Daily Mirror

The truth? Fans are not ‘UEFA’s lifeblood’... we are an irrelevant pain in their money-making backside

- BRIANREADE

THERE was little that shocked me about Saturday night in Paris.

As someone who travels regularly from this country to watch football I’ve become conditione­d to expect my presence in certain places will be seen as an ugly threat that needs nullifying.

I arrived at the Stade de France in plenty of time alongside both sets of goodspirit­ed supporters only to be met by police vans parked to kettle us into a tiny space in an underpass. There a small band of stewards were overwhelme­d and local gangs were given a golden ticket to attack and fleece thousands of sitting ducks.

An eternity later I was jammed outside a locked gate, rubbing eyes that had picked up the pepper spray, seeing petrified kids crying, pensioners gagging, desperate people begging for informatio­n, locals scaling the fences and Liverpool fans dragging down those of their own who tried to follow suit.

Ironically, those being blamed for causing the mayhem were the ones whose patience and appeals for calm were preventing a major disaster.

Meanwhile, behind metal grilles, staring back at us, were Robocops with batons and sprays at the ready, awaiting a reaction.

Despite holding a €150 ticket and turning up two hours before kick-off I’d resigned myself to missing the game because experience taught me that it goes with the territory.

There have been so many occasions in Europe over the years when police and authoritie­s have simply got away with treating fans of English clubs like scum.

In April, we were corralled for no reason outside Benfica’s Estadio da Luz as security carried out single-file body searches, meaning thousands of us missed the kick-off. UEFA looked away, picked up the TV money, and moved on.

On Saturday, the French with their trigger-happy heavyhande­dness and blind-eye turning to the real criminals, took contempt to a new level.

But fans of Chelsea, Manchester United, Everton and England who were teargassed in France in recent years would not have been surprised at the treatment.

The police had been riding around through the city all day in one huge motorbike cavalcade to let us know we were up for a battle, but gained little response from passing fans who just wanted to see the sights and have a drink at roadside cafes.

Later in the stadium riot police would line up, confrontat­ionally, in front of Liverpool fans to let the world know they were anticipati­ng a violent attack that never came.

The fans just wanted to go home, preferably without being mugged outside by locals. Many of them were. As police looked on.

After the tear gas had cleared there was an even more rancid stench. The buckpassin­g bulls**t from French authoritie­s who claimed there were 40,000 fake tickets, an impossible number that has been laughed out of court even by the French media.

Yet after such a monumental mishandlin­g of a major sporting event I understand why cowardly French politician­s played the English hooligan card. It is the response from UEFA though, that is far more disgracefu­l and worrying.

Without establishi­ng any facts or checking the dire situation outside a ground they had chosen to stage the biggest game in their club calendar, they immediatel­y blamed the delayed kick-off on late-arriving Liverpool fans. Then switched the narrative to ticketless hordes when video evidence blew their lies out of the water.

The only slur missing from the Hillsborou­gh playbook was to claim most of the fans were drunk.

French media, its people, police officials and Real Madrid fans have since poured scorn on the official version of events.

Parisian deputy mayor, Richard Bouigue, wrote to Joe Blott, the chair of the Liverpool supporters’ group ‘Spirit of Shankly’ shooting down the false allegation­s and expressing his “deep regret” at the way fans were treated. Yet there has been nothing from UEFA except the pledge of an independen­t inquiry.

But how can anybody trust the same self-serving, powerprese­rving mafia who organised this shambles to properly investigat­e itself ?

More than 5,000 Liverpool fans have written to the club detailing their experience­s.

Many more of us who were present struggled to write, or read, about the events, especially when a familiar cover-up pattern emerged.

For some of us who were at Hillsborou­gh this was extremely triggering. Did UEFA, which is supposed to have knowledge of the game it runs, even consider that consequenc­e when it turned into a South Yorkshire Police tribute act? Does it care?

Two months ago they offered to give 10,000 free tickets to the Champions League finalists, a scheme rejected by clubs who asked them instead to reduce some of their outrageous prices.

President Aleksander Ceferin said: “Football fans are the lifeblood of the game and we thought it would be a nice way to recognise the difficulti­es they have experience­d over the last two years.

“We must ensure loyal travelling supporters can attend historic moments at affordable prices.”

Sure. Check out their ticket distributi­on which prioritise­s their powerful friends and sponsors, their ballot which is effectivel­y a touts’ charter and the obscene prices they ask fans to pay, and you’ll realise that’s sanctimoni­ous garbage.

As for the difficulti­es fans experience? On Saturday when thousands were crying out for help, UEFA’s delegates sipped champagne with the money-brokers and deflected all blame onto them. Their customers.

I’d like to say I’m waiting for an apology from UEFA, but I don’t care any more. Because I genuinely believe they don’t want fans at their showpiece events. If they could create a CGI crowd they would, because the people they laughingly describe as their lifeblood are an irrelevant pain in their money-making backside.

It has been said many times UEFA is unfit for purpose. But their handling of Paris hints at something more disturbing: That they actually loathe fans.

Why else would they allow their customers to be abused like animals in an illegal circus then side with their abusers?

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