You should give either Max or Linda a buzz.
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You should give either Max or Linda a buzz.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/14056189.stm
According to the club, it has (or, at least, had planned to have) measures in place.
What more can Derry City do as regards what goes on outside the stadium?Quote:
Derry director O'Doherty said that measures had been planned to ensure the safety of Rovers fans at Friday's game.
"The attacks occurred outside the ground and they were carried out by children," Mr O'Doherty told RTE.
"I don't want to minimise this in any way because first of all I want to apologise to any Rovers fan and indeed the owners of the buses but it did happen outside the ground.
"No League of Ireland club has jurisdiction for outside its ground.
"However, we recognise the special situation of The Brandywell.
"In recent games, such as the Bohemians game, our stewards stayed on and made sure there was clear and safe exit and that was offered.
"Unfortunately I think the Rovers guys had already made up their minds on this. It is regrettable and I'm extremely sorry they have taken this stance."
O'Doherty added:"If Shamrock Rovers decide they need a police escort to come to the ground that is entirely up to Shamrock Rovers.
"One situation has been taken here and used to make something that is not true overall.
"The vast, vast majority of visiting fans come to the Brandywell and never have the slightest problem."
I would ask the (unfortunate and generally misguided) Phibsboro-based travelling contingent for their opinions on the handling of that game.
what more can Derry City do?? Are you that stupid?? right here goes..
1) Shamrock Rovers take a large travelling support and if 1000 hoops went to the Brandywell and paid 10 pounds in... how many pretty pennies would Derry city have in extra income??? Now i am pretty sure DCFC cant afford to be idiots business wise..
2) Entrance to Dalymount Park / Tallaght Stadium / Inchicore etc on big match days are 99% of the time, completely safe as stewarding & policing outside the stadiums are adequate and normally very well communicated with local police.. (THIS IS IN THE INTEREST OF THE HOME CLUB AS ITS THEIR GATE RECEIPTS BEFORE YOU REPEAT YOURSELF AGAIN SAYING THE LOCAL POLICE IN DERRY WILL DO NOTHING) failure to ensure home and away supporters have safe access to and from the stadium is a basic failure of responsibilities by the home club despite the problem being inside the stadium or out, Derry City & the PSNI need to address the problem in the interest of a) Derry City FC and its potential income & b) the income for the local people (players, stadium staff, stewards etc..)
3) Take a bit of pride in your club, Derry is a fantastic club and has normally a fantastic set of fans. I know Shamrock Rovers fans have 'an element' but alot of clubs do, even Derry City has. You have a BIG PROBLEM outside your stadium if a club bringing up to 1000 fans paying 10pounds entrance will not travel because Derry City FC would rather blame Shamrock Rovers fans over songs etc than maybe hold weekly meetings with the PSNI and coordinate police levels like Bohs Rovers Pats do.
This argument is not over what club you follow, nor is it about which club has the worst set of fans. If you are the home club, in the interest of everybody you need to maximise the attendance of the fixture. People = money, Money = development, Development = ....... So if you are in charge of Derry City, you are obliged to the staff, players, fans and folk who work inside the stadium to optimise the business side of things.
This isn't brain science is it???
'However we recognise the special situation of The Brandywell'. Is that not admitting the fact that there's no cops in and around the place? Imhop the FAI should've nipped this problem in the bud long ago and made it a condition of membership in the league.
After something happens shout about it from the highest height.
But if you really want to do something about preventing it, then it has be on the qt. And what assistance was sought? The release conspicuously neglected to mention anything constructive shamrock rovers or their fans may have contributed.
The only light that's been shone, by going about things in this manner, is the scrotesignal.
Instead of having the odd one from a mile radius you've basically put out the call to all surrounding districts - and given notice to would be scrotes, of either tradition, in outlying hamlets that there might be something to throw bricks at.
On a brighter note maybe this will ending the unceasing asking of rovers fans' favourite question when they come to this part of the world.
This is what it's like - wee wannabe hoods out wrecking stuff, and peelers can't do feck all about it without making it worse.
But sure being the big republicans that the same rovers fans are, they'd never look to invoke the protection her maj's constabulary.
If anything, they're less likely to fire stuff now, as part of the kick out of it, is the unexpected.Quote:
Originally Posted by A N Mouse
This isn't just a problem at our games in Derry, this is a long running problem in the area, involving a number of clubs. Pats go up there next month. We're just the ones to have taken a stand against it, as nothing has been done about it for far too long. It's up to others now to examine whether it's safe for their fans to travel to games there in the future.
Hmm, wouldn't they just offer "misguided" opinions? As far as I understand, the Bohs buses left the ground safely with the stewards staying on after the game in order to ensure the vicinity of the stadium exit was clear and safe for the buses to pass. Or did you you have some hearsay to add with regards goings-on inside the ground?
I'd mistakenly thought you were going to offer some ideas for solutions. What's really your point beyond pretending to care about Derry's gate receipts? :rolleyes:
I don't think I ever said that. In fact, it's you that is moaning that the PSNI will do nothing and it was the press release that erroneously claimed the Brandywell area was a "no-go" zone. It isn't.Quote:
(THIS IS IN THE INTEREST OF THE HOME CLUB AS ITS THEIR GATE RECEIPTS BEFORE YOU REPEAT YOURSELF AGAIN SAYING THE LOCAL POLICE IN DERRY WILL DO NOTHING)
To be honest, I don't think it is. Beyond the grounds of the stadium is neither the property nor the legal responsibility of the football club. I mean, how far do you expect that apparent onus of responsibility outside the ground to stretch? Do you want a reinforced Derry City-licensed security van escorting you up the M1 and through Newbuildings? You're being both unreasonable and ridiculous. Sure, the club wouldn't even be able to secure the safety of its own fans if it wanted to bus them between certain areas in and around the city, especially with the weekend that's in it.Quote:
failure to ensure home and away supporters have safe access to and from the stadium is a basic failure of responsibilities by the home club despite the problem being inside the stadium or out
You're lapsing into hysterical nonsense now. No one's trying to deny there's a problem or even attempting to justify local youths throwing stones at buses.Quote:
You have a BIG PROBLEM outside your stadium if a club bringing up to 1000 fans paying 10pounds entrance will not travel because Derry City FC would rather blame Shamrock Rovers fans over songs etc than maybe hold weekly meetings with the PSNI and coordinate police levels like Bohs Rovers Pats do.
Well, certainly, but I'm still not really any the wiser having read your rant twice. You insinuated I'm afflicted with a certain level of stupidity before giving me the impression you were going to proceed to answer my question properly by offering a list of solutions, but as far as I can see, your offered solutions to addressing the problem amount entirely to the following:Quote:
If you are the home club, in the interest of everybody you need to maximise the attendance of the fixture. People = money, Money = development, Development = ....... So if you are in charge of Derry City, you are obliged to the staff, players, fans and folk who work inside the stadium to optimise the business side of things.
- "Take a bit of pride in your club"
- "maybe hold weekly meetings with the PSNI and coordinate police levels like Bohs Rovers Pats do"
And that's it. Nothing else of substance. Your first suggestion is no more than blather - a rhetorical platitude - and your second is naïve in the extreme if you're of the belief that the club is neglecting to liaise with the PSNI on a regular basis; there are plain-clothes officers inside the stadium on every match day. The club has stated that it has plans to put measures in place for Friday's game, similar to those it successfully put in place in order to ensure the safe passage of the departing Bohs buses recently. The Brandywell area isn't a "no-go" zone for the PSNI, but if Derry City can't persuade the PSNI to enforce the rule of law in the area - not that it should have to anyway - I'm genuinely not sure what more the club can do.
There we go. At least it's out in the open now.
Provide them with the itinerary and they'll be less bothered? Really?...
Early 1970's alive and kicking round Tallaghfornia way.
Haha. No. Almost certainly more likely.
A stand? This press release and the attendant publicity has done nothing constructive to help the situation and only exacerbated it.
Rovers fans were largely up-in-arms about the Zayed incident becoming public for the negative reputation it would attach to the club and league. How is this snide, insinuating statement, and the misguided idea Brandywell is a Mad Max style badlands, helpful in alleviating the problems Rovers fans have coming to Derry?
Folks, I think I've solved the issue. I've been in contact with a local tour company and they'll meet the Rovers buses at the border and bring the fans in so their own coaches won't be attacked:
http://i1232.photobucket.com/albums/...LImage-2-1.jpg
Photo courtesy of Ultras forum, no hoods will come near ye's now:)
I will be heading up, wont have time for my dinner in the city centre. But looking forward to a good nights football.
No itinerary has been given. In fact, there is no itinerary full stop. The buses are not going.Quote:
Originally Posted by DannyInvincible
It has made the issue public. We've had to make it public, because no authority responsible at these games have been prepared to do anything privately to sort out the issue. The brickies want it to remain a local matter, and not in the public eye. Once it's in the public eye, the kick got out of it is reduced.Quote:
Originally Posted by SwanVsDalton
The issue was already public. The club have committed to taking extra measures for this Friday's game. I'm not aware of any private correspondence between SRFC (or fans) and DCFC, but if there has been any I'm sure some compromise could've been reached. Though the fact remains, there's only so much Derry can do to ensure any fans safety - there's only so much any club can do.
The scumbags responsible are going to get more of a kick out of any heightened publicity. They aspire to the Celtic-scarf-over-mouth shot on the evening news and they want to get a rise out of people, they're hardly going to retreat because they're getting more attention.
They live on the shock and surprise their actions get. Now they don't have it. There's no kick got out of vandalism, when everyone is watching them. So they'll lay low for a while. In the meantime, it's up to Derry and the PSNI to sort it out. Neither side wants to admit responsibility for the issue though, so everyone loses.Quote:
Originally Posted by SwanVsDalton
You really don't understand the mindset at work here. Rovers fans, and bus companies, if they travelled would've expected to be attacked I imagine. So where's the shock and surprise in that?
The police get it every day - I doubt the attackers are loading up on the PSNI because they'll be surprised. Likewise for the less common but equally sickening attacks on ambulances and fire engines.
They get a kick out of vandalism. Period. A bit of publicity only pushes the novelty factor further.
The really sad part is these morons will see shams (in)action as a victory - shams are "scared" to come up. Hopefully an accomadation can be reached, I recall when we played Linfield at Windsorthe Bohs buses were met at outskirts of Belfast and escorted in (I appreciate this may be more difficult in Derry given the PSNI may also be a target)
During our trips north in SETANTA Cup I found PSNI to be far betterthan Gardai at handling matches, although again appreciate difficulty for them in policing atthe Brandywell.
Bottom line is no fan should have safety concerns going to any game and everthing than can be done must be done to accomadate this.
Good job it's not brain science as you're clearly lacking in the brains department.
The common denominator in trouble at away grounds in the LOI is Shamrock Rovers. We have even seen you have battles among your own supporters in the Brandywell, so please spare us your hypocrisy and come back to us when you have put your own house in order.
This attempt by Rovers supporters to blacken Derry City is a smokescreen to hide the problems of racism (i would say alleged but we have all seen their actions on you tube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fretxesAwI )within their club.
The alleged racism against Eamon Zayed has been completely overshadowed by this smokescreen, and if you have any idea on Rovers motives at this time, go on their forum, and mention the Zayed incident and you'll know what i mean.
They do, but they're like bored youngsters everywhere. They do damage when you least expect it. When they're watched/observed/policed, they're not so big then. The PSNI don't police that area, Derry don't want to know, so they have an easy life. Tomorrow, they'll have no buses to hit, so they probably won't bother. No fun in hitting nothing after all.Quote:
Originally Posted by SwanVsDalton