Dateline: a Saturday in June, 1997.
Venue: Rojenny Sports Centre, Oba, Anambra State, Nigeria.
Event: NFA Professional League Match between Udoji United (Onitsha) and Jasper United (Awka) --- on the menu; Wrestlemania contest between both sets of fans --- not on the menu. Both teams used that stadium as their home base Onitsha and Awka are both in Anambra, and within 'trekkable' distance from Oba. For this match though, Udoji was designated as the home team.
I had gone with a cousin to watch the football match, one of my first local league games in years. My mum didn't approve of my going to stadiums (she still doesn't approve, but this man has lots of stadium experience behind him now, and one with Uju

), hence I had to practically abandon going to Ogbe Stadium to watch my home town team Insurance play. However, since I happened to be out of her reach at that point (Onitsha is quite some distance from Benin), I went to watch. Sometime during the course of the game, a Jasper striker was brought down in the Udoji box, and the fans screamed for blood. The penalty wasn't given. The result? Pandemonium in the stands. Fortunately, both teams back then used to share that ground, so fan numbers were in equal strength, and it took just a 'while' for the pandemonium to die down. Unfortunately though, the referee felt the need to call off the game.
Dateline: another Saturday, this time in May 2001.
Venue: Rojenny Sports Centre, Oba, Anambra State, Nigeria, again.
Event: NFA Professional League Match between Jasper United (Awka) and Enyimba FC (Aba) --- on the menu; Wrestlemania contest between both sets of fans --- not on the menu. Jasper was the home team in this game, while Enyimba having come all the way from Aba was the away team. Some of their fans made the trip though.
This is one that sticks in my memory for so many reasons:
First, it was one of the first games that was being refereed by a woman in the Nigerian League. I have to admit that she gave a credible performance, though as a football purist, I still believe up until now that women have no place in the beautiful game.
Secondly, this game was played at a time when Enyimba was on the rise in the Nigerian (and African) football stratosphere. They were a good team, and played some wonderful football. I still remember the rings their players ran around the Jasper defence in that match. I was to see them live again later that year, this time in Benin, when they ran rings around the Insurance defence.
Thirdly, it was one of those few games back then that had cameras all over the place, so there was ostensibly no chance for any wuruwuru.
Fourthly, it was the first time I can remember seeing a bona fide away team scoring first against Jasper. Normally, the fans wouldn't permit it, and the male referees, being pragmatic and rightly fearing for their own safety would concur. This time, madam refused to concur. She awarded the goal.
Let me describe the incident as I remember it, because it happened a few feet away from where I was standing: Towards the end of the first half, Jasper were awarded a corner. It was saved by the then relatively unknown Vincent Enyeama, and Enyimba launched a counter. In the flowing counter attack from their own half, the Enyimba players cut out the Jasper defence, and one of their strikers scored! There was silence around the ground (except for the few travelling fans).
The referee awarded the goal, and I swear it was a great goal. However, maybe in an unthinking fit to protect his skin, the linesman on the near side from me raised his flag for offside, after the ball had gone into the net and the Enyimba players were already celebrating. That was the excuse that some Jasper supporters needed to claim that there was an offside. Madam ref stood her ground, and pandemonium ensued. One guy a few feet to my left, urinated in a bottle and stoned the linesman (as a punishment for not raising his flag early enough), while another set of fans who were baying for blood (the referee's blood) rushed onto the field to collect it. Before you could say Nzogbu, Nzogbu, some Enyimba players had received the odd slap (or two) for daring to score, while madam referee was being beaten. Thank God for the presence of the Mopol that day, who knows what would have happened? The Mopol officers had to use force to rescue Madam ref. I watched for a while, then took off. The game was called off. I was told that the violence continued for hours more. What I remember for certain is that after that, Rojenny was banned.
Why am I reminiscing on these games?
Yesterday there was an outbreak of fan violence in the Serie A match between Catania and Palermo. Unfortunately it lead to the death of a police man, and has led to the suspension of the entire Serie A and Serie B programme for this weekend, and maybe longer.
Having been at the venues of no less than three incidents of irate fan behavior (Nigeria-Congo, 2000 being another), I still find it tragic when fans go off the bend, although I must say that sometimes I understand. See, football is a game that brings up a lot of emotions (I almost ran mad when Eto'o scored that first goal against Nigeria in 2004), bragging rights and all that, which is why the tendency is for the more violent behaviours to occur during derbies.
In football, a derby is a match between two neighbouring teams, they could be neighbours within the same city (Al-Ahly versus Zamalek), or within the same region (Jasper versus Enyimba), or they could be the most successful clubs in the country (Enugu Rangers versus Shooting Stars). Derbies as a rule tend to be very hostile (in some cases fans from one team are outrightly banned from the stadium), and lead to a lot of irrational behaviour.
While I am not condoning bad fan behaviour, I think that the reaction of the FIGC (Italian federation) is just another knee jerk reaction. What happened last night was tragic, make no mistakes about it, but stopping football indefinitely doesn't even begin to solve the problem. Sadly, and as is usual, that poorly organised Federation (IMHO the Italian and Dutch federations are just as badly organised, if not worse than the NFA) are burying their heads in the sand. Just as they did during the calciopoli scandal. They are looking for the easiest way out. What a bunch of wankers!
I think they should come to England and take classes in fan control from the English FA. Safety of fans, the ability to go to games without any fear should be paramount. Females go to watch matches readily in England. Hell, even in the Nigerian scene, females can go to watch certain matches without fear. I have taken my girlfriend to a football match in Abuja before (Enyimba versus Esperance), without fear. If my girlfriend were around, I would gladly take her to watch a game here in England (Arsenal-Tottenham for example). But I would not, even if I was high on the cheapest form of crack take her to watch a game in Italy. As an almost lifelong fan of an Italian club, I have seen so many times what happens in the stands there. The behaviour of the ultras in Serie A and B games leaves more than a lot to be desired, and it has to stop at some point, it has to. The only time Italian fans behave themselves is 'when the eyes of the world are on them', Champions League for example, or else, they go off the bend.
A first step to curbing this behaviour would be to identify the ring leaders and hand them life time bans from stadia across the country. It is not impossible.
May the soul of Filippo Raciti rest in peace.