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  1. The Football Supporters' Federation is running another of its successful 'Watching Football Is Not A Crime' events next Thursday, at Liverpool's Epstein Theatre.

    These events give the chance for matchgoing fans to debate the issues that affect them, and put their question to our panel of experts including club officials, police representatives and academics.

    The event is free, and you can register by emailing events@fsf.org.uk

    Full details can be found below - we hope to see you there!

     

     

    The FSF will hold Watching Football Is Not A Crime! in Liverpool on Thursday 28th November (7pm-9pm). Register for free by sending your name and club to events@fsf.org.uk. This event is open to fans of all clubs:Date: Thursday 28th November 2013 (6pm doors, 7pm start)

     

    Venue: Epstein Theatre, 85 Hanover Street, L1 3DZ
    Register free: Simply email your name and club to events@fsf.org.uk
    Panellists: Supt Chris Markey (Force Operations, Merseyside Police); David Lewis (Head of Security and Stadium Safety, Everton); Dr Joel Rookwood (Senior Lecturer, Hope University); Amanda Jacks (Caseworker, FSF). The event will be chaired by the FSF’s Michael Brunskill.

    Fans tweeting from the event should use #WFINAC.

    While we understand that some fans might have individual complaints relating to specific incidents for which they are seeking answers, this isn't the forum for that. However, we are happy to offer advice in relation to such complaints, email amanda.jacks@fsf.org.uk.

    Previous evenings were held in London, Portsmouth, Sheffield and Manchester. They proved to be lively, successful events which gave supporters the chance debate issues around match day policing and stewarding with a panel of experts.

    Questions raised at previous events include:

    Are football fans discriminated against?
    Is it in the public interest to prosecute fans for offences like drinking in view of the pitch?
    Can stewards sometimes provoke more trouble than they prevent?
    Is match day police/camera surveillance OTT?
    Are Football Banning Orders used appropriately?
    Are games over or under policed?
    Is it time to abolish football-specific legislation?
    What information can clubs and the police share about me?

    Panellist biogs:

    Dave Lewis is Head of Security and Stadium Safety at Everton. Dave is responsible for monitoring fan behaviour at both home and away games, and works closely with Merseyside Police in respect of those arrested and/or ejected from stadiums.

    Dr Joel Rookwood is a Senior Lecturer at Hope University. Joel's a Liverpool supporter and his research interests include British fan culture, spectator violence and the legal response, and issues relating to sport, race and identity. Joel's also a member of the 92 club.

    Supt Chris Markey is responsible for ensuring that the policing tactics deployed are appropriate and coordinated with the club's matchday operation. Chris has more than 20 years experience policing football at different levels.

    Amanda Jacks is the FSF's Caseworker. Amanda helps and advises fans who have cause to complain about policing and stewarding, and assists those who may require legal assistance for criminal or civil matters.

     

     

    http://www.fsf.org.uk/latest-news/view/event-watching-football-is-not-a-crime-liverpool-28th-nov

  2. The Football Supporters’ Federation awards are back for their third year, and will be held on 16th December at the Emirates stadium.

    We’re after nominations from fans of all clubs across a range of categories detailed below.

    Categories:

    * Away Day of the Year
    * Blogger of the Year
    * Commentator of the Year
    * Fanzine of the Year
    * Independent Website of the Year
    * Newspaper of the Year
    * Player of the Year (from your club)
    * Podcast of the Year
    * Pundit of the Year
    * Writer of the Year

    You can nominate up to three entries to be shortlisted in any category, apart from Player of the Year.

    This is the first time that we have included a Player of the Year award in the FSF awards, so we’re keen to see whose performances you thought most stood out for your side in 2013. Unfortunately, you are restricted to just one nomination from your team for this award, so choose wisely.

    All nominated entries will be considered by the shortlisting panel, whether they have been nominated once or a hundred times.

    Nominations should be sent to awards@fsf.org.uk no later than 9am on 28th October.

    Shortlisting will take place once nominations close, and the winners will be decided by a public vote in November.

    For more details, visit www.fsf.org.uk

  3. The Football Supporters' Federation needs your support to help bring down the price of tickets, with our Twenty's Plenty for Away Tickets Petition – www.fsf.org.uk/20plenty

    We're calling upon football clubs at all levels of the game to recognise and reward the amazing contribution of away fans by getting together to agree an across the board price cap on away match tickets of £20 (£15 for concessions).

    What’s the point in a petition, you might ask? Each signature on the Twenty’s Plenty petition triggers an email to your club, telling them you want to see something done about the cost of attending football, as well as an email to the Premier League telling them the same.

    In a little over a week more than 5,000 fans have already signed the petition to let their clubs know their feelings on the matter - please spare 30 seconds of your time and join them today – www.fsf.org.uk/20plenty

    We understand that football is unaffordable for many and this is especially true for away fans who, aside from match tickets, must contend with spiralling food, drink and travel costs. There has been a tremendous groundswell of opinion lately with campaigns popping up across the country and Twenty’s Plenty will try to harness that energy and discontent.

    For more on why you should back the campaign check out this pdf - http://bit.ly/14ic58h - or visit our website - www.fsf.org.uk

    Thanks,

    The FSF

     

  4. Every few seasons the Football Supporters’ Federation carries out a survey to help us better understand the views of fans. We all enjoy the game in different ways – the FSF has members at hundreds of clubs from the top-flight to regional leagues – and all those experiences deserve respect. Please take a few minutes to fill in the FSF’s survey so we can legitimately represent the views of supporters across the issues that matter. There are between 30-40 questions and it should take no more than 5-10 minutes.

     

    Please complete the FSF's survey here

  5. You might’ve seen last week that the Football Supporters’ Federation launched a petition as part of our campaign for the introduction of safe standing areas in the top two divisions in England and Wales. If you have not yet signed the petition, and are in favour of a return to standing, please give us 30 seconds of your time visiting the link below. Also tell your friends. Tell your family. Tell your work colleagues that you don’t really like but who you put up with anyway. Please help us spread the word.

     

    http://www.fsf.org.uk/safestanding

     

    We know you might think that signing a petition is a bit of a futile gesture, but there is currently a bill going through Parliament which faces its second reading in a little under 3 months time. For the first time the Sports Minister has agreed to look at the evidence on safe standing. We have a short timeframe to gather support and prove that there is a groundswell of opinion behind fans’ choice to stand at football in England and Wales. This is the first time the FSF has petitioned on this issue, and within a week nearly 10,000 fans have already added their voices to our campaign. Please add yours today.

     

    If you’re sceptical, read on below.

     

    http://www.fsf.org.uk/safestanding

     

    * If standing is unsafe, why is it allowed in Leagues One and Two? If it is safe in Leagues One and Two, why is it not safe in the top two divisions? We find the idea that safety is dependent upon the quality of football played on the pitch as absolutely absurd

     

    * The FSF’s Safe Standing Campaign is not just about those who prefer to stand. By giving supporters the choice, everyone benefits. Those who wish to stand can do so, while those who prefer to sit no longer have to worry about having their view blocked. Every week thousands of fans stand in front of their seats for large parts of the game - attempts by the authorities to end this practice have failed. Fans are standing in ever greater numbers, and we think they should be able to do so in safely designed and managed areas where possible.

     

    * The FSF does not propose that the stringent safety standards laid down in the Government’s Green Guide be abolished or weakened in any way, nor are we suggesting that clubs should be forced to provide safe standing areas. Issues around cost and feasibility should be a matter for individual clubs and their fans, not for the government.

     

    * Many opponents to standing mistakenly cite Hillsborough as a reason not to allow its introduction. The disaster was not caused by standing, however; the Taylor Report primarily blamed the failure of police control. It did not ban standing, nor claim it was inherently unsafe.

     

    If you agree with us that fans should have the choice to sit or stand at football, please add your name to the thousands already in favour of safe standing. Now’s the best chance we’ll have to make a difference.

     

    http://www.fsf.org.uk/safestanding

  6. The Football Supporters' Federation are conducting a quick straw-poll of fans up and down the country. There's only two questions, and it will only take a minute to fill in. We'd be much obliged if you could. Just follow the link below

     

    http://tinyurl.com/3ad6lau

     

    For your troubles, everyone who fills it in gets entered into a free draw to win a copy of Football Manager 2011, just because we're that nice.

     

    Cheers,

     

    FSF

  7. A campaign that started in a small way on Facebook, the brainchild of QPR and Harrow Borough fan James Doe, has really gathered momentum, and we at the FSF are more than happy to lend our backing to a worthy cause. We’ve even managed to get the support of Conference sponsors Blue Square Bet who were keen to get involved, but right now you’re probably asking ‘What’s Non League Day?’

     

    In short, the Premier League and Championship, like all top divisions across Europe, schedule fixture breaks for international weekends. This previously meant that fans of teams in those leagues could attend their national team’s matches (or watch them on the telly) and not miss any of the action at their club. Now that England will be playing some of their matches (like this week's game against Bulgaria) on Friday evenings, however, most fans have nothing to do the following day. There’s no match to go to, and no England game to watch. The idea was conceived, therefore, to encourage fans whose teams were not playing on Saturday September 4th to get along to their local lower division side instead, and thus the idea of Non League Day was born. Pretty simple, really.

     

    http://www.fsf.org.uk/non-league-day

     

    We think that given the current financial climate within the game, clubs in the lower reaches can do with all the support they can get. Teams away from the top divisions, particularly further down the pyramid, way past the Conference North and South, often only continue to exist because of hard-working volunteers giving up their own time and energy. We have to stress that the idea behind this isn’t trying to get fans to change their allegiance, somehow convince them that non-league football is purer or more worthy of their support than the upper reaches of the league, and nor is it any sort of protest at ‘modern football. It’s just a great opportunity to promote grass roots football to the masses, and remind people that there are small clubs in their neck of the woods that could really do with some support.

     

    With tickets and refreshments at a fraction of the cost you’re used to paying, as well as the ability to watch a match while standing, and even the opportunity to swap ends at half time, why not ‘adopt’ a team for the day? Who knows, you may even enjoy yourself and return from time to time on international breaks, midweek cup fixtures or when you’re not making a long away trip.

     

    Blue Square Bet have offered to sweeten the deal with a couple of cracking prizes on offer.

     

    Get along to www.fsf.org.uk/non-league-day/ to register your support for Non League Day (including the club you support, and who you’ll be supporting on the 4th September) and be automatically entered into a free draw to win a VIP package for two to the Conference play-off final in May (including pre-match meal, drinks and the best seats in the house), along with £50 worth of free bets.

     

    Two runners-up will also receive a pair of tickets to the final each, and £25 of free bets.

     

    You can’t say fairer than that.

     

    Get along to www.nonleagueday.co.uk to find your local fixture this weekend - with more than 500 matches there's bound to be one near you.

  8. Gordon Taylor, head of the Professional Footballers’ Association (PFA) will be speaking at a Q&A organised by the FSF at the City of Manchester Stadium on Thursday September 9th (7pm kick-off). This is your chance to question one of the most influential men in domestic football. As Chief Executive of the PFA, Taylor heads a formidable organisation encompassing 4,000 members from every professional club in England and Wales, including some of the richest young men in Britain. How should this influence the work done by the PFA?

     

    As an organisation whose most prominent members are cultural icons earning multi-millions every year, does the PFA have more responsibilities than the average union?

     

    Does it successfully tackle this through its work in anti-racism, charity, and community initiatives?

     

    Do players have a responsibility to act as role models for young fans or is this too much of a burden to bear for young men who are often still teenagers themselves?

     

    On the terraces, while we can never rest on our laurels, the battle against racism has largely been won and the fight against homophobia is ongoing too. Do players have a responsibility to speak up and tackle homophobia?

     

    To hear the answers to these questions, or to ask a question yourself, get along to the City of Manchester Stadium on Thursday September 9th. The event is open to all, and entirely free.

     

    For full details, visit http://www.fsf.org.uk/news/PFA-Gordon-Taylor-to-speak-at-FSF-event-in-Manchester.php

  9. As ever, the Football Supporters’ Federation has produced a guide for travelling Blues in Europe. With Everton holding a slender 2-1 lead, this week’s tie in the Portuguese capital is key for you lot. We’ve got the low-down on the city of Lisbon, as well as the stadium, for all those who are travelling (or those who might just be curious). We know some of you will have been there for the Benfica game, but anyway, every little helps.

     

    For all the info you could want, just pop along to:

     

    http://www.fsf.org.uk/ground-guide/international-clubs/sporting-lisbon/

  10. Yet again, another guide from us helpful folk at the FSF. This time, anyone who's off to Athens following the Blues next week might want to take a gander at the below:

     

    http://www.fsf.org.uk/ground-guide/international-clubs/aek-athens/

     

    I'm sure you'll enjoy your visit to the scene of the 2007 European Cup Final ;)

     

    Any questions about the ground, city or any of that stuff, fling us an email (the address is on the first page of the guide) and we'll do what we can. More will be getting added to the guide in the coming few days before you make your trips out there.

  11. Which is why the piece finished on Equally if the allegations that Diouf racially insulted a thirteen year old boy prove to be true then the FA should drop on him like a ton of bricks. Likewise if his allegations of banana throwing prove to be false.

     

    We know that there's no substance in them, and would like to see action taken against Diouf for malicious accusations.

  12. From the FSF News page - http://www.fsf.org.uk/news/El-Hadji-Diouf-must-spit-out-the-truth.php

     

     

    Every week we have our own column in the Daily Mirror’s Saturday Mania section giving us the chance to voice the fans’ consensus on the day’s hot potatoes and highlight issues which could otherwise slip by.

     

    We’re not sure how many of you out there are regular Mirror readers so we’ve decided to reproduce the occasional piece on site for FSF members. We would post up every week’s column but it’s such a popular selling point for the Mirror we fear their sales may collapse if people know they can read our incoherent ramblings on our site for free. Or it could be because we’re normally in a post-weekend haze for most of Monday and might forget.

     

    The FSF Fans’ Forum column from Saturday’s Daily Mirror Mania:

     

    Here at FSF Towers we’ve been bombarded with messages from outraged Everton supporters about the incident between Blackburn Rovers player El-Hadji Diouf and an Everton ball-boy at the recent Everton-Rovers game at Goodison Park.

     

    Diouf is alleged to have told the ball boy to, “F**k off, white boy!” in the first half of the game when Diouf apparently didn’t approve of the way the ball was returned to him by the thirteen year old ball-boy. Diouf has since alleged that it was he who was the victim of racist abuse, saying that he was pelted with bananas at the Gwladys Street end.

     

    El-Hadji Diouf has never been the most sympathetic and engaging of characters. To say he has a short fuse would be an under-statement. He seems capable of blowing up at the most trivial perceived slight. The fact that he’s on his seventh club in eleven years says it all really.

     

    Don’t get us wrong. We’re one hundred percent against any form of racism. If Diouf’s allegations have any truth to them they should result in punishment for those responsible.

     

    Equally if the allegations that Diouf racially insulted a thirteen year old boy prove to be true then the FA should drop on him like a ton of bricks. Likewise if his allegations of banana throwing prove to be false.

  13. The Football Supporters' Federation has produced another guide to help Blues on their European travels this season - following on from our guide to Olomouc, we've produced one for the Belarussian capital Minsk, where BATE will be playing Everton next week at the Dinamo Stadium.

     

    For full details, visit http://www.fsf.org.uk/ground-guide/international-clubs/bate/

     

    There's a comprehensive section there on where to eat and drink in the city, as well as all the usual information about getting there and getting around, and other travel hints and tips including an idiots guide to the Cyrillic alphabet (which will definitely come in useful if you're heading out there).

     

    Any questions at all, or anything that's not in the guide that you need to know, simply email the link on the opening page and we'll do the rest.

     

    Cheers,

     

    The FSF

  14. The Football Supporters' Federation is now offering free membership to all fans from across the UK and beyond. We're offering free membership because we're geared to creating a larger, more vocal campaigning force for fans of all clubs up and down the country. If you're worried about the direction the game is heading, whether it's the way that fans are policed week-in, week-out, ticket prices being prohibitively expensive or club ownership issues, then join our existing 140,000+ individual and affiliate members and stand up for fan interests.

     

    There has never been a more important time to ensure your voice is heard, and it's never been easier to get involved. All you need to do to become a member is give us your name and email address – it's that simple.

     

    http://www.fsf.org.uk/join.php

     

    All newly joining members are entitled to a free issue of The Football Supporter magazine delivered straight to your door, absolutely free of charge, as well as receiving a £5 discount from TOFFS, the UK's largest retailer of retro football shirts, just as our thank-you to you for getting involved. You can use the code as many times as you like between now and the end of the year, too. You can't say fairer than that, surely?

     

    Everyone who signs up before 31st August will also be entered into a free prize draw to win a retro shirt of their choice, so you've really got nothing to lose.

     

    These are just the tip of the iceberg in terms of deals and offers that you'll receive as an FSF member, but we know that you're not in it for the freebies, but because you're interested in the issues which concern fans, and want to make sure that someone is looking out for you and your interests – remember the 'No to Gam£ 39' campaign from 2008, or the Stoke fans who won compensation from the police after they illegally served them with Section 27 notices earlier this year? The FSF are instrumental in fighting for fans' interests in these, and other campaigns - http://www.fsf.org.u...aigns/index.php

     

    Get involved today – visit http://www.fsf.org.uk/join.php and give us 30 seconds of your time, and become part of something. Feel free to pass this on to family, friends, colleagues or other messageboards, blogs or email lists.

     

    If you've got any questions at all about free membership, or anything the FSF get up to, then get in touch with us – email us at info@fsf.org.uk.

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