Hooliganism in England and Ireland
Lads, a girl called Maeve Farrell who is doing her dissertation on hooliganism in England and how it is becoming more prevalent in Ireland. This is a survey to assertain if it is actually happening, and if so, what are the causes.
The survey is 15 or so questions, in Word document which can be downloaded here (40k Word doc). Can you please send them back to the email address below.
mflfc@hotmail.com
Any questions, just shout away.
And lads, its not about our opinions on the topic, its just a survey to establish across a cross-section of fans if there is actually a problem.
Is there a cure for football acne?
I was going to fill it in, but on reflection I don't think I can honestly answer this questionnaire, because it seems to presume that there is a significant problem.
Here's what I wrote under 'additional comments'.
Violence is not a feature of Irish club football. There is one club to which is attached a well-publicised, semi-organized hooligan, or aspiring hooligan, element, but on the whole such people have little credibility and pose little threat, particularly as they generally have no one to fight against.
I think it is also important to note that many of your questions appear to be premised on the belief that there is a culture of violence in particular around soccer matches, and that this, in turn, can be described as ‘football violence’. There is no such thing as 'football violence' in Irish football. I do not believe that you can isolate a significant phenomenon that can be thus labelled. You will find more violence, or witnesses to violence, in a Friday night survey of pedestrians in O’Connell Street and Temple Bar, than you will in every active Eircom League venue, from Turner’s Cross to the Brandywell, combined.
To illustrate, you might consider that many people, such as members of the hooligan element described above, have the misfortune to suffer from acne, because they are young and immature, and if you look around at the crowd in a football match, you will probably see lots of individuals who suffer from acne. But they haven’t got ‘football acne’. You might also conclude that some of them (though not quite as many as among GAA football fans) also have rather poor fashion sense, but I have yet to hear their predilection for chav-ish clothes blamed solely on football.
Your supplied answers leave little room for nuanced perspectives. For example, there is a very significant difference between ‘occasionally’ and ‘never’. For several of the questions posed, I would have answered ‘rarely’ or ‘don’t know’, but neither option is provided. In particular, the survey may give the impression that serious abuse of players is more prevalent than in other sports. There is no way for the respondent to distinguish serious abuse, such as racist chanting, from the general barracking that is a part of football culture, as it is in other sports.
I think that you and others should take great care with the interpretation of data generated from this questionnaire.