Belfast Telegraph

Tragedy was wake-up call for football, says expert

Death of 66 fans in horrific crush 50 years ago today sparked stringent safety overhaul

- By Andy Newport

ONE of the world’s leading stadium safety experts admits it took the loss of 66 fans at the Ibrox disaster for British football to wake up to the dangers of overcrowde­d grounds.

Today marks the 50th anniversar­y of the worst sporting accident in Scottish history.

The tragedy happened on January 2, 1971, at the end of the annual New Year Old Firm game when dozens of fans were crushed on stairway 13 as they tried to leave the ground.

Rangers were later criticised by a judge for their failure to improve safety on the passageway after earlier accidents at the same spot, including one in 1961 which claimed the lives of two men.

But Dr Keith Still, visiting professor at the University of Suffolk, has suggested much of the criticism aimed at the club was with the benefit of hindsight.

And he says it was only after the 1971 disaster that the full impact of the domino-effect which led to the crush was realised.

Dr Still, who is originally from Aberdeen and is widely regarded as the UK’S leading expert in crowd safety, said: “The incident led to not only a radical rethink in safety but also the developmen­t of the Safety at Sports Grounds Authority and people became much more aware of those kind of risks, with stairways inevitably a focus of much more attention.

“So it does take a disaster of that kind of scale before people will make changes.

“My work is always focused on can we anticipate what the next kind of disaster will be? Can we use the models and simulation­s of physics or the crash-test dummies with crowds to analyse what could go wrong and try to prevent similar incidents?

“Ibrox made a huge difference to our understand­ing of risk. It took a disaster of that scale for people to realise there was more involved.

“It’s only been in the last 10 or 15 years that we have had the technology to run simulation­s. Before that, you could not put a crowd into the environmen­t and knock them over to see what would happen.

“You can test steel and concrete to destructio­n — but you can’t test people to destructio­n.

“So techniques have improved, the science of crowd dynamics has developed and people understand a lot more the levels of risk.”

The disaster occurred just moments after Rangers striker Colin Stein had equalised in injury time only moments after Celtic winger Jimmy Johnstone had himself netted late on for the visitors.

The cause was initially put down to departing Gers fans turning back to rush inside to join the celebratio­ns of Stein’s goal.

But this was later dispelled by a Fatal Accident Inquiry, which ruled the accident happened when one person falling on the stairs caused a massive chain reaction as fans piled on top of each other.

Ibrox was rebuilt in the aftermath of the disaster, with manager Willie Waddle basing designs for the new ground on Borussia Dortmund’s Westfalens­tadion.

And Dr Still praised the foresight of Waddle to realise piecemeal measures would not make Ibrox a safe place for Rangers fans to watch their team.

“The rebuilt stadium, plus the Wheately report, the Safety at Sports Ground Act and just the understand­ing of crowd risks is the legacy to the people who died,” he said.

“The fact we know the physics now and it bettered our understand­ing of those kind of risks.

“Unfortunat­ely it takes fatalities of this nature — Hillsborou­gh, Bradford, Ibrox — for us to realise the issues.

“It takes vision and imaginatio­n to realise that we need to make change rather than just hoping it might not happen again. That’s the complacenc­y that is generally the route of most major incidents.

“So someone like Willie Waddle and the people involved in that rebuild said, ‘We’ve got to change and we’ve got to change dramatical­ly. We can’t put an extra couple of stewards in there. We need a radical rethink on this’.

“That’s the philosophy that is required and it did the world a favour in creating this new guidance and understand­ing of the levels of crowd risk.

“Most people think, ‘ We’ll just change a little thing in case something goes wrong. We don’t want to make radical changes.’

“Well that doesn’t work. What does work is understand­ing the hows and the physics of it and thinking we cannot allow this kind of design to continue.”

Dr Still lectures around the world, advising government officials and constructi­on firms on how to minimise the risk to the public at sports grounds and concert venues.

But he admits the dangers from overcrowdi­ng will always be present if the right steps are not taken to reduce risk — even here in the UK.

‘It made a huge difference to our understand­ing of risk. It took a disaster of that scale for people to realise there was more involved’

 ??  ?? Tragedy: bodies of the vctims covered up following the Ibrox Park disaster
Tragedy: bodies of the vctims covered up following the Ibrox Park disaster

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