Is cocaine fuelling a new era of football violence?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 фев 2023
  • Football violence in the UK is on the rise: pitch invasions; players and coaches being attacked by fans; fighting inside and outside grounds across England and Wales. But what’s driving it? Cocaine and class-A drugs? A new generation of younger fans? Or a collective release of bottled frustrations after two years of Covid lockdowns?
    (Subscribe: bit.ly/C4_News_Subscribe)
    The police are cracking down with new banning orders, targeting fans supplying cocaine and other Class-A narcotics, meaning they’re not allowed back inside grounds for years.
    But experts say blanket bans won’t work, that the approach needs to focus on education and identifying the next generation of troublemakers before it’s too late.
    In the meantime, it’s left to the stewards, who have seen their workforce depleted after the pandemic, to deal with ripped up seats, broken bottles, abuse and anti-social behaviour.
    Are we heading back to an era of violence, with echoes of the 1980s hooliganism that tarnished British football in the eyes of the world, or is there a way to restore calm in football grounds across the country?
    Follow us:
    Facebook - / channel4news
    Twitter - / channel4news

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @ianbell5505
    @ianbell5505 Год назад +1505

    Football violence is almost always a reflection on wider society. Many of these young men, from working class backgrounds, have been stuffed for the past 13 years and have seen their living standards fall, and opportunities slashed. Football violence is just one of a multitude of ways to let out their anger and frustration. Football violence isn’t necessarily the problem- it’s a symptom.

    • @khoyrulislam
      @khoyrulislam Год назад +62

      Hahaha does that explain why these hooligans have been behaving like this for decades? 😭

    • @ianbell5505
      @ianbell5505 Год назад +125

      @@khoyrulislam Actually, if you compare how it is now to how it was in the 70s, 80s & 90s- football hooliganism has improved, not stayed the same. But in the context of this report, stating it has gotten worse in the past few years, you can see how social-economic deprivation has exacerbated this issue, it is at the root of the problem

    • @Pitchtalk
      @Pitchtalk Год назад +8

      We've always said football is a microcosm of society, if people feel they can get away with something they'll generally do it again and again

    • @richardgough1393
      @richardgough1393 Год назад +1

      Yes m8

    • @denzel9086
      @denzel9086 Год назад +36

      Excuses excuses, however black kids caught up in drug warfare? You’d be much more critical

  • @covid-2031
    @covid-2031 Год назад +429

    This is a reflection of our society........it ain't just football

  • @Tazza81
    @Tazza81 Год назад +264

    "This isn't the hooliganism of the 1980's" No, it's the hooliganism of the 1970's that gave way to the 1980's. Economically and socially speaking the UK has regressed back to the early 70's and the cycle is repeating itself.

    • @wanderlusterer442
      @wanderlusterer442 Год назад +9

      So where's the fighting?

    • @gavinguitar2194
      @gavinguitar2194 Год назад +2

      Absolutely right!!

    • @randybackgammon890
      @randybackgammon890 Год назад

      @@wanderlusterer442 Most of them aren't up for it.Just like hanging tough abusing the Stewards/Police.who quite unreasonably risk their own necks protecting them from the real 'top boys'

    • @guddlom7655
      @guddlom7655 7 месяцев назад

      Give over

    • @Trueblue-jx2tk
      @Trueblue-jx2tk 6 месяцев назад

      Yawn!!...You were laying the groundwork to blame brexit next😂😂😂

  • @bollocks5724
    @bollocks5724 Год назад +433

    They never blame alcohol do they?
    Probably don't want to upset the alcohol companys who they profit massively from.

    • @TheTruth-uy4kp
      @TheTruth-uy4kp Год назад

      Prescription drugs are alot more dangerous than pure cocaine...especially the opioid tablets mixed with alcohol

    • @skycloud4802
      @skycloud4802 Год назад +3

      Drugs in general. Mentions class A drugs such as cocaine, but even THC can exacerbate aggression and antisocial behaviour.

    • @halfpint5877
      @halfpint5877 Год назад +71

      @@skycloud4802 no it does not 🤣

    • @RW-nr6bh
      @RW-nr6bh Год назад +2

      MP Tracy Crouch's supposedly fan led review tried to get alcohol allowed within sight of the pitch. A dreadful idea.

    • @GDUBMX
      @GDUBMX Год назад

      @@skycloud4802 shut up

  • @stealthbum34
    @stealthbum34 Год назад +40

    I’ll give you a cause and link. In the 80s Thatcher wrecked working class communities and suddenly there was a rise in football violence culture. In 2023 the Tories have done it again and surprise surprise, working class men are drunk and angry.

    • @peterramsden3134
      @peterramsden3134 Год назад +3

      and still had football violence when labour was in charge, so dont just blame the tories

    • @jamieagnew1608
      @jamieagnew1608 Год назад +14

      ​@@peterramsden3134 ah the classic response to objective irrefutable facts about the tories - "but labour"

    • @thyikmnnnn
      @thyikmnnnn Год назад +4

      ​@Jamie Agnew The problem isn't who is in power. Many of these kids are probably middle class and well off. It's down to the way these kids are brought up with no moral framework to live by.

    • @kevphillips02
      @kevphillips02 Год назад +2

      All the world's issues are Thatcher's fault . Dear old Maggie is certainly given a lot of implied power by some .

    • @Notpoop906
      @Notpoop906 2 месяца назад

      @@jamieagnew1608 labour are the reason we suffered through lockdowns. if the "ToRiEs" had their way, the country would have remained operational. You can't blame the boogieman for everything 😂

  • @jackseaward2376
    @jackseaward2376 Год назад +52

    it made me chuckle when the copper shoved that kid back and he got all mouthy with him 😂

  • @samww1995
    @samww1995 Год назад +73

    Crazy what a stone island jacket does

  • @barryhamilton7845
    @barryhamilton7845 Год назад +20

    Instead of fighting each other they should be protecting their country.RISE UP AS A NATION.

    • @phax71
      @phax71 Год назад +3

      From who/what?

    • @stephendallison1465
      @stephendallison1465 Год назад

      Government puppets that lie about everything. Kill your television. They don't want you to know the truth what's really going on

    • @kevphillips02
      @kevphillips02 Год назад

      Protecting the country from ? Some people have 😂 wild imaginations or 🍟 on the shoulder

    • @barryhamilton7845
      @barryhamilton7845 Год назад

      @@kevphillips02 From dafty's like you.When were you born,don't say 02.

    • @stephendallison1465
      @stephendallison1465 Год назад +1

      @@kevphillips02 wake up bud

  • @jimzenglish1
    @jimzenglish1 Год назад +197

    Love how these kids are so tough when there’s a line of police between them and the rivals. Just little brats acting up.

    • @888ssss
      @888ssss Год назад +16

      thats how a modern creche fight works.

    • @benzobrimzs
      @benzobrimzs Год назад +5

      Bro us a kid where were u in 80 ,86,90

    • @JohnKobaRuddy
      @JohnKobaRuddy Год назад +17

      Was like that back in the day too. I once saw uncut footage of 80s football violence and it looked more silly than scary. Absolutely laughable. All on the drink and wouldn't do a single thing without the drink and back up

    • @saraprva4172
      @saraprva4172 Год назад +1

      ​@☆𝔍𝔬𝔥𝔫 ℜ𝔲𝔡𝔡𝔶☭ True, I know not as many cameras but never see much fighting in 80s England either - now if you look at Italy France Balkans etc..there is plenty - and heavier police action there

    • @JohnKobaRuddy
      @JohnKobaRuddy Год назад +3

      @@saraprva4172 if you look on RUclips it's around. It was two relatively "hard" known groups and they were pulling at shirts and swirling around and flailing like people who've clearly never fought before on the terraces. It was beyond pathetic it resembled the fight in that romcom starring Hugh Grant and that bloke who played the nazti king. And I want to hear no nonsense that these people are "working class" either. When most people getting knicked for hooliganism are bankers and construction workers on good pay that's not working class. Not even a little bit. For every 100 hooligans one will be genuinely hard 5 will be relatively game for a scrap (once the drink and the back up kicks in) and the rest are just out and out cowards.

  • @raindancerave8521
    @raindancerave8521 Год назад +29

    Looked like a school trip at the football 😂😂😂😂 absolutely embarrassing giving it the big one behind a line of bill

    • @garymcmanus9946
      @garymcmanus9946 Год назад

      Any lines they can get their hands on or work with too😅

  • @ciananmacreamoinn9253
    @ciananmacreamoinn9253 Год назад +44

    Potentially there is some romanticising the days of football violence and there's a younger generation that weren't around for that and want to experience that buzz

    • @carrauntoohil86
      @carrauntoohil86 Год назад +5

      It's all a buzz until you're picking your teeth up off the floor

  • @kanedNunable
    @kanedNunable Год назад +27

    strange, when it was MDMA (ecstasy) that was reported to have almost eliminated hooliganism in the early 90s.

    • @ryank3321
      @ryank3321 Год назад +7

      Not strange at all, because they are completely different drugs with completely different affects.

    • @gregprocter765
      @gregprocter765 Год назад

      @@ryank3321 look up the word irony in the dictionary it may help you understand English culture/language.

    • @ryank3321
      @ryank3321 Год назад +3

      I don't need to look up anything, I think the claim that football hooliganism went away during the acid house years is all a load of anecdotal nonsense, English teams were banned from European competition for 5 years from 1985 to 1990 after Heysel, so there wasn't any opportunity to go and smash up some city centre on the continent in the late 80s anyway, and when Italia 90 came along the English hooligans descended on Italy in their 10s of thousands and went on a rampage, and in 1993 hundreds of England fans were arrested in Rotterdam before the game, then set fire to the stand in the game. If anything the ban on standing in English stadiums following the Hillsborough disaster could have been what led to a reduction in domestic incidents (if there even was any reduction)

    • @bobby6517
      @bobby6517 Год назад

      They government allowed es on the street to quell the violence in my opinion

    • @Zamo_71
      @Zamo_71 Год назад +1

      @@ryank3321nah it definitely did, i was there..

  • @InArgCroitheGoDeo
    @InArgCroitheGoDeo Год назад +40

    Why would anyone trust what the police says about football fans? Always quick to blame alcohol and drugs for any footballs issues and football for alcohol and drugs issues. Stop separating problems in football from problems in society. Football violence in the 70’s and 80’s was treated this way and had tragic consequences. Look at society during that time and look at it now. Look at the parallels and learn your lessons, the outlier isn’t alcohol and cocaine. If they were the causes of violence then there’d be brawls in Parliament every day. And for the love of christ stop taking a sociological analysis of football by the police at face value. They cause as many problems in football as cocaine does.

    • @guddlom7655
      @guddlom7655 Год назад +6

      Brilliant comment, also just think of all the money that gets wasted on our council tax on football policing, this government needs to concentrate on all this.knife crime that is cutting short a lot of innocent peoples lives.Foitball policing is where the tax payers money is been wasted big time

    • @1gerard47
      @1gerard47 Год назад

      In parliament ,you are correct.

    • @garymillward8619
      @garymillward8619 Год назад

      You right there m8 more traces of sniff in the bogs in house of commons than yah local boozer on a Saturday night😂😂😂

    • @MBRoa22
      @MBRoa22 6 месяцев назад

      Spot on. I think they also know how many views chucking "cocaine" next to football will net, so they try to draw the parallels between cocaine and football violence without looking at the socio-economic factors that lead to lads getting high and punching on at a game.

  • @jameshaslam1990
    @jameshaslam1990 Год назад +197

    Interesting analysis, can't help but feel like 2 years of lockdowns has scarred people of this age, think of all the social interactions that were missed out on at a key stage of their develpment. Everything gets bottled up and then football is a release. What else do they have to look forward to? everything must seem so unattainable financially at their age now so why be concerned about consequences.

    • @MrSimonw58
      @MrSimonw58 Год назад

      Wait until they get on the meth

    • @thesmithersy
      @thesmithersy 9 месяцев назад +2

      It is the lockdowns that caused this. A loss of in person social interaction leads to frustrations, anger and scenes like this.

    • @Blastoice
      @Blastoice 7 месяцев назад +1

      I'd probably get a better job or go and study instead of wasting £100 on beers and trains every weekend just to stand there asking someone for a fight, then running off when they come anywhere near...

    • @kickedinthecalfbyacow7549
      @kickedinthecalfbyacow7549 7 месяцев назад

      It’s easy to blame on lock down, but that doesn’t explain the football hooliganism of the 1970s and 80s

    • @thesmithersy
      @thesmithersy 7 месяцев назад

      @@kickedinthecalfbyacow7549 That was through a different social and cultural ideology back then. Sadly its one that most of continental Europe are stuck in.

  • @Steve-kl3yl
    @Steve-kl3yl Год назад +32

    No, no it isn't. As a match going fan, i'm sure it's the lowest levels of football violence that there's been for decades.

    • @RW-nr6bh
      @RW-nr6bh Год назад

      I've been attending football regularly since the 1990/91 season, while I've seen some trouble in the past, mostly away from the grounds and never reported on, I've seen far more trouble in the last couple of years. It was increasing pre-Covid and is even worse now. A lot of it is gobby kids now and they're a real pain. I know a lad who was in the Naughty Forty at Stoke, they kept the fighting away from those who weren't interested, not like these lot. They're less tough these days but more in your face.

    • @miamiglia
      @miamiglia Год назад +1

      I 100% agree go back to the late 70s early 80s firms was in there thousands not like it is now !!

    • @JackCoeCoe
      @JackCoeCoe 7 месяцев назад

      @An0n3mu55what club?

    • @NachttiSchlampE65
      @NachttiSchlampE65 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah media under pressure to survive. Making any story bigger or just make stories up even.
      Connecting football and drug usage there you got your clickbait.
      Come up with some "data" interview a copper and you have your report ready to go

  • @rampantbullproductions
    @rampantbullproductions Год назад +10

    “many of these young men appear ready to fight”
    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @bfb187
    @bfb187 Год назад +36

    It never went away. Happens every week and has done for decades.

  • @elainekent3551
    @elainekent3551 Год назад +19

    We need this at Dover !!

    • @Eduardo-pc6gq
      @Eduardo-pc6gq Год назад

      Maybe in 10 years time there will be ultra nationalistic highly trained,organised fearsomely violent hooligan firms.
      Meet the russians in a historic European city and eviscerate them to settle things.
      Regain the respect from other countries hooligan organisations that we once had.
      We could have training days out in Kent kicking the Afghans and Syrians shitless chasing them through the fields, hedges and copxxses of our beautiful countryside. Gradually progressing to tooled up long weekends away having pitched battles with the Albanians, Eastern Europeans and any of the African countries who arrive in organised groups.
      Making sure not to maim or kill any agricultural workers in any little mishaps.
      Make Britain Great again.
      Let’s start with football violence and get back to being Europes best

  • @jonathaneffemey944
    @jonathaneffemey944 Год назад +1

    Thanks for posting.

  • @davidockley2987
    @davidockley2987 Год назад +75

    I blame it all on Gary Lineker.

  • @simoncook3325
    @simoncook3325 Год назад +18

    Cokes been in footy fights for years on and off the pitch .

  • @wolverinescratch
    @wolverinescratch Год назад +32

    UK has a drug problem in general

    • @edfash9976
      @edfash9976 Год назад +4

      In your opinion. Why? How? When?

    • @lifeisblessed4802
      @lifeisblessed4802 Год назад +2

      @@edfash9976 for decades now

    • @guddlom7655
      @guddlom7655 Год назад

      It's gone worse as well over the last 10 years or so..

    • @thirtythreehz
      @thirtythreehz Год назад +2

      Its cos if how depressing life is even if you got money

    • @Red-tm1bs
      @Red-tm1bs Год назад

      ​@@edfash9976that's not an opinion that's fact. A large number of the homeless have no teeth and that's not because they have a poor dental plan at work. You only have to walk down the high streets (what's left of them) and you're walking past someone stinking of the stuff.
      And if the stuff that basically using your eyes to see isn't good enough for you the police and other organisations that deal with drug abuse release their stats every year! The drug violence related deaths are through the roof as well.

  • @roverlutionary619
    @roverlutionary619 Год назад +33

    It's happening in Scotland aswell.A lot of violence at games including lower league games

    • @brain8484
      @brain8484 9 месяцев назад +2

      well thats easy , ban the kilt

    • @user-zt9qf7oe1m
      @user-zt9qf7oe1m 8 месяцев назад +1

      Accies are massive ft well

    • @user-wc8is6jx5z
      @user-wc8is6jx5z 8 месяцев назад

      Scotland a different country no one cares about Scotland honestly

    • @roverlutionary619
      @roverlutionary619 8 месяцев назад

      @@user-wc8is6jx5z so why even mention scotland then you ding

  • @free..to..air..
    @free..to..air.. Год назад +5

    Tribalism has always sustained the inter rivalry between football bastions..like Manchester/ Liverpool...North / West London..the Midlands...Glasgow....adding drugs to the equation is a natural progression of this ...alcohol has long been the main driving force..so a combination of the two..means an escalation of disorder and unbridled violence😢

  • @valward8195
    @valward8195 Год назад +35

    "Football violence in this country
    will never end, as long as they are shitting
    in our shoes and we are pissing in their
    bovril." Billy Connelly. 😁😁😁

    • @simonabbott725
      @simonabbott725 Год назад

      Nothing to do with football just the Scottish culture

    • @stardustmonk3y
      @stardustmonk3y Год назад

      @@simonabbott725We all humans

    • @louistudor1086
      @louistudor1086 Год назад

      It’s their culture with their drinks they can’t help themselves they are heavy drinkers

    • @nervousheadache
      @nervousheadache Год назад

      @@louistudor1086It’s mainly football culture.

    • @louistudor1086
      @louistudor1086 Год назад

      @@nervousheadache plus their drinks

  • @ashf4612
    @ashf4612 Год назад +107

    Conclusion : there is no link between drugs and football “violence” . Just lads goading and giving other lads “wanker” hand gestures after having a few beers. Didn’t see a single fight. Looks like police going for “low-hanging fruit” by arresting lads with a small amount of drugs on them.

    • @guddlom7655
      @guddlom7655 Год назад

      And they can't blame it on cannabis because that just relaxes and knocks people out,a drug which has even been legalised in Thailand now of all.places,and should be legalised here..

    • @i_know_youre_right_but
      @i_know_youre_right_but Год назад +11

      Oh come on. Anyone with half a brain knows that if cocaine is involved a fight is more likely to break out, same with alcohol.

    • @gregprocter765
      @gregprocter765 Год назад

      @@i_know_youre_right_but i think these guys would fancy a fight regardless of cocaine consumption just coke makes feel a bit harder. theres not really much you can do you cant really ban these drugs its a fight you cant win putting criminal records on these people just makes it less likely they will turn things around. But you know it keeps coppers looking busy and not accountable for genuine causes that they claim to represent.

    • @TWW-zk9gw
      @TWW-zk9gw Год назад +9

      ​@@i_know_youre_right_but you're wrong

    • @i_know_youre_right_but
      @i_know_youre_right_but Год назад

      @@TWW-zk9gw explain

  • @orourkedafootball
    @orourkedafootball Год назад +2

    I'm an Aston Villa supporter and was recently checked for drugs at a recent away game, and also at the same ground the previous season as well. These are the only two instances that's happened. Is it particular clubs or more general.

  • @gregjones1493
    @gregjones1493 Год назад +4

    Media, Police, Government, Medical Professionals, all have zero idea about drugs or drug use.

  • @EST1865
    @EST1865 Год назад +3

    A new era of people being arrested for slightly offensive chants

  • @SA-ff9uc
    @SA-ff9uc Год назад +24

    There's not one football ground I have been to where I haven't seen massive white lines.

  • @shaunshunt
    @shaunshunt Год назад

    This has never gone away, the thing that’s changed is that it’s not so we organised anymore as the kids don’t seem to care about keeping it underground

  • @vincerobinson6144
    @vincerobinson6144 Год назад +46

    The police presence makes them brave. Would be interesting to see what happened if the police and stewards retreated from the corner and left them to it. Many of these are school age.

    • @alishour5519
      @alishour5519 Год назад +3

      True thee will be no fight 👍

    • @elliottspokemon2654
      @elliottspokemon2654 Год назад +3

      I feel like it’s a general problem in the whole of the uk

    • @alynwillams4297
      @alynwillams4297 Год назад

      Look up Oldham v Wrexham. There was a 15 minute street battle which continued even when the police turned up

    • @vincerobinson6144
      @vincerobinson6144 Год назад +3

      @@alynwillams4297 Yes but they are the ones that organise a meet away from the ground. I’m talking about the wannabes that get involved in chest beating either side of the police and stewards in the ground. Just lots of people running back and forth.

    • @JJ-ef7lb
      @JJ-ef7lb Год назад

      @@vincerobinson6144that is the case for 90% of them I think. I’ve seen it loads of times. Once a massive group charged at each other and when there were no police they stopped short of each other started all the abuse and hand gestures before moving on! Good that they didn’t fight but it was comical!

  • @weewinty1stlambeg
    @weewinty1stlambeg Год назад +47

    I've been to many football matches in Northern Ireland, England and Scotland and I can honestly say I've never seen so many fans feeling the need to use drugs, openly in front of other fans like its the normal thing to do. I hear a lot about fans fighting before and after the games but it seems its prearranged at a specific location as I never seem to witness it happen (thankfully). But yes I think it's more than just drug use as the "casuals" (I think they like to class themselves as?) Seem to be getting so much younger than I can remember them being back in my day. Sadly I believe its something that won't be going away anytime soon. 😢

    • @Mikeb1001
      @Mikeb1001 Год назад +3

      Part of the age thing is that for a long time you literally had the ‘Football Factory’. Younger hooligans coming through kind of under the watch of the older ones but as much of it got stamped out back in the early to mid 2000s, there’s a generation gap and only really the youth mobs getting involved so it reduces the average age

    • @shsh-he5qg
      @shsh-he5qg Год назад +1

      Junkies mate

    • @FlickeringEmber
      @FlickeringEmber Год назад

      It's been getting worse even before lockdown, especially up in Scotland. Been to games on the East and West coast.

    • @heavysmoker
      @heavysmoker Год назад

      @@FlickeringEmber Whom do you support?

    • @johnw6389
      @johnw6389 Год назад

      It's the agenda... police involved... government involved... it's not rocket science.

  • @GamingGoose
    @GamingGoose Год назад +5

    Trouble always coincides with people being fed up of the regime. Everyone's skint and sick of all this so they lash out at football. Same happened last time in the 70s 80s etc when people had no money.

  • @paulfenty5240
    @paulfenty5240 7 месяцев назад +4

    Back to the good days

  • @notmenotme614
    @notmenotme614 8 месяцев назад +10

    Went to watch a rugby game last weekend. It was an away fixture for my team. Afterwards I was sat in a pub talking to the away fans we were both in our different team shirts, I shook their hand and said it was a good game. They made me feel welcome.
    When I think about it and look back, I can’t remember ANY police presence at rugby games.

    • @Edgisco
      @Edgisco 7 месяцев назад +10

      What's that got to do with football? Theirs always been a class/cultural difference between the fanbase

    • @John-gx2ry
      @John-gx2ry 7 месяцев назад +2

      No one cares

    • @notmenotme614
      @notmenotme614 7 месяцев назад +5

      @@John-gx2ry if you don’t care, then why are you replying?

    • @John-gx2ry
      @John-gx2ry 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@notmenotme614 because your implication that rugby fans are better than football fans has zero merit. Stop commenting on football issues as a rugby fan.
      It's obvious the two are entirely different worlds. Doesn't make anyone better. But by all means, if it makes you feel superior👍 crack on

    • @harrychalmers2141
      @harrychalmers2141 7 месяцев назад

      To be fair I'm assuming this is rugby union, you do get a bit of violence with rugby league especially between rival teams.

  • @5000000squid
    @5000000squid Год назад +3

    Been fueling violence for years always charged up on the bugle

  • @nickybrooks6942
    @nickybrooks6942 Год назад +35

    A few years back I dated a man who had a care worker , that care worker was proud to be a football hooligan ! He admitted that he didn't go to the games for the football but went for the fights , I truly don't understand that sort of mentality especially because of his job caring for a man who was an amputee !

    • @Captain.Pugwash
      @Captain.Pugwash Год назад +31

      Adrenaline.. to feel really alive.

    • @paulgibbons2320
      @paulgibbons2320 Год назад +11

      Job center pushes anyone into those roles. Nobody wants to do it.
      Most under paid and valued profession.
      If he had a job he cared about he would not risk it for a bit of a scrap.

    • @danieloliver4558
      @danieloliver4558 Год назад +17

      Exactly these are normal people. Everyone has a release on the weekend after a long week. Some do extreme sports, others go to the gym, others drive cars erratically. He went for a day out with his mates and a bit of confrontation.

    • @borntoclimb7116
      @borntoclimb7116 Год назад +3

      Criminals with complexes

    • @borntoclimb7116
      @borntoclimb7116 Год назад +3

      @@Captain.Pugwash He can go to climb and not be a criminal coward

  • @trublu72lewis77
    @trublu72lewis77 Год назад

    Wow, stadium bans for people supplying class A.
    That's pushing the boat out!!

  • @TheTruth-uy4kp
    @TheTruth-uy4kp Год назад +36

    The stuff the dealers are mixing the cocaine with is alot worse than cocaine.

    • @halfpint5877
      @halfpint5877 Год назад +2

      Yea teething powder is terrible

    • @TheTruth-uy4kp
      @TheTruth-uy4kp Год назад

      ​@@halfpint5877 fentanyl, xylazine, tranqz, ketamine etc, stuff which is alot more addictive and deadly than cocaine but alot cheaper.

    • @halfpint5877
      @halfpint5877 Год назад

      @The Truth ok so you're another misinformed idiot talking online as if you know ehat youre talking about. all those drugs have the literal opposite effects of cocaine. Ketamine can be consumed pretty safely theres Absolutely no reason to mix it with blow. Downers are often cut with fent etc, uppers arent, because they wouldn't be uppers. Sure in rare cases its possible, but 99% of dealers rely on repeat business.

    • @TheTruth-uy4kp
      @TheTruth-uy4kp Год назад +1

      @@halfpint5877 I know what I'm talking about, its a shame the police havent got a clue tho, doesn't matter about its an upper or downer if its mixed with cocaine, they mix it to make it alot more addictive and to bulk up the price with cheaper more addictive substances.

    • @TheTruth-uy4kp
      @TheTruth-uy4kp Год назад

      Grooming gangs are using these tranq drugs for other purposes and the police won't do anything about it, vigilante season in Manchester...also synthetic opioids are alot worse than the real stuff.

  • @miketgl4543
    @miketgl4543 Год назад +5

    How sad are these men.

    • @davemcmahon4045
      @davemcmahon4045 Год назад

      @Mike TLG Their not men their immature little boys

    • @TCCTTWH
      @TCCTTWH Год назад

      Exactley. There not men. Wankers were hiding behind ridiculous face masks and the sofa for two years cause the government told them. Two pints of stella and a line and there back out thinking there roman gladiators. SAD LOSERS.

    • @beaterbikechannel2538
      @beaterbikechannel2538 Год назад

      Like it or not, this is the potential for violence we need to keep our new "vulnerable fighting age male children" in hotels away from women citizens.

    • @billymarsh648
      @billymarsh648 Год назад

      Kids

    • @jamieroach5755
      @jamieroach5755 8 месяцев назад

      lets hope they dont get hold of you mike

  • @humanbeing6933
    @humanbeing6933 Год назад +3

    The logic.. “My brother god sick from smoking cigarettes. So I’m going to ban anyone from smoking cigarettes, drag away people selling them and lock them in a dungeon”

  • @cake-diver8991
    @cake-diver8991 7 месяцев назад

    What i notice is there are more resources being put into monitoring football games than local communities.

  • @jimmy-stourbridge-fc8980
    @jimmy-stourbridge-fc8980 Год назад +2

    It's happening in Non League aswell ay my club Stourbridge we had a game abandoned with our local rivals Halesowen in a pre season charity game because of d1ckheads from both sides fighting in Stourbridge town centre & after we went 2-0 up also in our league Southern League Premier Central Tamworth v Nuneaton was abandoned because of violence.

    • @phax71
      @phax71 Год назад

      To be fair, Stourbridge has always been full of wannabees…. Get yourselves over to The Molineux

    • @wanderlusterer442
      @wanderlusterer442 Год назад

      Hahaha....have I read correctly? 😂😂😂

    • @jimmy-stourbridge-fc8980
      @jimmy-stourbridge-fc8980 Год назад

      @@wanderlusterer442 yeah

  • @IBTU
    @IBTU Год назад +21

    Watching gown men kick a ball doesn’t attract the most intelligent people

  • @butikimbo9595
    @butikimbo9595 Год назад +3

    BRING BACK THE MAGIC OF WHAT IT WAS IN THE GOOD OLD TIMES WHEN WATCHING A FOOTBALL MATCH WAS A PARTY AND NOT A STAGE TO VENT FRUSTRATIONS AGAINST THE RIVAL.

    • @nasreireinas3392
      @nasreireinas3392 7 месяцев назад

      Yes that would be good, unless you have a time machine handy, those times have gone, when did you see kids killing each other over post codes?times have changed and not for the better,

  • @kokobwild2413
    @kokobwild2413 6 месяцев назад +1

    Cutting edge journalism this.

  • @glenford2870
    @glenford2870 Год назад +2

    Young lads just having a enjoyable afternoon

  • @baby_joe
    @baby_joe Год назад +3

    'Football violence has skyrocketed since the end of lockdown'...you mean lockdown, where fans couldn't go to games?! That's a weird thing to measure it against

  • @user-wm1zg1dh8f
    @user-wm1zg1dh8f Год назад +7

    I think it's honestly so sad and pathetic how (mostly men) get so angry over a football game.

    • @brain8484
      @brain8484 9 месяцев назад

      i think its because they all like smelling each others farts after pies and nasty burgers. then lose it after one beer. and of course their mums are not there.

  • @johnsmith-rs2vk
    @johnsmith-rs2vk Год назад

    A clip round the ear from the local Bobby is now history .

  • @mossy199
    @mossy199 Год назад

    Blaming it on coke is a complete sham.

  • @Caras443
    @Caras443 Год назад +9

    They should do what they did 25 years ago : identify, imprison and ban the worst offenders to set an example for the others. Making excuses for their behavior is counterproductive. In the end, we all have to live by the standards of the society we live in.

  • @phax71
    @phax71 Год назад +3

    Coke has been rife in and around English grounds for OVER 20 years already, it’s not new, it’s just more accessible

  • @jibberism9910
    @jibberism9910 3 месяца назад

    One thing cocaïne is definitely NOT fueling, is quality journalism by people with a passion or possibly even a heartbeat.

  • @falvalisious
    @falvalisious Год назад

    Randonly came accross this as a county fan

  • @JohnKobaRuddy
    @JohnKobaRuddy Год назад +3

    The levels of violence are small and the acta themselves are more pathetic today than in yesteryear.

  • @bobshields6829
    @bobshields6829 Год назад +15

    Give them E instead. If they are caught not on E then give them a banning order.

    • @909rhythm
      @909rhythm Год назад +6

      Yes give them a " e " and a big spliff and send them off to a house / techno club that will change their aggressive outlook and behaviour !!! 👍

    • @Red-tm1bs
      @Red-tm1bs Год назад

      ​@@jonmurray2350it was also the reason for some horrible deaths

    • @Rebellion1
      @Rebellion1 Год назад

      @@Red-tm1bs I attended numerous raves in the 90s and cannot remember one person ever dying off taking an E
      Any literature to back that up

    • @Red-tm1bs
      @Red-tm1bs Год назад

      @@Rebellion1 yeah a quick internet search will do it for you! Not rocket science!

  • @jamesdivine69
    @jamesdivine69 8 месяцев назад +1

    Whenever your football team plays badly, going through a dip. Nothing beats bumping a load of Charlie, turning a few over and mildly smashing up the place. Away days, beats shopping with the missus and her fam, followed by dinner @ the outlaws

  • @thejeffjefferson4128
    @thejeffjefferson4128 7 месяцев назад

    It’s a resounding YES…. particularly outside the Premiership… and also in the nighttime economy..

  • @ennmb1
    @ennmb1 9 месяцев назад +5

    Better to be hooligan than a roadman

  • @billymorrison3296
    @billymorrison3296 Год назад +1

    Jesus it's young guys wanting a tear up.Been happening for decades.Nothing new. Tribal, unity,a laugh

  • @lesscotford1419
    @lesscotford1419 6 месяцев назад +1

    These lads are gonna be the front line if they organised it right when it eventually goes off with the imports. This behaviour is as old as the game and reflects the mood of the working man in Britain then, now and the Saturday's to come.

  • @chadscalls9101
    @chadscalls9101 Год назад +6

    Foot ball violence has actually gone down, before there used to be a lot of organised fights between football fans from different clubs, now it’s just drunken fights started at random between people mainly influenced by alcohol , cocaine doesn’t make people aggressive alcohol does

    • @chadscalls9101
      @chadscalls9101 7 месяцев назад

      @@mikeoxlong3526 you seem to know a lot about cocaine 😂😂😶‍🌫️😶‍🌫️

  • @martinobrien7110
    @martinobrien7110 Год назад +12

    The real side of banter ladishiness that lurks in the English male football thug .

  • @bendoyle5412
    @bendoyle5412 Год назад +2

    Football violence and hooliganism is a massive underground culture in Europe, S. America and Asia and has been for decades, it has absolutely nothing to do with drugs or alcohol. Hooligans across europe meet up sober to fight, it is a lifestyle of group identity and rebellion that so many men are drawn to. This video dumbs it down to something completely irrelevant

  • @ronneyscott5112
    @ronneyscott5112 Год назад +2

    Nothing has changed .. I'm almost 60 and i was a football hooligan ....when people have Nothing they join together ..🙄 IT WILL GET WORSE .. 😢

    • @waqaskhakid6158
      @waqaskhakid6158 8 месяцев назад

      You guys are too soft send them down to middle east or Africa these lot wouldn't last a day

  • @KJ-js7pi
    @KJ-js7pi Год назад +5

    you wont get this with tennis, rugby or cricket fans... i wonder why

    • @spamme9021
      @spamme9021 Год назад +6

      Exactly, and people sniff at all these sports. They just don’t have the ridiculous drinking culture that football has

    • @crimsonchin9632
      @crimsonchin9632 Год назад

      Dunno like, Welsh Rugby fans don't exactly have a stellar reputation. Which proves that whichever sport is most popular with the masses will inevitably attrac the most trouble given that Rugby is bigger in Wales than football.

    • @seanthomas2906
      @seanthomas2906 Год назад

      Rubbish

    • @guddlom7655
      @guddlom7655 Год назад

      Rugby league fans fight and it also happens on a even bigger scale at big horse racing meeting now,fuelled by the same thing,it's just that football gets a lot more attention because it's the country's number 1 sport

    • @hoi4noob765
      @hoi4noob765 Год назад

      a lot of wankers

  • @tellmemore8837
    @tellmemore8837 Год назад

    Unfortunately it's either drink, drugs or both.

  • @plumduff3303
    @plumduff3303 Год назад +2

    I gave up on football after witnessing first hand the 70s and 80s thuggery on the terraces...not surprised

  • @JugglinJellyTake01
    @JugglinJellyTake01 Год назад +10

    Over the last 13 years we have seen the disabled and unemployed stigmatised, wage stagnation, inflation, normalising food banks, high inflation and punitive attitudes towards the unemployed and low waged.
    This is not the '..new normal...', in fact it is not 'normal', it is an engineered and steepening slippery slope designed to erode our rights including our rights to vote and go on strike for better pay.
    As many have said this is a symptom of wider issues: the cost of living; stagnant wages; high energy prices; the solution is peaceful action on the picket lines and in peaceful protest for better wages, better conditions and better representation.
    To refer to the this as the '...new normal...' is to imply people should accept current circumstances.
    We should not accept this as the '...new normal...', we should oppose it with red lines not white lines.

    • @peterramsden3134
      @peterramsden3134 Год назад +1

      football violence has been around for decades not just the last 13 years

  • @kostephan9442
    @kostephan9442 Год назад +7

    It’s really really eye opening how so many of the comments try to empathise with and humanise these men who cause needless violence and terror over something as small as a game. I’m just going to head over to a video of young men who look slightly more “ethnic” doing the exact same thing and I’m sure the comments there will have the same amount of sympathy and understanding for them…….😂😂😂

    • @davidfogarty2220
      @davidfogarty2220 6 месяцев назад

      What I find worrying is many of these many men won't just keep it to the football terraces, but also mete out domestic violence to their wives.

  • @Rogier7305
    @Rogier7305 Год назад +2

    I have used drugs but never had the idea of invading a pitch or cause other violence.

  • @howareyouwho8430
    @howareyouwho8430 Год назад +2

    Dont blame the game, dont blame the drink or drugs, blame the scum bags who behave like animals

  • @evilkhamzat
    @evilkhamzat Год назад +7

    Didn’t happen in Qatar…wonder why?

    • @bollocks5724
      @bollocks5724 Год назад +3

      Probably because they didn't use slave labour.

    • @skycloud4802
      @skycloud4802 Год назад

      No drugs and alcohol. They have zero tolerance for antisocial behaviour in general.

    • @grahammurray7426
      @grahammurray7426 Год назад +4

      Most football lads couldn't afford to go

    • @tonybordley7481
      @tonybordley7481 Год назад

      No One to fight

  • @brenforan4916
    @brenforan4916 Год назад +2

    Back in the 70s they blamed ale now it’s Lemo fighting at the footy will always happen we never even had a drink when I might or might not of been involved 😊

  • @RW-nr6bh
    @RW-nr6bh Год назад

    I'm glad that government didn't act on the idiotic proposal allow alcohol within sight of the pitch in Leagues 1 and 2.

  • @Hollows1997
    @Hollows1997 Год назад +3

    No. It’s a symptom.
    The modern football hooliganism doesn’t have one distinct cause but rather multiple symptoms.
    For some it might be the overly sanitised world we live in, for others it may be total lack of respect for police and for some it might be the camaraderie. Mix a little of all of those together and you see how this could lead to hooliganism.

    • @infrasleep
      @infrasleep 5 месяцев назад

      Well said. You're the first person here not spouting the by rote cliches and drivel from the sociology books of the 70's -all of which insulted the working class by making them the hooligans because of (insert drippy excuse) As you say, it's muliple reasons/varied perpetrators .

    • @Hollows1997
      @Hollows1997 5 месяцев назад

      @@infrasleep the reasons for hooliganism have always been the same really, a sort of fight club for some and to others it’s the closest they’ll get to actual battle in a war. The use of cocaine is irrelevant given how prevalent it is in todays society, and while it is taken by these “hooligans” they certainly aren’t alone in taking it, nor is it fuelling the rise in football related violence.

  • @Aussie-Mocha
    @Aussie-Mocha Год назад +5

    If it was a higher scoring game it would provide a higher level of satisfaction between scoring goals.
    Unfortunately, with only a few goals per game on average, the crowd is SO riled up by the time a goal is scored the reaction from both sides is out of control.
    Stupid sport . Aussie football is much better 😅

    • @Zenhumanist
      @Zenhumanist Год назад

      And much more stupid.

    • @mwd331
      @mwd331 Год назад +1

      Right you are champ…

    • @v0LcaN_o___
      @v0LcaN_o___ Год назад +2

      nah Ice hockey is much much better

    • @guddlom7655
      @guddlom7655 Год назад +2

      Also a sport which is far to bank rolled with money nowadays..

  • @pravito_keys
    @pravito_keys Месяц назад

    Finally, Indonesia is not alone when it comes to this

  • @andy242headhunter
    @andy242headhunter Год назад +2

    Need to get them all back on the E's, things were more chilled in the early nineties.

  • @ronniegilbert7998
    @ronniegilbert7998 Год назад +4

    Beautiful. Aslong as it don’t involve innocent ppl w families

  • @LukeMovement1
    @LukeMovement1 Год назад +7

    Who knows, we know its fueling the house of commons however.

  • @lastnihilist9
    @lastnihilist9 Год назад +1

    just out of interest what do you think fuelled past violence?

  • @CheeseChilliNaanBread
    @CheeseChilliNaanBread Год назад +1

    the forest fan running into billy sharp wasn’t fuelled by anything other than pure alcohol, the bloke didn’t know it was him until he saw himself on the cctv the next day and handed himself in

  • @Pitchtalk
    @Pitchtalk Год назад +13

    We think it's a multitude of things as opposed to one or two, the coke and alcohol will lower inhibitors and make people think they're invincible but also the small punishments and cultural attitude of 'i can get away with it at the football' need changing as well. Banning alcohol at matches and class a drugs could have an impact but remember some people thinking it's just 'lads blowing off steam', which is another attitude that needs breaking down as that is used to excuse a lot of abhorrent behaviour. Not being able to go to games during COVID, again a cheap excuse, if you're a true football fan you aren't going to matches to make trouble, you're going to enjoy the game, those creating trouble are violent morons.

    • @i_know_youre_right_but
      @i_know_youre_right_but Год назад +2

      Literally no one believes you can get away with it at the football. You can have a fight anywhere in the UK and most the time it will be NFA. As soon as a fight is linked to football, you’re very likely to be sent to prison.

    • @louistudor1086
      @louistudor1086 Год назад +2

      This is the reason why the World Cup in Qatar alcohol was banned through out the stadiums to prevent violence and crazy people

    • @MBRoa22
      @MBRoa22 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@louistudor1086 Main reason was that Qatar is a Muslim nation. Any other reason was second to that. Alcohol is never ever getting banned from sporting events in the UK. Too many teams and leagues are propped up by beer sponsorships.

  • @caglarkarademir
    @caglarkarademir Год назад +4

    LEGALISE the weed you muppets!

    • @Keeplifesimple9
      @Keeplifesimple9 Год назад

      They are too dumb to Legalise it mate, I've given up with those careless pillocks in charge at this point. Getting everybody addicted to Alcohol and Fags but you cant even smoke a joint legally with freedom what a shambles.

  • @AndrewG1989
    @AndrewG1989 Год назад +2

    I find it quite funny on how fans are being so rowdy. Including one police officer having to push the young fan away and the young fan was really giving it. I think that it's not just Covid-19 that has caused football violence to increase but I think that its the younger fans who are the ones who have the passion of causing trouble.

    • @louistudor1086
      @louistudor1086 Год назад

      They are trouble makers they are only good for causing trouble

    • @waqaskhakid6158
      @waqaskhakid6158 8 месяцев назад

      Send them down to middle east we will straighten them up you guys are to soft that's why your society is crumbling mate

  • @HeliosNeo
    @HeliosNeo 7 месяцев назад

    There's a lot of numpties on it at PL games.

  • @martinobrien7110
    @martinobrien7110 Год назад +4

    Certainly Alcohol is involved at the base .

  • @pgc8410
    @pgc8410 Год назад +3

    Comedy gold. Crewe and Stockport 12 year olds. A total non story.

    • @derekalexander846
      @derekalexander846 Год назад

      Absolutely mate; total clickbait garbage from Mainstream Media.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      Can't be as they mentioned 2 years of COVID.

  • @jamesdoyle8442
    @jamesdoyle8442 7 месяцев назад

    Sick. Very. 😩

  • @popeeeyee253
    @popeeeyee253 Год назад +5

    There a line from a 1977 doc on Millwall that talks about when they put up the price of the tickets to force out the violence and make league football a predominantly more middle class sport;
    "Violence is only one side of the coin. On the other is good humour, companionship and a sense of belonging which for these lads would be hard to replace. Of course measures must be taken to curb football violence but if the measures drive the terrace fans out, the cure may be worse than the disease"
    I think for me that's kinda bang on. The history of the UK is an attempt to destroy anything that looks like community and that exploded in the 80's and has continued through too now, no matter the government (although I personally think the tories do it faster). If you want to explain why there's violence (not that I'm romanticising it) we would do well not to look at the people on the ground but the system who those in fluorescent jackets are protecting.

    • @ianbanks2844
      @ianbanks2844 Год назад

      Criminal violence is never justified . If you think that it is then next time I'm short of a bob or two I shall take it from you and others who hold similar views . And if you object I shall simply say " Well according to you people who are poor are entitled to not be poor by any means they so desire " .

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      As a Millwall fan who enters his 8th decade next May,I know there was,also,another,lesser-known Panorama documentary in 1968 showing 3,000 Millwall fans visiting Villa Park when Millwall lost 3/0 to Villa in THe 3rd Round of THe F A Cup:)

    • @nasreireinas3392
      @nasreireinas3392 7 месяцев назад

      Blame the tories yawn, lets vote labour in and ooen the floodgates on illegals, trouble at football will be the last of your troubles

    • @popeeeyee253
      @popeeeyee253 7 месяцев назад

      Hey, I don't think you actually read the comment, I said; "no matter the government" meaning that I think the answer isn't about which party you vote for, I think its much deeper.
      I'm saying that in this country, there is a significant problem of how massively the government (at large, not just the tory party to be explicitly clear) destroys anything that could be a form of people having ownership and control over how they live their lives, both as individuals and members of a community.
      Now I'm going to assume that by illegals you mean drugs because this is the context we are currently talking in so if you were to mention illegal tax fraud, for instance, it would be out of context and irrelevant to the conversation at hand. So to be honest if the conversation you are interested in is the illegality of drugs, there's been many countries that have decriminalised drugs (Portugal most famously) which had a hugely positive impact on the drug problems from individual addiction to gang presence. @@nasreireinas3392

    • @nasreireinas3392
      @nasreireinas3392 7 месяцев назад

      I think we are cross purposes here, by illegals i meant people not illegal drugs, but hey ho we all make mistakes, even me

  • @k_rez
    @k_rez Год назад +6

    Why does no one look on social media. It's all on there. The cuture...clothes, drugs, tifo's. That is where the interactions are game day is just content.

  • @deek5252
    @deek5252 6 месяцев назад +1

    In the 80's the casuals from Aberdeen came out in good number.Hibs and hearts were also pretty mental

  • @Andy_McColl
    @Andy_McColl 4 месяца назад

    Sadly it’s not just at the football, go into any UK town centres on a Friday or Saturday night and have a look at people, huge numbers all fuelled up on coke

  • @robbarker2894
    @robbarker2894 Год назад +6

    Ian, completely true, im one of Maggies kids. Its a cycle repeating, youth snubbed by politicians and feeling powerless. Cant buy a house, job uncertainty and ignored because the medis and society only care about race and woke. This is history repeating and why in the early 80s we all got together to vent our anger on other youths at the footy. We should have all got together and smashed the system and the pollicians and media to be fair but it was far more fun to get pissed with youf brothers and go and kick someones head in at the footy. Plus we looked smart doing it

  • @jamesfawcett841
    @jamesfawcett841 Год назад +4

    Where did that kid whose dad could do nothing about him get the money from to go to football? Every sympathy, but …..

  • @dan19752008
    @dan19752008 Год назад

    I've never seen so many bad drivers on the road either, that will drug & alcohol related.

  • @FulhamboyH
    @FulhamboyH Год назад +1

    It’s been going on since the 60’s it’s not going to stop anytime soon