The attack made on Manchester United’s team bus before
their crucial must win game against West Ham highlights something
that we’ve known for some time – football hooliganism is far from dead.
This is not my forum for attacking West Ham fans, as I
want to focus on the clearly dramatic impact that the much discussed Respect
campaign has had.
As a child watching football, I was all too familiar
with the sight of players surrounding and berating the referee, with Roy Keane
and Patrick Vieira sticking in my memory as the worst examples. As a teenager,
I experienced this first-hand from parents of under-11s games, with some of the
abuse received frankly shocking. To combat this, and the continual threat of
off-field violence, the FA introduced the Respect campaign, an umbrella for
anti-racism and pro-fairness in football. This was also designed to paint
football to kids as a friendly and respectful sport, and give them role models
they can look up to.
Has it made a difference? Clearly not as much as they’d
hope, if Tuesday’s events are anything to go by. It’s certainly true that
referees are not as bombarded by people after every decision, but the abuse
from both the players and the fans continues to be prevalent at every level.
Just read Wayne Rooney’s lips when the camera pans to him, and you’ll learn
some new vocabulary you didn’t want! It also sets a worrying double standard,
as some offences are punished and others simply aren’t!
It certainly doesn’t help that footballers don’t paint
themselves in a good and respectful light as role models for kids. For every Vincent
Kompany there is a Joey Barton, and every Claudio Ranieri has a Neil Warnock.
The very fact that proven racists Jamie Vardy, Luis Suarez and John Terry are
so revered among sections of football fans is alarming, and highlights the
scale of the problem remaining.
So while West Ham have reacted quickly to the whole
bus incident, the events should act as a warning shot across the
bows of the FA. The Respect campaign is not hard-hitting enough, and for the
sake of thousands of Sunday League referees across the country, football’s
governing body needs to have a rethink. Try coming down hard on every type of
disrespect, and not set a loophole for poor role models by letting some players
get away with it.
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