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Liverpool fan to sue Uefa over Athens chaos

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    Liverpool fan to sue Uefa over Athens chaos

    Michel Platini, the president of Uefa, is facing legal action for compensation from an enraged Liverpool supporter denied entry to last week's Champions League final in Athens, despite having a ticket. The action is seen on Merseyside as a test case which, if successful, could lead to a flood of further litigation against Uefa.

    With two friends, Paul Gregory, an architect, spent €3,490 (£2,370) on flights, accommodation and tickets. "I would like this to be reimbursed by Uefa,'' wrote Gregory in a letter sent to Platini. "It's the least you can do for putting our lives at risk. If this is not forthcoming we intend to take action against Uefa through the British judicial system, and through the European Courts if necessary. It was only through good luck that Uefa avoided deaths.

    "As a former shareholder in Liverpool FC I am the recipient of three €140 tickets for the Champions League final. All are still unused as we were refused entry into the stadium. I was herded, tear-gassed, kicked and baton-charged by riot police outside the stadium for the hour leading up to kick-off and way beyond.

    "As the organising body, Uefa has a duty of care towards its legitimate ticket-holders in just the same way as any corporate body has towards its customers. This duty of care extends to having systems in place to deny entry to the stadium to non-ticket holders. Demonstrably these systems were not in place.

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    "While unsavoury elements of the Liverpool fans must take responsibility for their actions, so must Uefa take responsibility for its shortcomings. Uefa appears to have planned for a genteel corporate networking event. It took its eye off the ball and forgot about a football match between two of Europe's largest and most passionately supported football clubs, despite warnings weeks ahead forged tickets were likely to be in circulation.

    "Not only did thousands gain entry to the stadium with amateurish, photo-copied forgeries (some not even bothering to print the reverse side of the ticket!) but, incredibly, some fans simply walked into the stadium with no ticket at all - forged or legitimate! Others waved a stadium map and gained entry. One fan gained entry to the press box with a photo-copied press pass.''

    Gregory has also written to Brian Barwick, the Football Association chief executive, and Rick Parry, Foster Gillett, Tom Hicks jnr and Rafa Benitez at Anfield, outlining in detail problems encountered before kick-off at 9.45pm local time.

    "I can't even be accused of naivety as this was my sixth European Cup final and I arrived at the stadium an hour and a half before kick-off. Plenty of time to negotiate 'security', I thought.

    "8.15pm: Arrived at stadium complex entrance arch. Everyone relaxed. Fans funnelled by railings into several entry points. It became apparent fairly quickly very few people were being let through. It also became apparent this was a holding operation.

    "8.45: Crushing begins as fans see little progress. Panic beginning. Children lifted up and crying. Pushing from behind. Police respond by pushing back and forming an impenetrable barrier.

    "9.00: I finally make it to the front. Extruded like toothpaste out of a tube into police line; 100m further on, a line of police buses with a bus-sized gap and riot police blocking it. Fans backing up here. It becomes apparent this is a similar holding operation. It looks like one or two are allowed through at a time to give the appearance of a checkpoint. Totally inadequate again. We hold up our tickets, to no avail.

    "9.30: No one is getting through now. Police drive a bus in to close gap off completely. Crowd of 2,000-5,000 backing up. Panic, crushing. My feet aren't touching the ground. Kids crying. Pressure increases to dangerous levels. This prompts police to let crowd know over hand-held Tannoy that 'the stadium is full! You can't get in'. No one can believe it. The charade is over. The crowd realise they haven't been policed; they've been conned, corralled, herded and contained for the last hour. A surge from the back and now it's confrontational. The police get more vocal and counter-surge with shields, batons, helmets, visors and boots, pushing us back a few metres.

    "The police fire a huge cloud of tear gas and panic ensues. Police batter their way forward. Crowd retreats, choking and eyes streaming.

    "9.45: We assume the match will not kick off. Surprised to find it has.

    "10.00: Some fans regroup and storm staircases to our right. Running skirmishes. Beaten back by police. Tear gas again, kickings. Some fans try to crawl under parked buses. This goes on until about 10.30. We make our way back.''

    Gregory has asked Platini to answer three specific questions:

    "1) At what time was the stadium declared closed? And by whom? 2) What security arrangements did you have in place, particularly in regard to forged tickets that Uefa had been warned about weeks in advance? 3) Why are corporate 'partners' allowed to sell tickets at hugely inflated rates to fans?'

    Finally, if you want a solution to this perennial problem the answer (apart from security that actually works) is easy: license clubs to show the match live on screens at their home stadium when the live venue is sold out.''

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/mai...0/sfnliv30.xml
    Just when I discovered the meaning of life, they changed it

    #2
    I am so glad somebody is making an official stand.
    Oh I don't know.

    Comment


      #3
      Hope it works out for the guy, I think the G14 clubs should back him as well.

      Comment


        #4
        A very well-written missive. UEFA, surely, don't have a leg to stand on.
        Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

        Comment


          #5
          Lad lives next door to me is doing something similar after the shareholders took the plane they were due on and they had to stay overnight in Athens again.
          RAFA! RAFAEL! RAFA! RAFAEL! RAFA! RAFAEL! RAFAEL BENITEZ!

          Comment


            #6
            This guy is a mate of a mate I was with in Athens and has been to every final since 1974. This is the first one he's missed!

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Lynchyred View Post
              This guy is a mate of a mate I was with in Athens and has been to every final since 1974. This is the first one he's missed!
              He must be absolutely ****ing furious.

              Welcome to the site, by the way.
              Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

              Comment


                #8
                It's about time they were held accountable for the way they royally f*cked up last week.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Lynchyred View Post
                  This guy is a mate of a mate I was with in Athens and has been to every final since 1974. This is the first one he's missed!

                  Wow!

                  welcome to est mate.
                  Liverpool born and bred.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    It's totally UEFA's fault, the facilities outside the ground were woeful for starters. Alot of the tension would of been eased by the use of giant screens outside the ground. I, like lots of fans travelled without tickets in the hope of finding one out there, however i didn't get involved in the charging of the gates. I would of been happy to of watched it on a giant screen outside the ground after being unsuccesful in obtaining a ticket as i'm sure others would of.

                    At the end of the day i was amazed at the location and facilities in Athens. A very poorly planned and ran event. Lots of people we spoke to after the game were refused entry with genuine tickets. One lad who flew with us had paid a 1000 pounds for a genuine ticket off the internet and missed the first 30 minutes of the game and was tear gassed for good measure. Very poor from UEFA!

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                      #11
                      I told you this would happen.

                      More and more people will do the same thing after seeing this aswell.

                      Its going to hit Uefa hard!!
                      "When a man insults my country I insult him, by taking his woman" Tony Yeboah

                      "looking through your posts since 2007 and what you have consistently written about my football team I have come to the conclusion that if you had 1 more brain cell you would be a plant .. your father was a hamster and your mother smells of elder berries, I fart in your general direction ..." Nicey

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                        #12
                        I was lucky I got in just before they closed the stadium and started tear gassing people. I did have a go at the coppers as I was walking in as one of them hit this lad in front of me with his riot shield for no reason.

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                          #13
                          Although I wasnt in Athens I emailed William Gaillard (twice) to complain about the shambles of their "organising" of the match.

                          This is the reply I receiced. They've set up a FAQ section. ******s


                          Dear Sir/Madam,

                          To deal with the large number of emails sent to uefa.com, a frequently asked questions (FAQ) section has been set up at: http://www.uefa.com/uefa/faq/index.html. uefa.com's FAQ section is designed to answer the questions you - the users - ask most often. The FAQ will be updated on a regular basis so that topical issues are also covered. Please refer to this page.

                          Information about ticket sales for the UEFA EURO 2008™ final round is available here: http://www.uefa.com/competitions/eur...id=511168.html.

                          Information about employment opportunities at UEFA and Euro 2008 SA can be found here: http://www.uefa.com/uefa/recruitment/index.html and here http://www.uefa.com/competitions/eur...ent/index.html. Please use the relevant forms to apply.

                          Journalists should contact the UEFA media desk at +41 (0) 848 04 27 27 or refer to the following page for questions about accreditation: http://www.uefa.com/uefa/MediaServic...ion/index.html.

                          To comment on football matters, please refer to uefa.com's forum at: http://www.uefa.com/fanzone/forums/index.htmx.

                          If you have forgotten the password for your uefa.com account, refer to: http://www.uefa.com/users/RememberPassword.htmx.

                          For information about uefa.com's new video service, please click here: http://support.video.uefa.com

                          For help with your fantasy football team, please refer to http://en.uclfantasy.uefa.com/M/help.mc (UEFA Champions League), http://en.euro2008fantasy.uefa.com/M/help.mc (UEFA EURO 2008™) or http://en.ucupfantasy.uefa.com/M/help.mc (UEFA Cup).

                          We thank you for your email and for your interest in uefa.com.

                          Best regards,
                          uefa.com
                          "With Ron Yeats in defence, we could play Arthur Askey in goal."

                          Bill Shankly

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by Maestro View Post

                            "While unsavoury elements of the Liverpool fans must take responsibility for their actions, so must Uefa take responsibility for its shortcomings. Uefa appears to have planned for a genteel corporate networking event. It took its eye off the ball and forgot about a football match between two of Europe's largest and most passionately supported football clubs.
                            Nail on head there. UEFA (in fact add the FA, Premier League, Fifa etc etc) are so concerened about 'corporate sponsors' that they have totally forgotten what makes football the great sport it is, the fans. Without the fans, you have no sport and there goes the corporate sponsors and with it the 'Fat Cats' money.

                            It will be interesting to see what happens here, unfortunatley most of us know the outcome......**** all. It's a shame but the game we all love and enjoy is being ****ing ruined, but because we love it so much we can't do anything about it and the governing bodies can continue to cash in. The only possible(tho highly unlikely) way I can ever see this changing is if the bubble burst and fans world wide united and refused to pay out. Unfortunatly the demand is so high this will never happen as there will always be someone waiting to pick up the tickets/merchandise etc etc etc.
                            i own everton fans on the internet....that's what i do

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Harveybirdman View Post
                              I told you this would happen.

                              More and more people will do the same thing after seeing this aswell.

                              Its going to hit Uefa hard!!
                              If this case is successful they will for sure!

                              Comment

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