England fans face FA ban from Turkey

Published: 28 April 2003 y., Monday
FA sources say it is 'highly unlikely' to take any of the 4,000-5,000 tickets it is entitled to for the volatile match in Turkey on 11 October, which FA and police chiefs fear could spark violent clashes between rival supporters. Details of the FA's stance have emerged as it waits to hear on Thursday how Uefa will punish the pitch invasions and racist chants, such as 'I'd rather be a Paki than a Turk', which spoiled England's 2-0 win over Turkey in Sunderland earlier this month. Uefa could make them play the qualifier on 11 June against Slovakia in Middlesbrough behind closed doors. In its evidence about events at the Stadium of Light, the FA has pleaded with Uefa's disciplinary committee to take into account the lack of complaints about recent England home games and impose at worst a final warning for the fans' behaviour. 'We cannot prejudge Uefa's decision but if they hand us a final warning, we will use that positively to send a strong message to England fans that if they continue with this sort of behaviour, including the booing of national anthems, then they and the team will suffer because we'll have to play games behind closed doors,' said a senior FA figure. Although the FA is proud of its anti-racism work, it recognises that much more needs to be done to end the macho, xenophobic culture that still surrounds many England games. It is reviewing the operation of englandfans, its official supporters club, and examining ways of encouraging more women, families and ethnic minorities to join.
Šaltinis: observer.co.uk
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

In Victory, Venus Williams Is Surprisingly Vulnerable

On an increasing number of occasions, the opponents of Venus Williams have tended to step on the court and immediately search for a foxhole. more »

EXPECTING TRIUMPH IN SYDNEY OLYMPIC GAMES

Lithuanian state and sport officials say the Sydney Olympics might be a time of glory for the country's athletes. more »

Sluggish Sampras defeats Damm

Pete Sampras slogged through a slow-motion, first-round victory Monday as the U.S. Open got off to a sleepy start. more »

Virtual Tournaments in www.chess.lt Website

Let’s take part in the tournaments more »

Agassi faces Kim

Top seed Andre Agassi faces an apparently straightforward opening round clash at next week's US Open against American qualifier Alex Kim at Flushing Meadow more »

IOC May Let Dot-Coms Cover Games in … 2002

The International Olympic Committee's new-media director says the ban on Net reporters may be lifted. more »

Athletes who win medals in Sydney will owe taxes in Australia

Medals at the Sydney Olympics might come with a little something extra -- a tax bill. more »

Banned From the Olympics

The International Olympic Committee has essentially blocked Web sites from covering the games in Sydney, Australia. more »

Carlsbad Tournament

Martina Hingis opened defense of her title at the $535,000 tournament in Carlsbad by turning back Dominique Van Roost 6-2, 7-6 (7-2) on Tuesday to book a spot in the quarterfinals. more »

Germans set early pace

Michael Schumacher recorded the quickest time in Friday's free practice for this weekend's German Grand Prix at Hockenheim. more »