50 have taken place in the past decade, involving at least 14 clubs. Away fans travel on licensed coaches under police escort. Tickets are often picked up en route, in service stations or industrial estates. The guardians of the game have remained silent. They are, literally, taking a right liberty.
Ticket News: Away Leg
No explicit threat to ban fans should a ticket be passed on.
Met Police 1 - 0 BHAFC
Not a ban but...
A condition of sale is that the ticket may only be used by the purchaser and is not transferable and you may be asked for proof at the ground therefore it is advisable that you take with you either;
a. Your membership Card
b. Season Ticket Card
5) Failure to produce proof that the ticket is yours could result in refusal of entry to the match.
Read more at Ticket News: Away Leg
Since when was football hooliganism the preserve of ticket-holders?
If people want to have a fight, they will. It may or may not be in the vicinity of Selhurst Park.
I didn't say that it was. Hooliganism has many different forms and can happen anywhere. But in the pressure cauldron that will be Selhurst Park next Friday night, the slightest excuse could set things off. Just the slightest spark would do it.