Another difference between 87 and 89 was that at our game the kick off was put 
back for 15 minutes due to the congestion outside. 
 
That day in 87 I was on a coach that was held up when the M1 came to a complete 
standstill outside Sheffield through the extra traffic, and would have had no 
chance of getting in for the original kick off time. But we heard on the radio 
that the kick off had been put back, so   nobody from the coach was in a panic 
about missing the kick off or rushing to try to get in on time. And as we 
walked down from the coach park, we could see that all the other fans had got 
the message that kick off was put back, so the mood was quite relaxed.
 
When I finally got inside and came through the tunnel towards the central pen 
it looked far too packed, so I thought I had no chance of even getting onto the 
back of the terrace to anywhere I could see the game. So instead I headed round 
the side and ended up watching the game from the terrace in the corner.
 
Tim.
 

--- On Fri, 21/10/11, DAVID NATTAN <[email protected]> wrote:


From: DAVID NATTAN <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [LU] Hillsborough
To: "list leedslist" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, 21 October, 2011, 11:16


As others have said our visit in 87 was the most crushed I have ever been at a 
game (only after 89 did I think that we had actually been in danger of dying) 
We still laugh at the smallest lad with us whose feet quite literally did not 
touch the floor the whole game!
The design of the stadium where we were boxed in on 3 sides in each pen with 
fans coming in from the only open bit - meant we had nowhere to spread out to.
The big difference between us and the scousers was that we were subject to a 
12noon kick off which meant a lot less drunkeness and fans not all leaving it 
to the last minute to get in ( a football culture thing that still applies - 
stay in the pub till the last minute) Also and this is another biggie - we were 
being stopped a long way from the ground to have our tickets checked which 
meant that we did not have many coming in without tickets or with tickets for 
the wrong end - something which appears to have added to the scousers problems.
The Liverpool fans were to blame in some respects BUT as far as the actual 
crushing was concerned they did nothing that other fans (of that era at any 
rate) would not have done - eg try and get in without the correct tickets / 
come in late and at the last minute. The ones who died of course were not a 
part of this 'bad behaviour' but the layout of the ground was the main cause. - 
exacerbated by the fact that the police viewed all fans as thugs and hooligans 
-  so when the problems started they viewed it as the start of a riot / pitch 
invasion (as did the commentators on TV) rather than a tragedy
Having said all that I do not really know what the Hillsboro support group or 
whatever want to achieve - lots of things went wrong and they have all now been 
put right throughout the country so it cannot happen again,one of the things 
victims families are generally keen on. In fact they have made it nigh on 
impossible to talk sensibly about safe standing so they have achieved their 
aims.
Also I do wonder why they do not have the same sort of campaigns dealing with 
Heysel !
Dave
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