THE ARCHIVE
Race
"Part and parcel of every game" | "Part and parcel of every game" |
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Alex Williams “When I first started coming down to Maine Road there were a lot of black kids so you’d end up playing with your friends, which cushioned you from racism a bit. My first real experience of it was when we played Millwall in the FA Youth Cup final. The first leg was at Maine Road and they brought 3,000 down. It was bad enough here but then we went there... By my second year Clive Wilson was there too and we used to get all the stick. But there are different ways to react: you either fall and go back and you never recover or you just try harder than you ever did before. Sometimes it was harder being a goalkeeper – I did wish I could run up to the half-way line. Two things kept me going. First I was paid, for the time, a decent wage. Secondly, even now when I play occasionally I tell myself that it’s just a kickabout, but as soon as the whistle is blown something inside me says I want to win. If you put in a good performance they don’t see the colour thing, they say ‘he’s a good player’ rather than ‘he’s a black player’.”
“Racism was very prevalent, very strong, in my early years. Particularly among fans, not so much players. I can’t ever remember seriously getting any racial abuse from players – maybe one or two incidents. But you used to get a lot of chants from opposing fans, especially up in places like the north east. Leeds was pretty bad as well. I remember once at West Ham at the end of the game there were bananas and coins scattered all over the pitch. That was quite an intimidating place to go because you were so close to the fans. If people don’t grow up with people of different nationalities and different cultures they tend to fear what they don’t know. Maybe fear is too strong a word, but they’re unsure of them. I think with me that was the biggest problem, the cultural thing – some of the humour wasn’t what I had grown up with. Not that they were necessarily aimed at me, but the general joking around the dressing-room, I don’t know, it could be something they saw on TV that was funny to them, but less funny to me.
I certainly was not happy about the racial comments and jokes in the dressing-room at Wolves. But when you’re only a baby, and it’s a couple of the senior pros at the club who are doing it, it’s difficult. But when you start getting on in the club a bit eventually you have to make a stand. On the pitch of course you just got it full stop. It was part and parcel of every single game you played. And what you didn’t get at that time was back-up from your team-mates. I was quite lucky in that the position I played, I could always mete out my own justice, as it were. There was always going to be an opportunity to hurt somebody if I had to – not in the sense of breaking their legs, but just to let them feel your presence. But mostly, if the crowd got on my back, I knew I was doing my job. If I was having a crap game I never got slaughtered, but when I was having a good game, everything was coming at us. Because obviously what they were trying to do was make you lose concentration. Because I knew that, it used to spur me on. It was not nice – it was horrible and unacceptable, but you have to take the negatives and turn them into positives.
“The worst racism I experienced was probably Newcastle, partly because of the Sunderland rivalry. Then Millwall, though eveybody got abuse there, it wasn’t just because of your colour, playing for the opposition was enough. The abuse I had was only ever from the fans, not others players or managers. But as more black players appeared in football, it died down. Crystal Palace was a place I remember for the lack of racial abuse. I remember playing against them when they had several black players, maybe a majority of the team – Ian Wright, Mark Bright, Eric Young, Andy Gray and so on. Wimbledon too, when they had four or five black players. There’s been a vast change since the early Eighties. Around 90 per cent of teams have black players now. Back then it was maybe only 25 per cent. Young black kids coming into the game have seen what players can achieve – they see Ian Wright and feel that they can be where he is. When I was a player at Sunderland I went through a stage when I was getting stopped three or four times a week by the local police, because I had a nice car. A couple of times it happened when I was out with friends, another Sunderland player Gordon Armstrong and his girlfriend, whose dad was a policeman. I made a complaint then and it stopped for a while. They’d stop you for the sake of stopping you. It was always: ‘What are you doing in a car like this and in this area?’ I made another complaint, to the CID superintendent who lived opposite me, who’d actually seen it happen. Then they acted on it and they laid off. I have to thank my chairman at Darlington for my becoming a manager, he’s taken a gamble. Occasionally there’s a reaction. Sometimes I might walk into an office at another club and I’ll be stopped and asked what I’m doing but as I soon as say that I’m Gary Bennett and I’m the Darlington manager they say, ‘Oh, OK.’ But they are surprised. I get it sometimes when players who we want to sign come to see me and don’t know I’m black. But it probably does help when it comes to signing black players, they’re maybe a bit more relaxed about the prospect of playing for you – especially when they otherwise might not think to come to the north east.”
“When I began, Viv Anderson had just made his debut for England and we were like the next generation: people like Fashanu, Regis and Barnes. But if you look through most of the teams, it was like they had – I wouldn’t say a token black player – but more or less one per team, mainly as a centre-forward or winger. But as the Eighties moved on, people like Des Walker and midfield players came in behind us. The players were fine, no problems. Of course you got the odd name-call. You knew what they were trying to do and I never once took it as a personal thing. I never got booked for retaliating against things like that and that’s what I coach now to young black players facing the same problems, though it’s rare that those things happen now. With the foreign players coming in it’s become even less of an issue, it’s become what it should be, which is a multicultural, multiracial sport.” From WSC 174 August 2001. What was happening this month On the subject...
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