The Phnom Penh Post

‘Sick’ attacks on Leipzig fans shock Germany

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AN RB L e i pz i g f a n has described how hooligans in Dortmund attacked t heir group, which included children, with stones and bottles and levels of hatred towards the Red Bull-backed club which have shocked German football.

Hooliganis­m is nothing new in German football, but Saturday’s violence meted out to RB Leipzig supporters, including young families, was a brutal fresh low.

Some of the terrified 8,000 RB Leipzig supporters, who saw their team lose 1-0 in front of 81,360 at Dortmund’s intimidati­ng Signal Iduna Park stadium, were attacked en route to the game.

“On the way to the Borussia stadium, the [rival] fans weren’t separated,” RB Leipzig fan Lars H told German daily Bild.

“They threw eggs, cans, bottles and stones at us; flags and scarves were torn away.

“Our children were pushed and attacked, we had to get them to the sides. There were several people injured, some with laceration­s.

“In eight years of being a fan I’ve never experience­d anything as bad as in Dortmund.”

Severed bull’s head

Hatred from rival fans is something RasenBalls­port Leipzig, founded by Red Bull in 2009, has had to deal with on the path to the top flight.

Following four promotions in seven years they are perceived as a threat to all things good about German football because of the obvious commercial­ism they represent.

RasenBalls­port – GrassBalls­port – is a fabricated German word to get around the ban on Bundesliga clubs bearing a sponsor’s name.

The Bundesliga’s “50+1” rule stops clubs being run by a single rich investor, and its mem- bers must have a controllin­g share, except RB Leipzig has just 17 members – all essentiall­y Red Bull employees.

At the start of the season, Borussia’s CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke was one of RB’s most outspoken critics, saying Leipzig “play football to perform for cans of drink”.

The head of a severed bull was thrown into the playing area when Leipzig lost a German Cup match at Dynamo Dresden in August.

And home fans in Cologne s t a ge d a sit dow n pr ot e s t which blocked the RB team bus and meant the kickoff for a league game was delayed in September.

But Dortmund was something else. During the Bundesliga match, Leipzig players had laser lights shone into their faces from the terraces and there were around 60 banners in the stadium with anti-Red Bull slogans.

One of the most offensive read: “Burn-out Ralle: go hang yourself ”, referring to Ralf Rangnick, RB’s director of sport who resigned from Schalke in 2011 with exhaustion.

Oil on the fire?

In a video message, Dortmund boss Watzke said the club will do “everything in our power” to catch the culprits, and two fans responsibl­e for the banners have been identified, reported Bild.

Police chiefs have criticised Dortmund for allowing the banners into the stadium.

And Watzke’s sharp “performing cans” comment last year could have fuelled the violence from Dortmund’s “Ultras” [hooligans], according to a fan expert.

“The neuralgic at this point is whether one, as head of a club, the team, the trainer or the CEO, still pours oil on the fire, knowing that their own fan culture can’t deal with it,” Professor Harald Lange told Cologne-based newspaper Kolner Stadt-Anzeiger.

According to Munich-based newspaper Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung, Dortmund’s hooligans were prevented by police from attacking the Leipzig team bus and then aimed their frustrated aggression at visiting fans.

Dortmund can expect to be heavily punished by the German Football Associatio­n (DFB).

Dortmund are already on probation having been fined € 75,000 ($80,000) after their fans rioted following May’s German Cup final when Dortmund lost on penalties to Bayern Munich.

 ?? INGO HAHNE/DPA/AFP ?? A fan is arrested on Saturday ahead the Bundesliga match between Borussia Dortmund and RB Leipzig in Dortmund.
INGO HAHNE/DPA/AFP A fan is arrested on Saturday ahead the Bundesliga match between Borussia Dortmund and RB Leipzig in Dortmund.

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