Peter Anderson ⚽ Last week I tuned in to see the Northern Ireland Women's team in action in their first ever Euro Cup game.

It didn't go well. To be fair it wasn't expected to go well, but you live in hope. The part-timers were up against a very accomplished Norway and were 3-nil down by half-time. After the restart though, Northern Ireland got one back. The hundreds of Northern Ireland supporters in the stadium went crazy, just like they had scored the winner! It is something that is part of the GAWA experience whether at men's or women's games. We aren't very good and we don't score many goals, but we still love it anyway.

I have to say that I love the GAWA. Not having a proper quality league in Northern Ireland means that the only time we see good players playing here is in international matches. And thanks to Billy Bingham, we have a culture of hoping for the best and supporting our boys (and now girls) in their endeavours because sometimes, just sometimes, we pull off something special.

The big difference between today's GAWA and that the Billy Bingham years is the lack of sectarianism. I went to as many games as I could afford in the 80s. I loved the atmosphere in the Kop end and the singing of loyalist songs was a big part of that. By the 90s my perspective was changing as I fell out of loyalism over Drumcree. Around the same time Neil Lennon started getting stick from Northern Ireland fans for being "one of them". I'm not a big fan of Lennon but he was definitely one of ours. I was at a Northern Ireland game around that time and a fight broke out among the fans, I heard later it was over some feud among paramilitaries from the Shankill and Sandy Row. It all kicked off right in front of me and I had to flee, lest I end up getting a diggin'. That was me finished with Northern Ireland. I vowed never to return.

About 10 years later after moving to Madrid, one of my mates told me that the IFA had cracked down on sectarianism in the stadium. I was sceptical, but he insisted. I decided to watch one of the games to check it out. I went to a bar in the centre of Madrid to watch Northern Ireland against Spain in a qualifier at Windsor. The atmosphere was electric and there were no loyalist songs. To make it even better, we won 3-2. As the only Northern Ireland supporter in a bar packed with Spanish, I thoroughly enjoyed beating it up the locals.

Once I moved home, I decided to check out this "new" Windsor Park. I was amazed. Somehow the IFA had managed to stamp out the sectarianism and improve the atmosphere at the same time. Big kudos to them, it was a minor miracle. In 2016 I travelled to Lyon and Paris with the GAWA for the Euros and have never been so proud of the fans. On the ferry from Rosslare, we drank with the Republic fans in a wonderfully friendly way, no problems at all, even after the drink was in. And at Lyon's central square, tens of thousands of GAWA drank merrily and behaved themselves admirably, gaining much praise from the local police and French media. The French Euros were a resounding success for us.

The IFA have achieved what I believed would be impossible: the complete changing of our football culture and (almost) total eradication of sectarianism. Not only that, but they have increased attendance and improved the noise level, and therefore the atmosphere. So, seated stadiums and family friendly policies have ruined football's atmosphere? The GAWA will show you that it doesn't have to be that way.

Peter Anderson is a Unionist with a keen interest in sports.

All The Way With GAWA

Peter Anderson ⚽ Last week I tuned in to see the Northern Ireland Women's team in action in their first ever Euro Cup game.

It didn't go well. To be fair it wasn't expected to go well, but you live in hope. The part-timers were up against a very accomplished Norway and were 3-nil down by half-time. After the restart though, Northern Ireland got one back. The hundreds of Northern Ireland supporters in the stadium went crazy, just like they had scored the winner! It is something that is part of the GAWA experience whether at men's or women's games. We aren't very good and we don't score many goals, but we still love it anyway.

I have to say that I love the GAWA. Not having a proper quality league in Northern Ireland means that the only time we see good players playing here is in international matches. And thanks to Billy Bingham, we have a culture of hoping for the best and supporting our boys (and now girls) in their endeavours because sometimes, just sometimes, we pull off something special.

The big difference between today's GAWA and that the Billy Bingham years is the lack of sectarianism. I went to as many games as I could afford in the 80s. I loved the atmosphere in the Kop end and the singing of loyalist songs was a big part of that. By the 90s my perspective was changing as I fell out of loyalism over Drumcree. Around the same time Neil Lennon started getting stick from Northern Ireland fans for being "one of them". I'm not a big fan of Lennon but he was definitely one of ours. I was at a Northern Ireland game around that time and a fight broke out among the fans, I heard later it was over some feud among paramilitaries from the Shankill and Sandy Row. It all kicked off right in front of me and I had to flee, lest I end up getting a diggin'. That was me finished with Northern Ireland. I vowed never to return.

About 10 years later after moving to Madrid, one of my mates told me that the IFA had cracked down on sectarianism in the stadium. I was sceptical, but he insisted. I decided to watch one of the games to check it out. I went to a bar in the centre of Madrid to watch Northern Ireland against Spain in a qualifier at Windsor. The atmosphere was electric and there were no loyalist songs. To make it even better, we won 3-2. As the only Northern Ireland supporter in a bar packed with Spanish, I thoroughly enjoyed beating it up the locals.

Once I moved home, I decided to check out this "new" Windsor Park. I was amazed. Somehow the IFA had managed to stamp out the sectarianism and improve the atmosphere at the same time. Big kudos to them, it was a minor miracle. In 2016 I travelled to Lyon and Paris with the GAWA for the Euros and have never been so proud of the fans. On the ferry from Rosslare, we drank with the Republic fans in a wonderfully friendly way, no problems at all, even after the drink was in. And at Lyon's central square, tens of thousands of GAWA drank merrily and behaved themselves admirably, gaining much praise from the local police and French media. The French Euros were a resounding success for us.

The IFA have achieved what I believed would be impossible: the complete changing of our football culture and (almost) total eradication of sectarianism. Not only that, but they have increased attendance and improved the noise level, and therefore the atmosphere. So, seated stadiums and family friendly policies have ruined football's atmosphere? The GAWA will show you that it doesn't have to be that way.

Peter Anderson is a Unionist with a keen interest in sports.

7 comments:

  1. One of the greatest regrets in my life is not being able to make it to the Euros. From the GAWA back home I'd heard the crowd had changed and it was more like a carnival atmosphere. Long gone are the days in the dilapidated West stand, I was at Windsor when the Blues v Donegal Celtic went bananas, thank fuck that nonsense isn't about anymore. Hopefully next year I get to see the new Stadium. But when travelling the fans are exemplary and all about having a good time! GAWA!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Peter Anderson Comments

      Steve
      The new stadium is great but the capacity is too low. It's almost impossible to get a ticket for a big game.

      Delete
  2. Steve - If you are over next year give us a call

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Will do, usually have a night or two in Dublin so might swing by Dundalk if you're still hiding out in Mexico 😆

      Delete
    2. that's a bad word in this town!!
      Drogheda on the Boyne

      Delete
  3. Good to read about the cordial relations on the boat to France. Interesting when juxtaposed with John Coulter's thoughts on an "inclusive" twelfth. Wonder if it ever occurs to John that inclusivity might be better served by events other than the twelfth.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Peter Anderson Comments

    Ramon
    On the ferry I was so paranoid. I was convinced someone would get drunk and start singing "Here lies a soldier" or "The men behind the wire" and then it would all kick off, but it was great. Zero problems. As it should be.

    ReplyDelete