dave the gaffer said:But I thought the report said that only Cardiff people who got tickets had to travel by coach and got tickets near the ground.....I assume then they were vetted and found to be ok....why then the "fearsome" group....have you no controll over your thugs?
readingstockport said:Laughing Bluebird, how does the away travel thing work if you're like me, living in exile from Stockport. We have a couple of Cardiff living in Reading who go to games I know, how do they pick up their tickets?
dave the gaffer said:you said above they were a fearsome looking bunch....
Sounds like following Cardiff away is more of a chore than fun! f***ing hell.The Laughing Bluebird said:The stupid thing is that the coaches which were being attacked only contained the drivers and, in a couple of cases, their families. All of the Cardiff fans were still inside Elland Road. The drivers were brought into the ground by the police a few minutes before the final whistle because the problems outside had already started.
As for the ticket situation, this is now becoming a regular thing for Cardiff fans. This season, our matches at Millwall and Leeds have already been so-called 'bubble trips' and the forthcoming matches at West Ham and Stoke will also follow a similar pattern.
The routine is that our fans (season ticket holders and club members) can only travel to these games on official coaches that are run by either the club or our three official supporters clubs. Alcohol on these coaches is banned and they are not allowed to stop at any pubs on the way to the game, or anywhere near the town or city we are visiting for any reason at all (yesterday's stop limit was 12 miles from Leeds).
Fans buy travel vouchers from the club in advance, which includes the cost of both the trip and a match ticket. These vouchers are handed to the reps on the coaches, and the reps then hand the vouchers over to the police at the designated rendezvous point (usually a service station at least 10 miles from the ground), who exchange them for match tickets after the coach has been searched for alcohol. The coaches are then taken to the ground by the police in convoys.
These measures may sound very Draconian, but in fairness they do eliminate the risk of trouble at games where the potential for such is high like it was yesterday.
The regulations are a pain in the arse, no doubt about that, but our fans have been living with them for several years now and we manage to have a laugh all the same. The supporters clubs are excellent and very organised, and there are plenty of ways around the old 'no alcohol' rule as long as we are careful!
Despite the hassle, I enjoyed yesterday's trip as much as I've enjoyed any other this season.
eagles #1 said:Sounds like following Cardiff away is more of a chore than fun!
The Laughing Bluebird said:A fearsome-looking bunch they were. That doesn't necessarily mean they are thugs.
The Laughing Bluebird said:We can live with it, and the behaviour of our fans on these restricted trips has generally been excellent. But the same can't be said for some of our rival fans. Here's a recent report of jail sentences that followed last year's trip to West Ham:
Seven football hooligans who rampaged through the streets of east London after a match at West Ham United’s Upton Park ground were jailed today.
The men were also given seven-year football banning orders preventing them from going to any domestic or England matches at home or abroad.
Police videos captured the moment when trouble flared as the home fans began goading rival Cardiff City supporters and throwing missiles, including phones, beer bottles and rubbish bins at them and police officers in February last year.
Alec Jones, 24, of Cambus Road, Canning Town, east London; David Thomas, 38, of Barking Road, Canning Town; Glenn Hicks, 25, of Belfarm Avenue, Dagenham; Martin Fox, 35, of Bonnygate, Basildon in Essex; Michael Parle, 37, of Stratton Drive, Barking; Ojijide Ikoli, 46, of Sherwood Gardens, Isle of Dogs, east London; and Paul Row, 38, of Reddown Road, Coulsdon, Surrey had all pleaded guilty to affray in relation to the incident, which came after their team beat the Welsh side 1-0.
Sentencing at Snaresbrook Crown Court, Judge Georges Khayat QC said the cases “well and truly” passed the custody threshold.
“As far as street violence is concerned, society is sick and tired of people who choose to resort to violence in stressful situations to the detriment of other street users,” the judge said.
“Enough is enough. It makes it worse that as a result of or around a football match; it ruins, besmirches the name of football.
“It has got to the stage where if a game is being played abroad one shudders to think of those football supporters who go out there and have fights and give other supporters a bad name.
“I’m not surprised that in many instances other countries are saying don’t send your supporters to matches.”
When the defendants’ houses were searched, Thomas’s mobile phone was found to have the logo of the Inter City Firm – the notorious West Ham supporters’ gang – on its screen.
The Wookiee said:Did the Cardiff fans retaliate in anyway?
Biscuit said:Leeds should be fined. Heavily.
Starry said:Fined by who?
Biscuit said:Leeds should be fined. Heavily. But who remembers what the Cardiff lot have been up to in the not so recent past? Knives Bricks? Piss?