The old
racism allegation rears it ugly head again.....
By Gary Miles
A reworking of
an old article....
In the
light of Stan Ternent's remarks, I have revised a long article I
wrote a couple of years ago in the wake of an anonymous Man City
fan writing an outrageous slur on all Millwall fans that was
picked up by the website Football365.com and then published in the
Guardian. Since then the media stereotype has been reinforced by
further attacks, which again are entirely unfounded.
The normal
response of the club to such accusations is to reel off the
measures it takes to combat racism. This satisfies neither the
press nor the supporters. To the press it’s paying lip service,
repeating the same old mantra. To the supporters it sounds very
much like, the club saying 'we are doing are best, but the fans
are too racist to be converted'. The press wants to hear of new
harsher crackdowns, the supporters want the club to defend our
reputation. Unfortunately I can’t say ‘good name’ here
because as far the media are concerned we don’t have a good name
and we are their favourite dog to kick.
So why are
Millwall fans continually convicted in the fleet street kangaroo
court of reporting as being the most racist football fans? Is it
all some terrible conspiracy by the Press to heap all the problems
of football at the door of one club? I was never a fan of
conspiracy theories, believing more in the cock up theory. And
this labeling of us does seem fall into the cock up category.
Is there loud
and audible racist chanting ringing around the rafters at
Millwall? Certainly not. Is there any racist things said or
shouted at Millwall? There are the odd individual shouts and they
are most certainly few and far between. There is never any mass
chanting by the crowd of such things. There also seems to be a
move to label all booing of black players as racially motivated.
You don't hear
renditions of old chants such as "You black bastard" or
"Day-O" down the Den anymore. They basically disappeared
more than 10 years ago, around the time they disappeared in the
rest of football.
One chant that
has taken longer to die out, is only aired once in a blue moon
nowdays is "Oh East London, is like Bengal, It's like the
back streets of Delhi" The song is not only geographically
wrong, Delhi is hundreds of miles to the Northwest of Bengal. It
is also silly, as South London is not some racially pure area!
Perhaps in recognition of this the final verse is more often sung
as "Oh East London is full of shit, shit and more shit, Oh
East London is full of shit."
Three years
ago, Millwall fans, were being accused of racially abusing Black
Gillingham and Palace players. This abuse took the form of booing
players. However there were a handful of people making monkey
noises rather than booing.
In those cases
I do not believe that this noise carried over the sound of vast
majority booing at, so the accusation was over the booing. However
it lead to a less outraged response as the allegation could not be
completely shrugged off if you were unlucky enough to be next to
someone doing it, although the majority of Millwall fans would not
of heard any monkey noises. The only 'racist' comment of note that
I heard shouted at Palarse was an attempt at humour, "Oi
Morrison, you Irish cunt!" Morrison, of course, being about
as Irish as Tony Cascarino.
One of the
more recent allegations was from David Johnson of Nottingham
Forest who claims he was racially abused at the Den in October
2002. What David failed to tell the radio and press reporters was
that he had just cheated by controlling the ball with his hand
before scoring and then later in the game miming the action again
as he was met with chants of ‘cheat, cheat, cheat’. Small
wonder that he was booed and rightly so. But to deflect attention
from his cheating, out came the race card and suddenly he was
painting the picture that he was booed because he was black rather
than a cheat.
In the wake of
that row, Radio Five Live decided to investigate racism in
football and sent an undercover reporter armed with a tape
recorder to three games at the Den. Rather than admit they didn't
get any juicy racist chanting, they played a three second clip,
yes that’s a full three second clip, that was so short they had
to play it over and over again. And what was on this clip, they
claimed it was monkey chanting, but to a good ear, all it was, was
Millwall fans chanting 'off off off' as Brian Deane was getting
his marching orders in the game against Leicester.
Now we have
Stan Ternent moaning, nothing new there, but it’s the use of the
race card this time to deflect attention away from his team's
second defeat to the Lions in a fortnight. Rather than admit that
Mo Camara was getting the bird for an incident in the first few
minutes of the FA Cup Fifth round game, where he ran sixty yards
to indulge in a bundle after Ian Moore had elbowed Matt Lawrence,
nope he paints it as Millwall fans booing him from start to finish
of both games and decides it racist.
Perhaps he is
jumping on a bandwagon as the press indulged in the old smear
campaign after the first game. Keith Pike of The Times decided to
start his report “This wasn’t supposed to happen. Somehow,
Millwall have reached the sixth round of the FA Cup, which means
that it might take only a home tie against Tranmere Rovers,
followed by a pairing with Sunderland, whom they have already
beaten twice this season, to reach the final. It’s that close.
And then, instead of merely vomiting on their own doorstep, the
moronic tendency that refuses to detach itself from the club could
descend on Wales and cover the entire Millennium Stadium with bile
— all in front of a global television audience. That should do
wonders for London’s Olympic bid. If the FA decided to rig
today’s draw, it might not be inundated with complaints.”
Hardly a declaration of impartiality, from an employee, of one of
Fleet Street finest titles.
He continued,
“But no matter how hard Millwall work to deter the lunatic
fringe, the New Den, like the old Den, remains unparalleled, a
uniquely poisonous, malevolent, ugly, depressing venue for a
sporting contest. Ranters to the left of you, racists to the
right: they may be a minority, but they are a bloody big minority
and when a stadium designed to hold 20,000 is only half-full, when
every syllable of vitriol can be heard and every hand gesture
detected, their menace grows and their presence can suffocate
you.”
“Mohammed
Camara, the black Burnley left back, was targeted for verbal abuse
throughout, while one fan in the West Stand who effed and ceed and
spat and bellowed non-stop — no matter that there were women and
children near him — was allowed to keep up his vile invective
for an hour before stewards removed him. Hundreds of others were
happy to indulge in more sporadic outbursts of venom,
gesticulating at opposition players or officials, while those in
the East Stand, when they weren’t making monkey noises, seemed
preoccupied with baiting fans in claret and blue. All this when
Millwall’s own starting XI included two non-whites.”
Given the
location of the Press box, the racist to the right he refers to
must be the Directors and the Executive club members. Indeed it
was confirmed that following a complaint from a member of the
press, a 64-year-old man was ejected from the ground and banned
for life. I hope Mr Pike is happy at depriving an old man, one of
the ranters to his left, of one of the few pleasures in life.
However the old fellow didn’t take it lying down and at a fans
forum last week had his say and he took great exception to the
description in Pike's article, especially the part where he was
accused of spitting which he deplored as "a filthy
habit".
Stan
Ternent’s description of Millwall as a ‘BNP Stronghold’ is
rich and very much of a case of kettle calling the pot black,
given recent elections in Burnley and the odd race riot or two.
What does the
player at the centre of the claims and counter claims have to say
for himself. “I don't care about the Millwall fans," Camara
said. "I'm just doing my job. Maybe it's not because I am
black. Maybe it is because they do not like me as a person."
However there
were some racist remarks at the Den in this match and they came
from the away end with chants of, "You’ll always be a
Paki," aimed at Tim Cahill, who certainly doesn’t hail from
Pakistan, but is an exotic mix of Irish and Samoan with an
Australian passport.
However to
portray the atmosphere at the match as above is to do a disservice
to both sets of fans. The highlight of the match for many, was the
chant of “Get your tits out for the lads” from the East stand
to a young lady in the away end, which was rewarded with a quick
flash. This was greeted with cheers that resembled a goal
celebration in both ends.
Perhaps like
most I don't specifically recall what the chants were at every
match I've attended in the last 20 years, but as Racist chants
grate on me, they do tend to stick in the memory. I would not
include chants like the ironic "Stand up if you hate
Curry" sung at Luton or "I would rather be a Paki than a
Scouse", sung many years ago at Liverpool.
A racist chant
is not exclusively a combination of a swear word and someone's
colour. It certainly includes anything that portrays Black or
Asian people as sub-human, such as monkey noises.
Lets take a
high profile match from within last 10 years where if racist
chanting was rife down the den you would expect to have heard a
bucketful. Take the 1995 FA Cup tie v Arsenal, Ian Wright simply
got personal abuse, "Ian Wank-Wank-Wank", no hint of
hating him for his colour, just hatred because he was a prat and
an ex-Palarse prat to boot!
The Den has
certainly not seen bananas thrown at black players, black players
hounded out the club or even a chairman making racist statements
or calling his star striker a cannibal.
So why are
Millwall fans being highlighted as congenitally racist? I think
it's a combination of things; there are like most grounds some
people who shout the odd racist comments. So unfortunately, it's
not a complete fabrication. It is, however, an exaggeration of the
problem.
There is also
a confusion or blurring of the problems of hooliganism and racism.
This stems from the exposé of a small element in Chelsea's firm
having links with a Neo Nazi organisation called Combat 18. The
press seem to assume all hooligan firms have similar links and as
Millwall have a "hooligan problem" we therefore also
have a racism problem. This stereotype of all hooligans as racist,
rather than territorial, is reinforced when there is trouble at
England matches; because it's against foreigners the motivation
must be racist.
So when did
this blurring or confusion start?
In 1977 the
BBC Panorama programme was seeking to prove a theory: that
football hooliganism was more than just mindless violence, that it
was orchestrated by the National Front, and that Millwall Football
Club had a bigger problem than anyone else.
The National
Front's "national activities organiser", Martin Webster,
was interviewed to lend substance to this claim, and pictures of
his supporters selling fascist literature outside The Den -
something never witnessed before or since - were transmitted to
the nation in Nov 1977. This claim was rubbished by the Police,
The Home Secretary and Millwall Football Club. However the first
bit of mud had stuck.
In the
aftermath of trouble at Luton, March 1985 in the FA Cup. There was
no major monstering of Millwall as racist then, it was written up
as a riot, plain and simple. Perhaps the press noticed the large
number of black guys on the pitch that night throwing seats!
Although in a
follow up piece, Nigel Clarke of the Mirror (who's dad played for
Millwall) couldn't help resist the temptation to blacken the name
of Millwall fans further. He said that perhaps 1,500 of the
average crowd of 6,000 were sympathisers of the British Movement
or National Front and that there were a dozen members of London
wing of Klu Klux Klan. He of course could not substantiate such
guesswork. He was not quite damming all of us, just a quarter!
Fast-forward
three years to January 1988 and Millwall's FA cup match against
Arsenal is labelled the Battle of Highbury and sited as a reason
for the continuing ban of English Clubs from Europe. The fact that
the hysteria surrounding the match was whipped up by the Mirror
with their silly Nick the Clock story, is ignored even when CCTV
footage show the trouble was nothing more police overreaction to
crowd surges caused by overcrowding.
Although the
press don't try and Label Millwall 'Thugs' as racist the
"Please God don't let Millwall win promotion" headlines
and linking of the story to possible trouble in Germany for the
forthcoming Euro 88 starts to blur the distinction. The press had
been full of stories about how right wing groups were planning
trouble in the summer and how right wing fans were in contact with
similar groups on the continent.
The crowd
trouble that erupted during the 1988 Euro finals is firmly
ascribed by the British press as orchestrated by Right wing
masterminds and this idea of organised and politically motivated
violence is a theme the press take up as the angle on all new
football violence stories.
With Millwall
securing promotion to the old First Division, Reg Burr and Peter
Mead went on a charm offensive, wining and dining Fleet Street
editors and reporters and putting over the positive side of the
Football club. This worked for a while, some positive stories
appeared about Millwall's Community scheme.
Even old
enemies such as the Evening Standard's Peter Mckay write some nice
words. "One man who was more calm than the others said
Millwall's hooligans were no worse and no more numerous, than
yobbos who attached themselves to other clubs. The difference was
that Millwall was a relatively poor club; its area was run down
and unfashionable. No one outside minded sneering at Millwall and
its population of old working class Londoners. This sounds
sentimental, but I think there is some truth in it." Mckay
had tapped into the source of Millwall's No one likes us siege
mentality and got it.
Millwall's
two-year spell in the top flight passed off without much in the
way of sensation headlines as the only major outbreak of trouble
at Millwall coincided with Poll Tax riots.
For a while,
Millwall slipped out of the Press headlines, more often than not
instances of violence were reported as a matter of fact and not
hyped up.
Then in 1993,
Millwall moved to a new ground and the profile of the club was
again raised. Articles such as "Architecture sooth the savage
beast" appeared in the Broadsheets with Reg Burr claiming to
have cured the problems of hooliganism at Millwall by providing
modern facilities for the Fans. It was a silly statement to make
and was bound to be thrown back in his face as soon as something
went wrong.
The 1993/94
season was a pivotal year for Millwall's relationship with the
press. Millwall as a football club had started to be considered as
genuine contender for top flight football again and was being held
up as a role model for other clubs to follow. The start of the
1993/94 season also saw the launch of the "Kick Racism out of
Football" campaign that saw 85 of the 92 league clubs sign
up. One notable absentee was Neighbours Crystal Palarse. Reg Burr
interviewed for Television at the Kick It Out Launch stated,
"That racism has been all but eliminated from Millwall".
Two other
notable race relation events happen in 1993. In April a teenager
called Stephen Lawrence was murder and then on the 16th September
a Council by-election victory of Derek Beackon for BNP in the
Millwall Ward of Tower Hamlets with a vote of 1,480 a winning
margin of just 7 votes.
Steven Howard
of The Sun made a special visit to the Den the Saturday following
the by-election to report on Pat Van Den Hauwe's home debut, and a
real piece of character assassination it was too.