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  • #PassionIsNotACrime - Post-Derby Media Bias


    mack

    Opinion: In the wake of the Sydney Derby, Australian Football has once again been dragged through the mud by the mainstream media in this country.

     

    After the 2-0 defeat of Sydney FC by the Wanderers we have witnessed two completely different reactions to the Sydney Derby and crowd issues. Without an agenda, print journalists, many of whom actually attended the match praised the supporters for the atmosphere they brought to the game. As did people outside the media who attended the match. On the other we have agenda-driven television media outlets who reported on an extremely small element of the supporters with exaggerated hyperbole and false statements.

     

    Daniel Lane, who I believe stood with the RBB for the Derby, wrote this article:

    Wanderers Fans Full Of Passion Not Anger:

    The sub-plot - the battle in the terraces, where the key to victory was to chant louder than the rival team's supporters - was action-packed and colourful.

    Phil Rothfield, who either attended or at least watched the Derby on TV, posted this article:

    Red and black wave swamps the west as Wanderers continue remarkable rise.

    This A-League club is truly one of the most remarkable success stories in Australian sport... Normally it takes years and years to build a successful football club in any code.

     

    snelson.JPG
    Those were just two printed examples, social media after the game had a wide amount of praise for the atmosphere and the performance of the Wanderers. Sebastian Hassett praised a "fantastic atmosphere". As did thousands of football supporters. They weren't wrong either.

     

    Not so the TV Media. They were looking for any pictures or videos they could use to paint football supporters as violent, ethnic hooligans wanting nothing more than to start a soccer riot.

     

    @MatthewSnelson - Reporter, Nine News.

    Anyone at the Sydney A-league game last night? Do you know if anyone has vision of the flares?

    Unsuprisingly, this lead to the report on the match being called "Trouble Flares at Sydney Derby." (Link to NineMSN website with video).

    Extraordinary scenes. Dangerous flares thrown into the crowd. Flares, detonators, a brawl and arrests. A group intent on violence and crime. Trouble went over 2 hours.

    On the main channel 9 news this was made the second report of the bulletin, behind the USA Newtown gun massacre. The idea that flares were thrown into the crowd is simply not true. That would be a reprehensibly dangerous action that I believe only someone deliberately intending to cause injury would do. They were thrown onto the pitch, or taken by security to pick up and dispose of. Nor did any brawl take place at the stadium during the so called 'two hours of trouble.'

     

    A police officer is quoted saying "We're not going to see what we see in parts of Europe". I have to question exactly what in Europe is and isn't allowed according to the Police, because he makes no details. Simply that he wants it not to be seen. Football support in Europe encompasses a wide range of issues and this kind of blanket statement is not helpful at all.

     

    According to the voice over, "We already have been". It then shows several scenes from RBB videos. The first shows grainy footage of a flare let off at a private supporters function.

     

    The next was video of the RBB chanting during a match. What this has to do with hooliganism is beyond me. The Mariners fans chant during matches, the Barmy Army chant during England Cricket matches, I stood at the top of the ANZ stadium wings at a State Of Origin match where the entire stadium was chanting "Bullshit" and "The Ref is a Wanker" whenever the Blues got a bad call. I doubt any of those groups have ever been linked with 'hooliganism'.

     

    The final part is the most reprehensible part of the report for me. It shows one of the RBB's perfectly legal, completely safe, pre-game marches. It was likely one of the marches which had the additional legal backing of being documented to the police through a "Intention To Hold A Public Assembly" notice under the Summary Offences Act of 1988. Vision of an RBB pre-game march included the voice over "and last month, a fan march in Western Sydney!", the tone being incredulous, accusatory, implying that this march was somehow violent, illegal, overly disruptive or an example of hooliganism.

     

    So who might you ask, was reporting this? Someone who attended the match and witnessed it first hand like a responsible journalist would? No, it was our twitter friend, Matthew Snelson. It appears like he had already made up his mind without having attended the event and proceeded to file a biased, incorrect report after doing the hard journalistic yakka of searching for videos on youtube. Apparently this is what you learn in Reporter School these days. I wonder how he dealt with the new youtube interface. Meanwhile the big bosses wonder why their media empires are crumbling and falling apart piece by piece as people take to social media, internet forums, blogs and other websites for their dose of news.

     

    Channel 7 also filed a report on the match.

    To me, what Robert Ovadia mentions in his first line is the root cause of this biased attempt at journalism.

    With the rise of the A-League, we are witnessing a rise in hooliganism as well.

    This yet again shows youtube video from the stands, but also mixes in video from Fox Sports showing the RBB celebrating during the match, clearly implying that the celebrations were due to the flares. It also makes an incorrect statement about 'railway detonators'. With even the smallest piece of journalistic integrity, Mr Ovadia would have researched what it takes to let off a railway detonator and what that would have done if it exploded in a crowd. They require high force such as being struck with a hammer when they aren't used for the intended purpose of going under a train. The explosion is big enough to cause serious injuries such as amputation or death. If a railway detonator was in fact let off during the crowd people would have been hurt and I would be personally disgusted at anyone who brought such a device into our group.

     

    The policeman is shown again but this time he completes his quote about Europe. He is the one who mentions detonators being 'common practice' in Europe. He does not say they were used at the Derby. We can now see why "detonators" were included in the report, while using the weasel word "possibly" to cover himself from being called out for his incorrect reporting.

     

    The final piece of vision is from our Derby march. It includes the severe hooligan element of a young woman with a broken foot on crutches. The voice over states:

    Before the game Wanderers fans marched on a hotel in Surry Hills and started a brawl there.

    Both these statements are incorrect. We did not 'march on a hotel', we were directed by police via their blocking of streets on a particular route that took us past a hotel. This route was not the route originally intended by the club and supporters which was a route that would have avoided the hotel completely. When we arrived the Police had unilaterally changed the route to the new one. The RBB did not start a brawl there either from what I could see in the march. Statements about broken chairs at the stadium are meaningless. Chairs are broken at every event by simple wear and tear. Some were already broken when supporters arrived at the stadium and what I saw was only a handful of seats broken at all. To suggest this was part of a concentrated effort of hooliganism is another incorrect statement

     

    Did these events deserve to be called 'hooliganism'? Were they deserving of being reported as 'extraordinary scenes'? Our forum member Kensworth pulled up some numbers on recent major events and their eviction rate. At many of these major events an eviction is the same as an arrest for the police, as the difference might only be what the officer at the time decides and in many cases an arrest may lead to a simple caution or even being released and told to go home. Stats involving events like these can be hard to come by hence why some are years old.

     

    2009 Boxing Day Test - Day 2 - 91 evictions and 13 arrests from crowd of 59,206. 1 in 570 evicted or arrested.

    2009 ODI (Melbourne) - 154 evictions or arrests from crowd of 40,000. 1 in 259 people evicted or arrested.

    2012 NRL Grand Final - 43 evictions from crowd of 83,000. 1 in 1,930 evicted. This number was praised by the police in the media after the event.

    2012 Sydney Derby - 3 arrests from a crowd of 26,176. That's 1 in 8,725 evicted or arrested.

     

    That is 4 and a half times lower than the NRL Grand Final that was praised by police. It's 33 times lower than the MCG ODI figure. Yet police accuse Football supporters of 'intending violence'. I would stake money on the belief that more people were hurt by violence at either of the Melbourne Cricket matches than were at the Sydney Derby.

     

    Here is a report on poor behaviour at an AFL match by Corey Stephenson.

    Time to split up AFL fans?

     

    Only so many times you can hear someone next to you scream the words "you f---ing maggot!" before losing it... Family with young children all trying to focus on the game rather than worry about whether some abusive idiot is going to add to a heated rant by launching the beer they’ve just smuggled into the alcohol-free zone... There were individuals actually beckoning people for a fight, while others repeatedly yelled "shut the f--- up" and "learn the f---ing rules" in front of terrified kids.

    The AFL supporters are all considered "individuals", while Football supporters are lumped into categories like "A group intent on violence". Flares are let off by supporters of South Australia's Central Districts AFL club,

    of the St George Dragon Army ripping one at a match, but I've yet to see Channel 9 or 7 run AFL or NRL Hooliganism as a story. Is a flare or god forbid, a chair being broken during a match, that much different or worse to racism, fighting and abuse that can take place in any AFL, Cricket or NRL match? A handful of flares is considered hooliganism but 100's of evictions is just 'Aussie larrikinism'. A punch can kill just as surely as a flare could, and there are far more evictions and arrests at NRL, Cricket and AFL matches than at A-League matches.

     

    Why is this route taken by the TV media with Football, but not with AFL and NRL matches? Inherent racism in the Eastern Suburbs based, Anglo-centric mainstream media is only part of the issue. That has lost some focus through the introduction of broad-based teams with a focus on an area or town instead of ethnicity. What is clear is how much vested interest Channel 9 and 7 have in attempting to delay the rise or to destroy Football.

     

    We know for a fact that Channel 7 buried the NSL for the benefit of the AFL. C7 executive Steve Wise was annoyed that the AFL hadn't given him credit for buying the NSL rights then suffocating the sport.

     

    Both channels recent confirmed they will spend 100's of millions of dollars each for the rights to NRL and AFL. Channel 9 also has Cricket to protect. Channel 10 made plays for both sports, for the A-League, and will likely attempt to secure the Big Bash League for FTA viewing the next time the media rights are put up for sale by Cricket Australia. It's hard to write more than a paragraph on this ingrained anti-football bias. Because it's so blatant, it's so obvious and so clear why football is targeted.

     

    Football has yet again activated the 'fight or flight' response of the AFL and NRL driven agenda of the mainstream television media. They are fearful of our potential power. Our sport is no longer a 'sleeping giant'. We have taken over from Rugby Union as the 3rd most popular football code in the country. Right now the Australian Cricket Team is playing in front of woeful crowds in recent Test series, and the Big Bash League is finding the novelty of an ultra-plastic 6 week long circus where the spectacle counts more than the result is very very short. Our Sydney Derby scored 26,000 attendees. The Big Bash Sydney Derby had 15,000.

     

    9, 7 and 10 are reacting to protect their investment and 10 future investments. While flare throwing is not a good look, the response from these media networks is well out of proportion to the reality of the situation. It is out of proportion to their coverage of heavier levels of violence, racism, ejections and drunken behaviour, and even flare usage, at non-Football matches. The fearful voice overs superimposed onto youtube video, all intended to promote the vision that the Wanderers supporters are ethnic hooligans invading the Eastern Suburbs intent on destruction is pure fantasy designed to anger, shock and worry those who might otherwise want to attend and A-League match. It is akin to the 'shonky builder' ambush reporting style used in A Current Affair or Today Tonight.

     

    I am heartened that our supporter group, and those fellow supporters from other clubs are joining us to directly protest this via social media. The Channel 9 facebook has been flooded with complaints. I hope the same has happened to Channel 7. Channel 10 is as relevant as Mohammed Bin Hammam is after his FIFA ban but perhaps take a few moments out to remind them they've got nothing worth watching except 20 year old Simpsons re-runs. Throw in a line that with the status of the A-League rising they should have chased us harder than SBS and Foxtel did and if they did people might watch their station instead of it failing and dropping down to become Australia's fourth most popular network.

     

    To anyone who is a part of the great active supporter groups throughout Football in Australia, no matter what league the team you support is in, we all need to consider our actions as we head out to matches this weekend, next weekend, next year and forever. While media coverage is biased there is only so much that a biased reporter can fabricate when there is nothing untoward to report on. If we take that content out of their hands. We are the better people in this matter. Throwing a target on our backs for Channel 9 and 7 to aim at will not help Football. We all know what the limits between passion and illegal behaviour are. Stay passionate, but as a collective know what the limits on our passion are if we want to avoid giving these media outlets ammunition against us.

     

    Passion is not a crime.

     

    We are Football and we will prevail.


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    Recommended Comments



    Tranquilo

    Posted

    the FFA need to step up and defend the A League against these false media allegations and support their fans/players and football in Australia.

    westofcentre

    Posted

    I'm proud of our supporters and our team. Passion is something this media is afraid of.

     

    They see Parra Stadium rocking on its foundations and they panic. The see the RBB marching through Parra, the heart and soul of Western Sydney and they quiver.

     

    To the media and the rest of the country, call us hooligans, call us bogans, call us w0gs, call us criminals, you think it can bring us down. This team is our voice. We inspire the players and they inspire us. The whole stadium carries our boys . Their every touch roared on by the crowd.

     

    I see people with tears in their eyes when we score, when we cheer on Dino. This team empowers us and if we are Losing we scream even louder.

     

    The magic of Western Sydney is we battle against the odds. Many of our players were rejected by other clubs. We come from a regionuch maligned by the media.

     

    But we are a force of good. The team and fans offer hope to the kids of the region with little or no positive role models in their lives. Write what you like, call us what you like. The greatest shame in all of it is you will never understand the pride and passion of Western Sydney.

    Mauly

    Posted

    Melbourne victory tonight. "Let our passion burn" with the flares n smokies. On the field after the game too. Much respect to the boys.

    ATP

    Posted

    Melbourne victory tonight. "Let our passion burn" with the flares n smokies. On the field after the game too. Much respect to the boys.

     

    Spoken like a true pyromaniac ;-)

    Guest ZipGunBop

    Posted

    Tried to post this on Channel 9 facebook page but they deleted it lol, it's still there on the 9 news facebook page though. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kRzjL2scS38

    That's fckin awesome.

    GunnerWanderer

    Posted

    A really good article by Foz this morning...

     

    http://www.smh.com.au/sport/a-league/take-a-bow-wanderers-you-are-the-pride-of-the-league-20121222-2bsif.html

     

     

    It's tough to decide whether the extraordinary Western Sydney Wanderers fans or coach Tony Popovic are the star debutants of the A-League season. But they are both in the grand final. Each has been exceptional.

    The Wanderers fan group has challenged every other club in the league to raise their match-day experience and enhance the defining characteristic that sets football well apart from any other pursuit - the atmosphere.

    If you haven't taken the opportunity to attend a Wanderers match at Parramatta Stadium, get your kids and pals along quick smart, because it's a thing of beauty to see a congregation of fans endlessly driving on their team, showing their passion with great pride and making it the premier sporting atmosphere in the nation. And this after just 12 rounds.

    Forget about the flare throwers from the Sydney derby the week before. There were only two implicated out of a magnificently vocal and involved crowd of more than 26,000. And that pair will be banned. In any context, that's an exceptionally small number of troublemakers at a major sporting event; my calculator has two zeros after the point and an eight as a percentage.

    Advertisement

    The FFA's response was swift and correct. Yes, the Wanderers fans are an amazing addition to the league. Yes, we love to see the passion and noise, the songs and exhortations, but flares are not welcome. The risk to the game is too high. To the supporters: guys, you are offering so much, changing the landscape of what a fan group can provide in Australian sport - don't spoil it.

    Last week the Wanderers out-sang Sydney FC supporters group The Cove. This week, at home, there was no point taking them on decibel for decibel - they ruled at Parramatta Stadium. Next week our eyes will be on the contest in the stands as much as on the field.

    Now to the coach. Tony Popovic has made the most impressive coaching debut in memory.

    The reasons are many. First, Popovic had a clear idea of what he wanted to produce. His football, which he refined under Vitezslav Lavicka and in a higher pressure atmosphere with greater scrutiny at Crystal Palace in England, led him to a clear focus on player requirements. On a shoestring budget, as well.

    So clear, in fact, Popovic was content to reject an ageing Michael Ballack and understood what Shinji Ono could offer instead. Many debutants would have either gone for the name and reputation or simply acquiesced to the club.

    He was also clear on wanting his close mate and assistant coach Ante Milicic on board, whatever it took.

    Most coaches lack important traits, whether technical or personal. The ability to lead and manage a group of men is one. That's not an issue for Tony.

    His media management has been impressive. As was his immediate talk of identifying with the region and recruiting players with certain personal characteristics. Popovic's goal of constant improvement sets the benchmark for the team's daily work. He challenges the group to always go a step further, but one at a time.

    Many coaches simply want to be liked, or admired. That achilles heel can affect decision-making and in turn compromise the chances of success. Players see the hunger for acknowledgement, which they interpret as weakness. Tony could care less. He is there to do the job his way - a rare trait in a first-time head coach.

    Perhaps the most positive sign, however, is the evolution of the playing group after 12 rounds. Every one of them is performing close to their peak, a sign of a well-managed group. The foreign players are starting to grow in output; Ono is coming into his own and is likely to be the signing of the season. Mark Bridge has shown a glimpse of what we know he is really capable of, and the work ethic of the team is exceptional.

    So it is with their connection to the fans. After every game, win or lose, the bond is clear to see and the players love the red-and-black band of supporters who wear their hearts on their sleeve. That rapport is crucial to building the club culture and the coach is the leader of this process, especially at a new club.

    There are plenty of games to go and many dramas yet to unfold, but we can be delighted that the new club is excelling in terms of passion and coaching excellence. Now get to Parramatta Stadium and see for yourself.



    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/sport/a-league/take-a-bow-wanderers-you-are-the-pride-of-the-league-20121222-2bsif.html#ixzz2FovIHoeL

    moxey25

    Posted

    Channel 9 showed extended highlights of the A-League yesterday.  :angel:

    Liv7

    Posted

    Definitely great to wake up this morning and read Craig Fosters article in the Sun Herald. Good read and more positive media about the club and supporters

    Neverbloom

    Posted

    Channel 9 showed extended highlights of the A-League yesterday.  :angel:

    i saw that it was really nice to see

    RBBKopite

    Posted

    <blockquote class='ipsBlockquote'data-author="moxey25" data-cid="71387" data-time="1356213923"><p>

    Channel 9 showed extended highlights of the A-League yesterday. :angel:</p></blockquote>

    Anyone who, after the derby, watched that abomination of a channel, must immediately go outside and smack themselves around the head.....repeatedly!!!

    Lmc

    Posted

    After the Adelaide game, while walking back to the station I heard a lady talking to who I assume was her husband, saying 'how ridiculous it was that the media was describing the crowd as violent and as criminal'.

     

    Put a grin on my face to see the rest of the wanderers fans supporting the RBB.

    dochers

    Posted

    Yeah great work Mack, it's easy to feel outraged by reporting that is, frankly, bizarre but you've cut it up and laid its falseness & hypocrisy open for all to see.

    And I was so pleased to see Foz' Sun-Herald article this morning, particularly reference to the culture we've built up in less than 12 weeks!

    Seeya in the terraces & the Woolpack...

    WestieBorn

    Posted

    Channel 9 only reported it that way because they don't have the rights to any football stuff in this country. If they ever won the rights to football, you wouldn't be hearing anything. It's a dirty way to do business but that's how the TV channels (Ch 9 in particular) operate.

    Jowel

    Posted

    Is the video on YouTube still?

    OnoOnoOno

    Posted

    Is the video on YouTube still?

     

    They've made it private, which means no one in the public can see it.. same with Channel 9, they've removed the report from their Ninemsn website.

     

    We shall still continue to trash their 9 News Facebook page though, make it an unofficial A-league discussion page.

    CMontgomeryBurns

    Posted

     

     

    Is the video on YouTube still?

    We shall still continue to trash their 9 News Facebook page though, make it an unofficial A-league discussion page.

    haha awesome idea
    Zurg

    Posted

    Look at the kid in this video :')

     

    ManfredSchaefer

    Posted (edited)

    <blockquote class='ipsBlockquote'data-author="moxey25" data-cid="71387" data-time="1356213923"><p>

    Channel 9 showed extended highlights of the A-League yesterday. :angel:</p></blockquote>

    Anyone who, after the derby, watched that abomination of a channel, must immediately go outside and smack themselves around the head.....repeatedly!!!

     

    Looking for anything meaningful in terms of sports coverage from Channel 9 deserves giving yourself an uppercut full fking stop. Don't forget this is the network that allowed their league commentators to make statements against the restrictions proposed by the government on gambling in the clubs, with those comments in effect being paid for by the pro-pokies club types. They have had a f'ck-knuckle AFL twat in the shape of Eddie 'The Idiot' McGuire integral to their network for years, and you can;t tell me he doesn't where his and 9's bread is buttered when it comes to dissing our game in favour of aerial ping pong. Nine has had a use and abuse attitude to cricket (remember the times they've cut transmission due to the news when things have were happening, or even not showing Ashes tests from the UK), and as for the Olympics...****, they were simply embarrassing (thank f'ck for Foxtel).

     

    Way I see it they are pandering to the dyed in the wool Neville Nobodies who will always think lesser of our sport because they have been unable to think beyond what Eddie or Fatty Vautin or Tony bloody Greig tell them...Nine is a blight on the sport broadcasting landscape in this country and their news reportage is tied in with such mediocrity. They will NEVER get our game...NEVER!

    Edited by ManfredSchaefer
    matty

    Posted

    ^ yeah they're pretty old school and behind the times

    matty

    Posted

    Yeah saw that.

     

    At first i was glad they made a fuss about crickets bad behaviour too but then i realised its only in the paper cos they're afl players.




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