To say football is a passionate game would be as obvious as saying base jumping,high altitude climbing and motor cycle racing are some of the most dangerous sports. Generally spectator sports usually elicit lots of passion but nothing beats the passion in football. What makes people who rarely say a word to you on the street shout their lungs out and celebrate as if they have just become first time parents when their team scores a vital goal? What makes grown men curse and hurl all manner of unprintable words to match officials whenever decisions do not go their way? Well the answer to these and many other related case in points is simply, passion! Passion is the only thing that could explain why logic is thrown-out-the-window when football is involved.
Over the years, football hooliganism has been witnessed across the world from ‘football-mad nations’ such as; Brazil and Argentina, to England, Italy, Egypt and other sub-Saharan African countries. The ugly face of the beautiful game of football, is indiscriminate. Today, Kenya got a share of what football hooliganism is, during a high octane fixture pitying perennial rivals Gor Mahia and AFC Leopards. The stadium was filled almost to capacity with both sets of fans, clad in their team colors cheering their teams the best way they know how. Some fans started streaming into the stadium from as early as 9.am, never mind, the match was set to kick off at 3 O’clock in the afternoon.
As expected, the match started on a high note and fans were treated to end-to-end action, as both teams tried to break the deadlock. At half-time, none of the teams was yet able, to see the back of the net of the other. The action was similar in the second-half, with AFC leopards seeing most of the ball. Come the 66th minute, Gor Mahia’s Victor Ali, was red carded for a high boot challenge on Leopard’s Amon Muchiri and what followed were 25 embarrassing and uneasy minutes for Gor. Gor Mahia’s fans, incensed by the decision to have Ali sent off, walked off the stadium, while others hurled all manner of objects into the field of play. The referee had to stop the match for 25 minutes as he consulted with the other match officials. Eventually the game went on and ended in a barren draw. However, the rivalry fans of either team took the battle for supremacy, to the streets of Nairobi, where one fan, believed to be a Leopards supporter, was killed and scores others injured.
This is not the first time that both Gor Mahia and AFC leopards fans, have clashed. The stakes involved in this highly publicized derby, maybe to blame more so, even alcohol and rogue fans. Whatever the reason for crowd trouble in the Kenya premier league, needs to be addressed and fast. We do not need to witness scenes such as those in Egypt in back February where, close to one hundred people were killed, and thousands more injured, following acts of hooliganism in a league match. Its interesting to hear that FKF proposes having foreign referees officiate matches pitying Gor Mahia and AFC Leopards. Is this really the solution? Will this stop thugs posing as fans from carrying rocks into stadia, and causing havoc? Those in charge of football in the country need to act quick and cautiously, to avert a looming disaster. England had some of the worst hooligan incidences in the 70’s and 80’s, resulting in a resolution to reduce the number of fans in stadiums. A similar resolution seems inevitable in the Kenyan football fraternity following today’s events ..It’s time to save Kenyan football, what happened before in England, is a good reference point.