Crowd trouble mars gallant Socceroos draw

By Davidde Corran / Roar Guru

On Saturday, as Socceroos fans drove through the centre of Rustenburg towards the Royal Bafokeng Stadium ahead of Australia’s Group D fixture with Ghana, they could be forgiven for feeling alarmed at the sight of half a dozen shops spruiking tombstones.

Thankfully, that morbid sight didn’t prove to be a bad omen for the Socceroos.

Down to 10 men for much of the game, and with their backs to the wall, Australia rallied and was by far the superior team in the second half.

Gallant, brave, astute, considered, pick any positive adjective and it would be appropriate. Unfortunately the same couldn’t be said for a handful of morons amongst the Australian supporters.

After a free kick was given against Nikita Rukavytsya late in the game for a late challenge on Ghana goalkeeper Richard Kingson, a tirade of bottles were thrown at the pitch – by Australian supporters!

While it was all from the one section of the stadium (which I was amongst) and only a couple made their destination, bottles were thrown intermittently as the game died out.

In other words, it was more than one or two stupid drunk supporters behaving badly and was very disappointing to see.

It had my mind thinking back to the reception the Uruguayan anthem got at ANZ Stadium in Sydney before that memorable 2005 World Cup playoff.

On Friday evening as England “supporters” were booing their team, I was proudly revelling with some colleagues from the Australian media in South Africa that Australian fans simply wouldn’t turn on their own like that. Yet the next day, as Australians booed coach Pim Verbeek, I was proved half-wrong.

If I was surprised to see the Australian response to Verbeek’s name, I was even more shocked by those who decided to throw beer bottles at the pitch.

Let me be clear, at most 20 or so bottles were thrown at the pitch and there were no players or match officials near that section of the stadium (though plenty of photographers, fans and security guards were nearly hit) but that doesn’t excuse this behaviour. A string of controversial refereeing decisions is no justification and it did little to lessen my embarrassment at the time.

Yet the real reason I’m bringing this souring event up is not just because I was ashamed by the behaviour of some of my fellow Australians. Instead, I wish to make one thing clear: just like the rest of the world, Australians also do “these” things.

Far too often Australians, whether they are fans or official members of the Socceroos delegation, have criticised members of other nations for a range of actions deemed unacceptable. Now we’ve been caught doing something just as bad. On the global stage, no less.

When someone makes a mistake, whether it’s as a referee or a supporter, his or her nationality shouldn’t be relevant (I’ve already had to put up with four years of “bloody Italians” so please not again). It’s too easy to get caught up in national stereotypes and other garbage at such moments.

As embarrassed as I am by the behaviour of those few Australians, I hope people don’t associate the actions of a few idiots with the rest of what is a wonderful set of Socceroos supporters. Furthermore, I’d encourage us all to bear that in mind when considering the actions of opponents and referees in the future.

To put it simply, on Saturday at the Royal Bafokeng Stadium a referee gave a bad decision and some foolish spectators embarrassed themselves and their country. No more, no less.

The Crowd Says:

2010-06-22T11:34:10+00:00

Steve

Guest


On a cricket tour to India I witnessed first hand the boorish, bogan mentality of the Fanatics. The clientele that the King Bogan, Warren Livingston, attracts is the quintessential ugly Aussie. He actively encourages this behaviour (I saw him trying to push a local Indian off a flimsy ladder whilst the man was trying to fix a scoreboard at Bangalore in 2004- much to the amusement of 'Wazza's' group of apes behind him). It makes me sick that these fools get so much TV coverage & media fall all over them. They should be banned from Anzac Day at Gallipoli to start with and people should start treating them with the contempt that they deserve.

2010-06-21T00:52:08+00:00

bazza

Guest


Nice to see that Australia is finally importing that "football culture"

2010-06-20T16:24:29+00:00

Roger Rational

Guest


Speaking of poor behaviour, was it really necessary for some hefty, pasty Kiwi girl in the crowd to strip down to her bra and jiggle her wobbily bits on worldwide television? Pity her poor father choking on his cornflakes in Taranaki when she flashed up on the screen!

AUTHOR

2010-06-20T11:07:01+00:00

Davidde Corran

Roar Guru


Though they look like they are made of glass they are actually plastic bottles.

AUTHOR

2010-06-20T11:05:49+00:00

Davidde Corran

Roar Guru


England v Australia? That would require the English to qualify for the next stage... not likely ;)

2010-06-20T09:21:43+00:00

Fisher Price

Guest


If Australians show spirit in a sport then they're entitled to win goddammit!

2010-06-20T09:12:07+00:00

Secret Squirell

Guest


Are we talking plastic or glass bottles ?

2010-06-20T03:51:11+00:00

Art Sapphire

Guest


MF - Wishing for the failure of the Socceroos.

2010-06-20T03:22:27+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


Thankfully, to date, we have been spared the sight of seeing young Australians draped in an Australian flag. With a little luck, we won't see it after the third game either.

2010-06-20T02:33:29+00:00

BigAl

Guest


. . . so true - and being overseas seems to to accentuate this sort of thing from Australians - wherever they gather enmasse ...!!!

2010-06-20T02:31:33+00:00

Al

Guest


Those that threw bottles are from the "fanatics", hardly football fans and mostly bandwagon jumping, Lleyton Hewitt worshipping bogans.

2010-06-20T01:42:38+00:00

Art Sapphire

Guest


Davidde - the irony of it all. Some so called Socceroo supporters who never attend football games, except when Australia is playing, behaving like what they think football fans should behave. Well thanks for turining up and providing the support, but it looks like some of you should only be allowed to drink out of plastic cups.

2010-06-19T23:23:56+00:00

Marcel Proust

Guest


The dudes who threw the bottles were clearly as daft as a brush. BUT...............if Aussie players and our players hold onto their bottle ( geddit ?!?!!?! ), we could well see a game between England and Australia. Father v Son. Abraham v Isaac. It's the Oedipus Complex on a football pitch. The Aussie fans won't be throwing stuff if ( when ? ) their team gives England a good hiding. That would break my heart.

2010-06-19T23:14:08+00:00

Marcel Proust

Guest


As Danny Baker would say: "Sometimes right, sometimes wrong. Always certain...." You Aussies are missing out if you haven't heard his Sausage Sandwich Game. It's bigger than Scrabble in Great Britain.

AUTHOR

2010-06-19T22:23:10+00:00

Davidde Corran

Roar Guru


"operatic in its mediocrity" - what prose.

2010-06-19T22:13:28+00:00

Marcel Proust

Guest


Interesting point, young Davidde. The England fans were right to boo, of course. The team played like tripe. Danny Baker on BBC Radio 5 Live called the England performance "operatic in its mediocrity". You can jeer at that, surely.

2010-06-19T22:10:55+00:00

James

Guest


Davidde, this booing is going to get worse as the Socceroos lose their underdog tag and expectations increase.

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