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Heretical, in that I hope to challenge pre-conceived ideas and accepted assumptions. Orthodox because some things (politics, football) never change. Tribally Labour (1900-2015, NOT the Corbyn cult) & Killie. Prepared to criticise both, hence the blog name.
Wednesday, 12 April 2017
CROWDED HOUSES NOW AVAILABLE
My new book 'CROWDED HOUSES' is now available. Paperback edition and e-book
Excerpts are available for both.
Excerpts are available for both.
Click to enlarge
What can you expect from it? Well, there are several excerpts in blog posts from this year but I'll let the book's introduction speak for itself.
It’s a perennial post-match topic. Along with
scepticism over refereeing decisions, doubts about penalty kicks, uncertainty
of offside calls and animated expressions of delight/disgust at the game in
general, debate over attendances invariably pops up. “What do you think the crowd was?” is part of the football fan’s staple
conversation.
I first began to take a wider interest in attendances
in the 1980s when I noticed that press reports of English matches usually
contained an exact crowd figure while those of Scottish games were more likely
to be estimates ending in two or three zeroes. So began my personal odyssey to
discover the truth or otherwise behind the estimates. Like Odysseus but
fortunately minus Calypso, Cyclops, Sirens or Lotus-Eaters, it was a voyage
that took many years to complete. Ultimately, it came to fruition in my book ‘The
ROAR of the Crowd.’ Its generally favourable reception motivated me to expand
my interest. I decided that one day I would return to the topic but this time
would look at Europe as a whole. Since then research has become easier thanks
to the increasing availability of source material online. The days of long
journeys to cold libraries to pore for hours over decaying microfiches are
thankfully long gone. Yet just like ‘ROAR’ this book has been many years in the
making.
The aim is to look at the rises and falls in
crowd figures, to see what factors are at play, what similarities or
differences prompt movement in one direction or the other, to compare countries
of equal size and to disseminate more widely information otherwise unknown. I’ve
endeavoured to cover every country in UEFA, even those with no or little
information available. I’ve looked at domestic leagues and European club
competitions. I’ve sought to accord appropriate coverage to each country. I’ve
also tried to delve down as deeply as I can into the lower levels of the game,
to the fifth and subsequent tiers. England and Scotland are the most prominent
but Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Russia and others also feature heavily and no
nation is omitted.
The biggest problem was knowing when to stop. The
football season has no natural concluding point these days. For example, the
2015-16 Champions and Europa Leagues qualifiers kicked off less than 48 hours
after the conclusion of the 2014-15 season in Spain. There are also several countries
whose seasons run from March-November each year. So a cut-off date has to be
arbitrary and December 31st 2016 is that date here (though a few
important events in early 2017 have managed to squeeze themselves in).
Information on some countries is scant and in
one or two cases almost non-existent, while others present a bewildering array
of often contradictory figures. Wherever possible I have used official figures
issued by leagues and national associations. Where these aren’t available I
have looked at numbers as provided on official club websites and after that
reputable media outlets.
Occasionally this results in a conflict and in
such instances I have opted to go for the figure more commonly used so where,
for instance, I have found three sources citing a figure of 20,000 and two of
15,000 I have accepted the one with the most sources.
Inevitably there will be differences between
some of the numbers here and what the reader may have seen elsewhere. Alas,
there is no universally agreed format for determining exactly what constitutes
an attendance. Is it all those present in the ground? Or simply those who PAID
to gain admission? Does it include those who paid for admission but didn’t turn
up? Are complimentary tickets to be included? Visiting officials and staff?
Police and stewards taking a sneaky look at the action? Catering stall workers
craning their necks over their customers’ heads to catch a glimpse of the game?
The press and TV crews?
At first glance some of these suggestions may
seem strange, but consider this: the record attendance for any match ever
played in Europe was the Scotland v England international in May 1937. Two
figures are often mentioned in the record books – 149,415 and 149,547. How can
the discrepancy of 132 between the two figures be explained? Well, there were
exactly 132 places in the Hampden Park press box.
At any rate I hope this illustrates the problems
that can arise when assessing the accuracy of the crowd numbers or at least
explain why you will often see two or more different attendances claimed for
the same match. But while I can’t claim 100% accuracy for the content herein
and fully accept any errors are mine and mine alone (for which please accept
humble advance apologies), I am confident that the information contained is as
accurate as is possible and that the general conclusions regarding totals,
averages, occupancy rate and rankings are correct and any minor discrepancies
would have no impact on them.
I mentioned previously the difficulty in finding
a suitable cut-off point for inclusion. The same applies to introductions.
Thanks for buying.
Thursday, 6 April 2017
MY LOVE OF NON-LEAGUE FOOTBALL
MY
LOVE OF NON-LEAGUE FOOTBALL
IN
THE BEGINNING
I’ve
been watching Non-League football on a regular basis since I was 10 years old.
What I like most is that the players, club officials and supporters are there
for the love of the game. The true spirit of football exists at Non-League level.
I
grew up in North-West London and I was taken by my family to see my local club
QPR as a child in the 1970’s.
I’ve
always supported the R’s, but when they were playing away from home I started
going to see my local Non-League clubs – Hendon primarily, but also Finchley,
Barnet and Edgware Town.
GROUNDHOPPER
From
there, I decided to visit every Non-League club in London as my groundhopping
bug began. By the time I was 17, I had visited all 92 Football League grounds
and I visited all the Scottish League grounds whilst still a teenager.
Since
then, I’ve continued travelling all around the country to visit Non-League
clubs. Last season, I chalked up my 2,000th ground at FC United of Manchester.
WORLD
RECORD
One
of the best groundhops was being part of a world record in March 2004. I joined
250 other groundhoppers to watch five matches at five different football
grounds in one day in the Central Midlands League.
This
is listed in the Guinness Book of Records and we received certificates
confirming the world record at the end of the fifth game.
INSIDE
PRISON!
In
December 2011, I set about watching a match inside Feltham Prison in Middlesex.
This
featured a team called Phoenix FC, who had to play all their fixtures at home
(for obvious reasons!) as inmates of the Young Offender Institution at Feltham.
I
received special permission by email to attend a fixture, but I was told not to
bring a phone or a camera with me. I was instructed to arrive in the main car
park along with the match referee and the visiting players from Hanworth Villa
Vets.
We
were met by members of the prison staff who escorted us all in together…via an
airport-style metal detector, a body search, numerous locked gates and along a
path to the changing rooms.
This
process took 45 minutes. After the players and ref got changed, we were then
accompanied through more locked gates out to the playing area.
A
high mesh fence with barbed wire on top surrounded the football pitch. There
were dug-outs along one touchline and I watched the match from there as the
only spectator.
THE
FUTURE
I
have now been to 2,117 football grounds and have completed visits to the all
the grounds in the top 16 divisions of English football down to Non-League step
4. Then at step 5 I need 23 grounds and another 71 at step 6.
There
are endless possibilities at step 7 and below. Also, I’ve been to 35 European
countries plus the USA for football – so it would be nice to visit more
countries.
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Tony Incenzo on Twitter @TonyIncenzo
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