There may be trouble ahead… (23/7)
- gooner.ed
- Site Admin
- Posts: 3458
- Joined: Fri May 12, 2006 3:05 pm
- Location: Scotland Yard's 10 Most Wanted List
There may be trouble ahead… (23/7)
Usual thread starter - This is one of the initiatives that we at The Gooner/onlinegooner are going to promote to try and improve the atmosphere at the stadium. It will take time, but my take on it is this. We are in the European Union. How come it’s ok in Germany and not in the UK? Are we just selective in which European laws we apply here? I fervently believe that safe standing areas are going to happen, but the harder we push now, the sooner that will come into being, thereby solving a lot of problems between stewards and fans.
- Sammy Mooner
- Posts: 203
- Joined: Fri Jun 15, 2007 12:23 pm
- Location: The superior end of 7 Sisters
Am in almost total agreement - except I'm one of those who just can't help swearing at the likes of Poll or Sherringham - though I can't this season
This may also have something to do with the players having friends and family in and around the area of DB10's box which is directly above the REDaction section.Gooner.Ed wrote ......"The redsection is the most obvious example of this and it’s no co-incidence that when an Arsenal goal in scored in the north end, it is that group of fans that the players run to and celebrate with".
Straightjackets are the way forward
Straightjackets and masking tape are the are the way forward,but the club might not captilise on those tasty cheaply priced savoury treats we all love at half time !
I thought going to a match was supposed to be about escapism - flag waving (already banned!), singing, jumping up and down (ok, providing its more down than up!) - and maybe even an opportunity to swear en-masse! Edelman seems to want to suck the fun out of football and make it as sterile as watching a game on TV! I take my kids to games - but fully expect & accept the fact that they will hear choice language (they love it!!). I have absolutely no problem with that!! There is so much the guy could be doing that I wonder why he wastes his time tinkering with something that doesn't need fixing!
Re: There may be trouble ahead… (23/7)
You just have to ask yourself - where is the money in terracing? If you can find it it will be done - If not, then it won't.gooner.ed wrote:Usual thread starter - This is one of the initiatives that we at The Gooner/onlinegooner are going to promote to try and improve the atmosphere at the stadium. It will take time, but my take on it is this. We are in the European Union. How come it’s ok in Germany and not in the UK? Are we just selective in which European laws we apply here? I fervently believe that safe standing areas are going to happen, but the harder we push now, the sooner that will come into being, thereby solving a lot of problems between stewards and fans.
We are losing our fan culture fast and if we don't act then the young kids coming up are going to spend all their time discussing what the design and colour of our 16th kit should be, while they sit in their big fat ashburton grove armchairs waiting for the orchestra to conduct them.
This is football for fucks sake not Marie Clare
- SPUDMASHER
- Posts: 10739
- Joined: Mon Feb 26, 2007 10:07 am
- Location: London Euston
- Contact:
I wrote to my MP last year supporting this change in law to allow 'controlled standing areas' in football grounds. I got a reply from the minister for sport and although I cannot remember the exact wording of his letter it went something along the lines of:-
Dear Sir,
We will consider a return to standing at football grounds, but not until Britney Spears sprouts square testicles from her ears and Tony Blair admits he lied about WMD.
I assume that he meant NO!
Dear Sir,
We will consider a return to standing at football grounds, but not until Britney Spears sprouts square testicles from her ears and Tony Blair admits he lied about WMD.
I assume that he meant NO!
What a stroke of luck...
http://www.youtube.com/hard_of_hearing_ ... ff_ex-pm's_ WMD_but_ can't_find_it
I want to stand near the back with someone much taller in front of me.
http://www.youtube.com/hard_of_hearing_ ... ff_ex-pm's_ WMD_but_ can't_find_it
I want to stand near the back with someone much taller in front of me.
-
- Posts: 1869
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 6:09 pm
We don’t like swearing, we don’t like abusive behaviour and this year we’re going to be much harder in terms of stewarding and ensuring that everyone enjoys the Emirates experience. My objective is to make sure that everyone who comes to the stadium, be they small children, teenagers, adults or OAPs, has a good day out
As Emile Durkheim, sociologist, would say.....
Rather apt that after football has got rid of the hooligan problem it's starting to nit pick at the swearing and any other minor problemImagine a society of saints, a perfect cloister of exemplary individuals. Crimes properly so called, will there be unknown; but faults which appear venial to the layman will create there the same scandal that the ordinary offence does in ordinary consciousness. If, then, this society has the power to judge and punish, it will define these acts as criminal and will treat them as such.
-
- Posts: 1869
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 6:09 pm
Are you having a laugh or is this what he actually said?I wrote to my MP last year supporting this change in law to allow 'controlled standing areas' in football grounds. I got a reply from the minister for sport and although I cannot remember the exact wording of his letter it went something along the lines of:-
Dear Sir,
We will consider a return to standing at football grounds, but not until Britney Spears sprouts square testicles from her ears and Tony Blair admits he lied about WMD.
I assume that he meant NO!
If so do name and shame.
I don't think the MP actually said anything about Tony Blair or WMD....Cus Geezer wrote:Are you having a laugh or is this what he actually said?I wrote to my MP last year supporting this change in law to allow 'controlled standing areas' in football grounds. I got a reply from the minister for sport and although I cannot remember the exact wording of his letter it went something along the lines of:-
Dear Sir,
We will consider a return to standing at football grounds, but not until Britney Spears sprouts square testicles from her ears and Tony Blair admits he lied about WMD.
I assume that he meant NO!
If so do name and shame.
-
- Posts: 1869
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 6:09 pm
-
- Posts: 1869
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 6:09 pm
Would there not be the expectation that with terracing comes lower prices? If not, it would be, I put my neck on the line, the first of its kind anywhere in the world. In Germany, significantly lower prices exist for terracing than for seats. Would people be prepared to pay the same for the terrace as for a seat?
I would like to see some analysis of how many people would be allowed in a safe standing area compared to sitting there, and the impact on revenue.
If the net benefit is relatively small, then Hillsborough would be invoked again.
I would like to see some analysis of how many people would be allowed in a safe standing area compared to sitting there, and the impact on revenue.
If the net benefit is relatively small, then Hillsborough would be invoked again.
-
- Posts: 1869
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 6:09 pm
Well an Arsenal game rarely goes on general sale and the season ticket list is about four years.
So the demand will be met with terracing, plus those already season ticket holders who'd rather stand than sit, I'm sure there must be at least 10,000 in that category.
There is no reason why the club couldn't command a high price for a terrace ticket.
So the demand will be met with terracing, plus those already season ticket holders who'd rather stand than sit, I'm sure there must be at least 10,000 in that category.
There is no reason why the club couldn't command a high price for a terrace ticket.