• Dear Guest, Please note that adult content is not permitted on this forum. We have had our Google ads disabled at times due to some posts that were found from some time ago. Please do not post adult content and if you see any already on the forum, please report the post so that we can deal with it. Adult content is allowed in the glory hole - you will have to request permission to access it. Thanks, scara

Racism in football

Yeh he was crying on tele.

Nice to see Cara admitting the Suarez shirts were a mistake, honesty for a change.
 
Yeah only 8 years too late and even then only because he was plonked next to Evra in a tv studio.
And claiming the “bigger boys made me do it” defence, despite being Vice Captain at the time.
Weapons grade clam.

Could not agree more.
 
Me and my strong-armed, fleet-footed mates would have this fascist flock covered in egg yolk in a matter of seconds. When segments break off to give (vain) pursuit, they get trailed away from the 'mother ship' mob, isolated, surrounded, and eventually beaten to within an inch of their lives and stripped of their clothes and ID. Left in the gutter to suffer in pain.

The rest will be harassed and pelted until similar mistakes are made and their, ahem, hard men, are drawn away and battered to a bloody pulp.

Whatever is left can go the to game and bleat out their misery on social media. And dealt with further upon exiting the stadium in the dark.

That is how gentlemen football fans deal with, as Trump has so conveniently phrased it, "human scum".
 
I am starting to think the games does not take racism serious enough, the punishments are frankly embarrassing.

I get that footballs in its "own world" but that world should not be above racism in the sense of punishments handed out
 
I find it silly that people persuaded him back on let him walk off and abandon game, its what it deserves
 
Racist abuse must be tackled with a "one-strike" policy rather than Uefa's three-step protocol, says Watford captain Troy Deeney.

The European governing body's rules state that a game can only be abandoned if fans have been warned twice before.

"We're teaching kids now that you're getting three strikes and you're out," said striker Deeney, 31.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4, Deeney said he has been racially abuse at stadiums and on "every post" on social media.

"There will be at least six to 10 comments I have to take down," the Englishman added.

"It's more on pictures of your kids, pictures of your partner. People are putting 'you black such and such', 'you monkey emoji', this, that and the other, or bananas and stuff like that.

"It's very difficult to ignore it."

Deeney said after Watford's FA Cup semi-final win over Wolves in April he had to turn off comments on his social media accounts because the "barrage of abuse" was "non-stop".

"It's at that point when you go: 'What am I going to do? Am I going to stand and argue or am I going to make a stand?'" he added.

"I'm very aware there are a lot of kids who watch what we do, and if we don't change that they're going to expect it to be normal."

The recent incidents of racism in football include England players being abused by fans during a Euro 2020 qualifier against Bulgaria in Sofia on 15 October.

The match was stopped twice by the referee under Uefa's existing protocol but England chose to play on.

"Is that a good way of tackling the problem?" Deeney said of Uefa's system. "Are we going to say now that it's OK to do it three times?"

Bulgaria were fined £65,000 and ordered to play two matches behind closed doors - one suspended for two years - for the abuse.

Anti-discrimination charity Kick It Out said it was "disheartened but not surprised" and Deeney thinks tougher punishments are needed because fines of that size will not lead to nations "acting properly in terms of handling it".

Deeney is part of Watford's "We" campaign, which is attempting to tackle racism in football and gives supporters a way to help identify abusers on social media.
 
Back