FREE FourFourTwo newsletters for all!

Register now and get:
  • The inside track on the big issues
  • Tactical insight from our experts
  • Players to watch
  • Analysis & humour
  • Exclusive competitions
  • Stick-men drawings
  • WAGs, bets, bargains & more
See a sample newsletter
Sign up now to avoid disappointment
And why not check out the magazine?

Confessions of a Correspondent

The real-life tales of a football writer


Andy Mitten

See all posts

Marseille trip far more eventful off the pitch than on it for United fans


Tuesday 01 March 2011 11:51

The first Manchester United fan I saw after walking out of Marseille St-Charles train station last Wednesday had a warning.

“Don’t bother with the Old Port,” he said. “We’ve just left. It’s getting a bit lairy down there. Too many pissed up idiots and a few snide locals eyeing them up. I wouldn’t be surprise if it kicked off.”

I heard similar several times before the match. It didn’t surprise. Marseille can be a rough and unforgiving port city. England fans were involved in prolonged disorder with local youths of North African descent around the bars of the Old Port during the 1998 World Cup, while there were incidents when United last played in France’s second city in 1999.

And while most United fans know how to behave and how to enjoy themselves on their travels, some do not. There’s a trend that continues at almost every Manchester United game in Europe. People drink heavily and turn up at the stadium late. Chaos and confusion ensues and the local authorities struggle to cope.


Some people have a vested interest in benefiting from the confusion – they have forged tickets or didn't have tickets in the first place. Innocent fans invariably become victims of a nervy, baton wielding local police force whose perception of English football fans is still stuck in the 1980s.

Last week, I started getting texts and emails before kick-off from United fans outraged by the over zealous and aggressive local police force. Fans had arrived half an hour before kick-off but missed the first 30 minutes of the game because they were kept in a warehouse which served as a holding pen.

They then queued to be searched and because the authorities couldn’t cope with the numbers of fans they had sold tickets to, crushes developed. Fans paid £60 for a match ticket which was not checked once – they could have been waving a metro ticket for all anyone cared. Communication from the police, most of whom were clad in a Robo Cop-style ensemble, was minimal and laced with aggression. One elderly fan was hit over the head with a police baton.

Despite being open on three sides, the Velodrome is a wonderful, atmospheric arena. The United fans played their part. They may have been caged by high fences into a section holding 2,500, but they were loud and their flags and flares added to the occasion.

There was a price to pay: seven fans were arrested, most for brandishing flares. Their punishment was tough: a five year ban from watching Manchester United games, a €1300 fine, one month suspended sentence and a year ban from France.


Ironic though, isn’t it, that television companies and magazines use images of fans with flares to illustrate the red hot atmosphere in a stadium? Ironic that at some Continental grounds they are tolerated, while at others you may as well be carrying a dead body.

And I doubt very much that the Marseille fans who shone lasers into the eyes of United fans were ever caught, let alone punished.

Some fans were right to complain, others clearly think they can get away with anything once they leave England. I saw the Twitter feed of one. During the afternoon of the game he was boasting about how drunk he was in Marseille. Later he was bemoaning the actions of the French police. You sense that there are two conflicting sides to that story.

Manchester United tend to be proactive and liaise with the FA and UEFA, but they have little control over the actions of foreign police forces.

I directed fans towards the Football Supporters Federation, who do an excellent job in representing fans abroad, but it’s not as simple as blaming a foreign police force for the ills of every travelling English fan – some really need to grow up because their behaviour makes life more difficult for the innocent majority.


or to add your comments

About Andy Mitten

Andy Mitten – whose great uncle Charlie Mitten starred in Matt Busby’s first great side – started United We Stand, which he still edits, aged 15 in 1989. A regular writer for FourFourTwo, his other credits include The Independent, The Mail on Sunday, Sport, The Guardian and GQ in the UK plus foreign publications around the world. He has visited 85 countries in every continent, covering derby games from Israel to the Faroes, and interviewed players like Ronaldinho, Keane, Gerrard, Messi and John Gidman.
He has written or co-written 10 books including the critically acclaimed We're the Famous Man United, Glory Glory!, Paddy Crerand’s autobiography Never Turn The Other Cheek and Mad For It – From Blackpool to Barcelona, Football’s Greatest Rivalries. Manchester born and red, Andy divides his time between M16 and Barcelona.

Comments

  March 3, 2011 14:05

neiltmufc said:

When are UEFA going to clamp down on the French CRS? Having personally been CS gassed for having the temerity to walk out of the Stade Gerland in Lyon, every British/Irish fan has nightmare stories of being attacked by those who are meant to be protecting you and enforcing law and order.

Being denied your civil rights in " holding pens " , battoned indiscriminately and having dogs set on you simply because you are following a English team is surely much worse than lighting a few flares?

Yes there are a fair few dicks who watch football abroad but the police should spend more time lifting them than treating every fan as a criminal.

FourFourTwo.com
Haymarket

FourFourTwo is brought to you by Haymarket Consumer Media & FourFourTwo is part of Haymarket Sport
About Haymarket | International Licensing | © Haymarket Media Group 2010