Cameras and legal measures can help curb fan violence, British prof says
TORONTO — Banning or limiting alcohol sales isn’t likely to reduce rowdy fan behaviour at large sporting events, a British professor who has researched hooliganism said Friday in the wake of a beer can-tossing incident during a Toronto Blue Jays playoff game earlier this week.
“There’s no evidence it’s reduced drunkenness,” said Geoff Pearson, an expert in soccer crowd behaviour and policing who works at the University of Manchester. “And there is evidence it may actually increase drunkenness because people will drink more before they go in.”
Pearson said there are several other measures, many already in place in Canada, that are more effective at curbing bad behaviour. Violence among soccer fans has been a problem in Britain for decades, but significant steps aimed at reducing that violence were taken in the late 1990s, said Pearson.
“The first change was legal: certain activities were classified as being a criminal offence such as throwing an object at a (soccer) stadium,” Pearson said.


