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There used to be a sign over the stairs leading out of the away end at Upton Park urging supporters to “Remember Ibrox” and leave without pushing. It seemed pretty rich, back in the Eighties, when spectators would struggle to get out of that tangle of unforgiving fences and barriers in one piece. Remembering Ibrox is not something British football has done very well. The disaster that took place there 30 years ago this month killed 66 people. Yet it changed relatively little, except of course for Ibrox itself. Perhaps if it had happened in England at a ground thought to be safe and modern (like, say, Hillsborough) the impact would have been different. But going down the stairs at Ibrox was known to be a dangerous business even before 1971. It was easy enough to assume it was a one-off. The Safety of Sports Grounds Act was brought in as a result of the disaster but, in an era of rapidly declining attendances, clubs were often more concerned with the costs it imposed on them rather than any opportunities it opened up for changing the way people watched football. Besides, hooliganism quickly overtook safety as the No 1 crowd control issue, with the result that fences went up and grounds, as we later discovered, became more, not less, dangerous. These are all debateable points. There is no single right answer to the question of terracing. Few people, for example, could argue that it makes logical sense to allow terracing for matches involving clubs as big as Stoke or Bristol City just because they are in the Second Division, but not for games at Crewe or Grimsby in the First. From WSC 168 February 2001. What was happening this month On the subject...
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