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As an away fan you buy your tickets through your own club, who are given an allocation by the home club, depending in the club that is visiting the allocations do vary due to rivalry/policing etc
You sit in a separate corner of the stadium, seperated by the orange bibbed brigade, use a separate entrance though dependant on the clubs involved (rivalries) fans do mix before, I think even the facilities (toilets/food) inside are separate as well. You get kept behind to leave separately from home fans. If its a big rivalry you even get separate trains/underground queue's.
Some of the rivalries run pretty deep over here utd/city, utd/liverpool, arsenal/tottenham etc, and as with all teams you get an element of knob head fans who cause drama, so they are kept as seperated as they can.
Realised I used the word seperate/separately a lot there, so in case you aren't clear they are generally well and truly separated
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watch The Firm for an insight into old fashioned blighty hooliganism.
lovin' me terrace footwear.
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thanks guys for letting me know the "ins and outs". very interesting.
always the knob heads that cause probs for the non-knobbies.
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Indeed, over here in the Netherlands the away fans are separated from the home fans as much as possible. In the stadiums the section for the away fans is separated from the home sections with fences or safety glass (sometimes in combination with nets). In some stadiums you even have a net in front of the away section, to prevent that things are thrown onto the pitch. Like Vortec said, most of the stadiums have special parking lots for the away fans.
The canals to prevent people going onto the pitch is something that most Dutch stadiums that are built in the 1990s have. Most of the older stadiums don't have these canals, but just have high fences. There are also some stadiums that don't have canals or (high) fences for the home sections.
The matches are classified in different "risk levels". The way you can travel to these matches depends on the risk level of a match. The matches in the highest risk level can only be visited with a bus (buscombi), and you're not allowed to drink alcohol underway.
It can happen that the police take the bus off the road to check that there's no alcohol onboard. If they find something the bus will be send back. Drinking alcohol after the match is allowed, so beer in the luggage room of the bus is allowed.
By these buscombi matches the last 10/ 15 km you'll get a police escort to the stadium. When we play a derby we'll get a police escort from our own stadium to the stadium of our rivals.
Sometimes there's an autocombi, that means that you can travel in your own car, bur that you have to stop at your own stadium first to trade your sign up form for another form, and you have to stop a second time underway to trade the second form for the match ticket.
There are also matches without any risk, offcourse you're free to travel the way and time you want to these matches.
Shame that all these rules are needed, but there are always some cunts that ruïn it for the rest of the supporters.
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I remember watching a pre season friendly many moons ago at Amsterdam Arena and I asked my mate (who lived there) what the cage was in the far upper corner.
He said: 'Ah that's for when Feyenoord come to visit.'
You craayzee Dutch peoplesch!
fc
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Whats the deal with the Den Haag rivalry? Rotterdam I understand, buf the Dem Haag I dont.
as a caveat, I'm on my way to the football here in Melbourne, to watch my adopted team. all very sedate in comparison to what I'm used to from back home
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Coulda been double figures Nik.
In terms of fan rivalry, where does Einhoven sit Marco. Are they just a big club who have succeded because of the backing of Philips and thus dont have the historical anymosity that Ajax - Feyenoord has?
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The big successes of PSV started in the seventies when Philips started to make a topclub of em. They had won national cups and league titles before that already, but from the seventies on they became part of the top three.
So they don't have the historical anymosity with the traditional two topclubs indeed.
The backing of Philips isn't that big anymore nowadays, the link between the club and the company isn't that strong like it was in the past. They now just have a contract as main sponsor, but it's possible that when this contract ends another sponsor takes in the place on the front of the shirt.
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PSV with another sponsor on their tops would be weird. It'd be like when the Queen finally lets Prince Charlse take over and shoving his head on a 5 pound note.
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