Sports & Fitness

Football police chief wants to talk with Premier League to address increasing disorder

UK Football Policing Unit’s data shows 36 percent rise in fan-related incidents in first half of season compared to last year

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 28 Jan 2022 6:37PM

Football police chief wants to talk with Premier League to address increasing disorder
Chief Constable Mark Roberts wants a unified response from clubs, the league, government, fans and the police to address the growing problems. - AFP Pic, January 28, 2022

LONDON – Britain’s head of football policing has called for an urgent meeting with Premier League chiefs over rising incidents of crowd disorder.

Figures recently released by the UK Football Policing Unit showed a 36 percent rise in fan-related trouble in the first half of this season compared with the same period in the 2019/20 campaign.

There were further incidents last weekend, with Chelsea defender Antonio Rudiger facing a barrage of missiles from Tottenham fans at Stamford Bridge, while Aston Villa pair Lucas Digne and Matty Cash were struck by bottles thrown by Everton supporters.

Chief Constable Mark Roberts, football policing lead for the National Police Chiefs Council, wants a unified response to the growing problems and is keen to speak to the Premier League immediately.

“I have written to the Premier League asking for an urgent meeting but am yet to have a response,” Roberts told AFP yesterday.

“This will take a joined-up response from clubs, the league, government, fans and the police.

“It would be wrong to say we are back where we were (in previous decades) but it is certainly a deteriorating picture and coordinated action is required if it isn’t to slip further backwards.”

It is understood the Premier League will raise the subject of disorder at a separate match-scheduling meeting today.

The UK Football Policing Unit said there were 759 reported incidents of disorder in the first half of this season.

That compares with 560 in the first half of the 2019/20 season before the coronavirus pandemic took hold and fans were locked out of stadiums for more than a year.

Stadiums in England have resumed operating without capacity limits this season due to the easing of Covid-19 restrictions.

There have been 802 football-related arrests in the first half of the season, compared with 547 in 2019/20. – AFP, January 28, 2022

Related News

Malaysia / 1mth

PAS-UMNO meeting a positive step in line with new political dynamics – Zahid

Malaysia / 1mth

Johor election: EC to meet on June 12 to decide important dates

Malaysia / 1mth

Future cooperation between PAS and Bersatu determined next Monday - Annuar Musa

Malaysia / 1mth

PH Negeri Sembilan emergency meeting discusses PRN preparations

Business / 2mth

BMI sees BNM holding OPR at 2.75% in July, amid contained inflation

Malaysia / 2mth

PJ MP slammed for ‘media statements without solutions’

Spotlight

Malaysia

Anwar congratulates BN on Johor victory, assures federal government support

Malaysia

Johor PRN: BN officially forms state government, wins 29 seats

Malaysia

Malaysia-Thailand open historic border crossing to deepen trade, regional integration

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Gerak Khas drama actress, Tisha Samsir denies drug involvement

Malaysia

Student stabbing: Teenage girl sent to Hospital Bahagia for psychiatric evaluation

Malaysia

Anwar wishes Tun M a happy 101st birthday

World

Israel shares intelligence with US over alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Trump

You may be interested

Sports & Fitness

Argentina survives Swiss scare to set up blockbuster World Cup semi-final against England

Sports & Fitness

Racism row deepens as Paraguayan Senator claims Instagram hack after Mbappé clash

Sports & Fitness

Bellingham's extra-time brace sends England into first World Cup semi-final since 2018