Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

When truncheons cow monsters of ‘beautiful game’

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WHILE I would not normally condone police brutality, in the case of England football fans, I am ready to make an exception. So, too, it seems, is much of the world.

One of the most gleefully shared World Cup video clips on social media this week was not of any memorable ball skills on the football pitch. It was, instead, of the remarkable truncheoni­ng skills of some Russian police officers as they laid into a brace of Pom soccer hooligans with long, wicked-looking staves.

In an excess of enthusiasm at making the semi-finals, the yobbos had made the mistake of leaping onto the bonnets and roofs of cars, then jumping up and down, while hooting and thumping their bared chests.

This is apparently an ancient Anglo-Saxon foreplay ritual, judging by the coos of admiration coming from their inebriated womenfolk, when they looked up from puking genteelly into the gutters.

One fan then made the mistake of using a Russian police vehicle as a trampoline. It was a miscalcula­tion of potentiall­y Darwinian proportion­s. To mistake the Russian rozzers for British bobbies could literally be a fatal error.

As we all know from splutterin­gly indignant articles in the likes of The Telegraph, effete British cops nowadays spend less time on policing than they do on sensitivit­y training. It’s all about wearing pink ribbons to show solidarity with Gay Pride marches and courteousl­y assisting that little old lady suicide bomber across the zebra crossing outside Westminste­r.

In contrast, the Russian cops are basically street thugs who have been handed uniforms and carte blanche by an unappetisi­ngly authoritar­ian regime. More than one in five Russians say they have seen police violence first-hand, with one in eight claiming to have been a victim of police brutality.

Accordingl­y, England fans in Russia have generally been well behaved. Many of the known troublemak­ers, in any case, had been pre-emptively barred from travelling to the World Cup.

Many UK police forces reported being overwhelme­d with calls last Saturday evening, after England’s 2-0 quarter-final victory over Sweden, according to the Express. Videos of fans damaging property and vehicles, spread across social media over the weekend, prompting public outrage.

Deputy Chief Constable Mark Roberts, the national head of policing football, was pleased that if England had to lose, that it was to Croatia. Croatia, he pointed out with a sigh of relief, doesn’t manufactur­e any motor vehicle brands that could be trashed by enraged England fans.

That was the fate of German marques such as Volkswagen and Mercedes when England lost to Germany in Euro 1996. This particular tournament heralded a new era of football violence, as Russian hooligans equipped with martial arts weaponry battled the English in France.

That’s one of the ugly sides to the game, at least in the UK. But even uglier than kicking in the tantalisin­gly smug grill of that BMW parked at the corner, which ironically was likely at least partly built in the UK, is the habit of kicking in the face of the missus.

Domestic violence soars when England loses, according to an analysis in The Conversati­on. A Lancaster University study across the 2002, 2006 and 2010 World Cups, found a 26% increase in reports of domestic violence when England won or drew, rising by 38% when England lost and peaking when England exited the tournament.

It remains one of the enduring mysteries of life why so many of the fans of the “beautiful game” are such monsters, while the fans of one of the most brutal sports, rugby, are rarely, if ever, guilty of post-match mayhem.

In rugby, all the violence is on the pitch. While their heroes might engage in all kinds of argybargy in the scrum – ear-biting, testicle-twisting and face-punching – opposing rugger fans don’t have to be separated by barbed wire and concrete barriers, but will sit down for a beer together afterwards.

There are, of course, many theories about why this difference exists, including that hoary one trotted out in the film Invictus: “Well, you know what they say about soccer. It’s a gentleman’s game played by hooligans. On the other hand, rugby is a hooligan’s game played by gentlemen.”

There is little academic research on the topic. Maybe it’s simply a matter of imitated behaviour, or of a national culture that encourages strong values. In which case, my three cheers for World Cup 2018 go to underdog Japan. They shocked everyone, including themselves, by almost making it to the quarterfin­als, to fall 3-2 to Belgium.

But they delighted the world with the sportsmans­hip of their fans, who had jaws dropping when, at the end of every game, they produced rubbish bags to collect all the rubbish strewn around the stands.

● Follow WSM on Twitter @ TheJaundic­edEye

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