Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Turkish Club Opens Up to Better Fans

Depending on what one reads, the conventional wisdom driven by sports journalists is that the typical sportsman earns too much money and does not behave well-enough to be an examples to the younger people. Predictably, this view goes unquestioned and is trumpeted again and again whenever a player is found to have committed indiscretions whether in public or on the pitch. My view though is that more often, the sports fan and especially the soccer fun in the leagues of Europe exhibit far worse behaviour. They are not called out for that behaviour because the sports associations and the teams often rely on their continuing to buy expensive tickets for matches and supporting clubs through the purchase of merchandise.

Fenerbahce, a Turkish soccer club was condemned to play a match in an empty stadium following crowd trouble. That club instead turned this situation around by distributing free tickets to women and children by banning all males aged 12 years and above. As reported on Louise Taylor's blog here, the match went ahead and the crowd turned up in full support of the teams with no crowd trouble. I see this as an extremely intelligent way for the club to try and build a fan base among women and children while denying trouble making men an opportunity to watch the matches live. 

Clearly, this cannot work throughout a season of more than 25 games but it is an important symbolic gesture to a new audience. That the racist chanters and violent mobs were kept from the stadium was victory in itself. 

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