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Hub AI
Football specials AI simulator
(@Football specials_simulator)
Hub AI
Football specials AI simulator
(@Football specials_simulator)
Football specials
Football specials are chartered or specially scheduled trains arranged to transport football supporters, typically to away fixtures or major finals. The term is most commonly used in the United Kingdom, but special services for match-going crowds have historically been operated elsewhere.
Special trains for football crowds were used in Britain from at least the late 19th century, as railways enabled large numbers of supporters to travel to major cup ties. By the 1970s, violence and vandalism associated with matchday travel contributed to a decline in the operation of football specials on the British network.
Football specials had run as early as 1927, when the Great Western Railway ran 50 services from Wales to London for the 1927 FA Cup Final at Wembley Stadium.
During the peak of football hooliganism in the 1970s and 1980s, football specials were chartered to ferry fans to away games. However these were only popular during weekends. Many mid-week trains would have been cancelled. One famous example of this was in 1975 when Liverpool arranged for five 'specials' to be put on by railway services for a game against West Ham United; however only one left the station.
The Inter City Firm that follows West Ham United, was named after the InterCity trains they travelled on. The firm following Leeds United, the Leeds Service Crew, named themselves after the regular services they travelled on due to them being less heavily policed than football specials.
When Wembley Stadium was closed for rebuilding from 2001 until 2006, and the FA Cup held at the Millennium Stadium, football specials ran.
At a transport security conference in London on 14 February 2007, the deputy head of British Transport Police, Deputy Chief Constable, Andy Trotter, warned that fans were disrupting trains. Trotter said his resources were "being stretched by the pressure of herding growing numbers of fans around the country on match days. Even when services to match day hotspots such as London, Manchester and Liverpool pass off without arrests, non-football going passengers can be frightened or irritated by fans' behaviour". Adding that, "There is an argument for the football specials, the trains that take fans backwards and forwards, but that's a matter for the train operators." He said he would like to see fans taken off trains, "I would much prefer if there is something done not to have them coming on the system at all."
British Transport Police welcome their return, a spokesperson saying "it gives us the chance to isolate the fans from other passengers".
Football specials
Football specials are chartered or specially scheduled trains arranged to transport football supporters, typically to away fixtures or major finals. The term is most commonly used in the United Kingdom, but special services for match-going crowds have historically been operated elsewhere.
Special trains for football crowds were used in Britain from at least the late 19th century, as railways enabled large numbers of supporters to travel to major cup ties. By the 1970s, violence and vandalism associated with matchday travel contributed to a decline in the operation of football specials on the British network.
Football specials had run as early as 1927, when the Great Western Railway ran 50 services from Wales to London for the 1927 FA Cup Final at Wembley Stadium.
During the peak of football hooliganism in the 1970s and 1980s, football specials were chartered to ferry fans to away games. However these were only popular during weekends. Many mid-week trains would have been cancelled. One famous example of this was in 1975 when Liverpool arranged for five 'specials' to be put on by railway services for a game against West Ham United; however only one left the station.
The Inter City Firm that follows West Ham United, was named after the InterCity trains they travelled on. The firm following Leeds United, the Leeds Service Crew, named themselves after the regular services they travelled on due to them being less heavily policed than football specials.
When Wembley Stadium was closed for rebuilding from 2001 until 2006, and the FA Cup held at the Millennium Stadium, football specials ran.
At a transport security conference in London on 14 February 2007, the deputy head of British Transport Police, Deputy Chief Constable, Andy Trotter, warned that fans were disrupting trains. Trotter said his resources were "being stretched by the pressure of herding growing numbers of fans around the country on match days. Even when services to match day hotspots such as London, Manchester and Liverpool pass off without arrests, non-football going passengers can be frightened or irritated by fans' behaviour". Adding that, "There is an argument for the football specials, the trains that take fans backwards and forwards, but that's a matter for the train operators." He said he would like to see fans taken off trains, "I would much prefer if there is something done not to have them coming on the system at all."
British Transport Police welcome their return, a spokesperson saying "it gives us the chance to isolate the fans from other passengers".
