Pitch invasion

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A pitch invasion occurs when a crowd of people who are watching a sports game run onto the field, to celebrate or protest about an incident, for example in games of football or cricket.

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[edit] Rugby union

Pitch invasions have occurred throughout the history of rugby union, with some particular moments being the most infamous. In the past, additional security support has been constructed at stadiums due to foreseen trouble. An early example of this was at the 1924 Summer Olympics, when a wire fence was constructed to protect United States players. During the 1971 Springbok tour, hundreds were arrested after they tried to distrupt test matches between the Springboks and Australia in response to South African apartheid policies. Some people even attempted to saw down goal posts at the Sydney Football Stadium to try and stop a test match going ahead, and in Queensland, a state of emergency was issued following fears prompted from the behaviour of people at the previous tests.

Perhaps the most infamous of pitch invasions at rugby matches occurred at the 1981 Springbok tour of New Zealand. At Rugby Park in Hamilton, 350 people pulled down a fence to invade the pitch. After arresting a number of people, police cancelled the match as they got word a protester was piloting a light plane to fly around the stadium. The last test at Eden Park was distrupted as a protester dropped flour bombs on the pitch to distrupt the game. Images like these gave the impression that New Zealand was on the brink of a civil war.

A referee was assaulted during a Tri-Nations match between the Springboks and the All Blacks in Durban. The man involved was fined and banned from attending rugby matches. Another incident, again involving the South African team took place at the 2003 Rugby World Cup in Australia when an intoxicated Samoan fan, with his face painted in the red and blue of the Samoan flag ran onto the pitch and attempted to tackle Springbok Louis Koen as he was kicking a goal in the late stages in a pool match against Samoa. Koen kicked the goal but also managed to inadvertently knock the fan unconscious, as the fan had tried to tackle Koen around the legs but had only been successful in being kicked in the head.

[edit] Australian rules football

Pitch invasions have long been a tradition of Australian rules football and, unlike association football or rugby union, these events are rarely hostile or violent (with the exception of an unexpected pitch invasion when the lights went out at Waverley Park in a night game between Essendon Football Club and St Kilda Football Club in 1996). At the end of an Australian rules match, it is traditional for supporters to run onto the field to celebrate the game and play games of kick-to-kick with their families. Supporters were once able to do this during the half-time break. In recent years, this has been more strictly controlled at the elite Australian Football League, with security guards on stand-by to ensure that players and officials can safely leave the ground (and only after the second siren). Sometimes a mid-game pitch invasion is expected for various landmark achievements, typically to celebrate a player kicking a landmark or record number of goals (such as Fraser Gehrig's 100th goal for the season in 2004 or Tony Lockett's 1300th career goal to set the all-time record in 1999 at the Sydney Cricket Ground) and players are duly protected by bodyguards while supporters flood onto the field. The now outlawed practice of "streaking" (running naked onto the ground) occurred in many big matches and Grand Finals during the 70s and 80s.

[edit] International rules football

International rules football, a hybrid of Aussie Rules and Gaelic football is not known for pitch invasions, however a famous pitch invasion occurred in the first test of the 2006 International Rules Series at Pearse Stadium, Galway after Ireland defeated Australia. During the game included several impersonators and streakers. At the end of the game, when Ireland had come from behind to win with goals in the dying seconds of the match, the crowd rushed the field, causing much controversy with the Australian players.

[edit] Cricket

It used to be a common occurrence at the end of cricket Test matches for the crowd to invade the pitch to watch the presentation from the pavilion balcony. In the UK this tradition ended in 2001 after a steward was injured in a pitch invasion at a one-day match between England and Pakistan [1]. Invading the pitch can now warrant a £1,000 fine, and post-match presentations are held on the field. The most common thing for invaders to do is to steal the stumps and run around with them whilst being chased by security.

[edit] Football

Pitch invasions are uncommon nowadays in top level football, but historically it was common for the supporters of the winning team in a major match, such as a Cup Final, to flood onto the pitch after the final whistle. For example, in the famous 'they think it's all over, it is now' television commentary at the end of the 1966 World Cup Final, 'they' were fans who had encroached onto the pitch before the end of extra time.

Pitch invasions are less common in the modern football era than in the 1970s and 1980s. Somewhat surprisingly, it was during that period that fans were barricaded in the stands by fences; after the Hillsborough disaster in 1989, this form of crowd control was abandoned, yet pitch invasions became rarer. However, they do still occur, especially in the lower divisions.

Famous pitch invasions include:

  • Celtic v Rangers (1909) Scottish Cup. At the end of the (drawn) replay the crowd invaded the pitch to protest at the lack of a result and at the prospect of having to pay to watch a third game. The SFA withheld the Cup.
  • Celtic v Internazionale (1967) European Cup. As the final whistle blew, fans of Celtic flooded the pitch in jubilation as Celtic became the first British team to lift the European Cup.
  • Hereford v Newcastle (1972) FA Cup. Non-league Hereford beat top-flight Newcastle 2-1 after extra time. There were pitch invasions after both Hereford goals and one at the end of the match.
  • England v Scotland (1977) Home International, Wembley. Scotland won 2-1. Scotland supporters invaded the pitch and destroyed one of the goals. The scenes were broadcast live on UK TV, and this is identified as one of the key moments when football hooliganism caught the interest of politicians.
  • Celtic v Rangers (10 May 1980) - Celtic beat Rangers 1-0 during extra time and rioting ensued on the pitch at full-time. Mounted police had to break up the battling fans. This led to the banning of alcohol from Scottish football grounds.
  • Derby v Fulham (1983) Football League - This match was controversially never concluded after Derby fans invaded the pitch. Fulham required a win to be promoted back into the top flight of English football but despite their protests the match was never replayed and the result, a 1-0 defeat, stood.
  • Everton v Wimbledon (7 May 1994) - In an attempt to secure 40 consecutive years of top-flight football, Everton, who had been at the foot of the table for much of a dreadful season, needed to beat the in-form Wimbledon, who had not lost for 10 games in a row. The club's chairman had offered a trip to Las Vegas if they should make it 11. Despite one stand being closed due to construction the atmosphere was known as one of the greatest ever within Goodison Park. Although they went 2-0 down in the first 20 minutes, Everton managed a remarkable comeback to win the game 3-2 and secure survival. A mass pitch invasion ensued and many images of the emotional day were screened on the BBC's Grandstand.
  • Brighton v York (27 April 1996) - Fifteen minutes into this match, a mass invasion of supporters of both teams protesting the Brighton board's decision to sell Albion's Goldstone Ground causes the match to be abandoned.
  • Reading F.C Vs Wigan Athletic 16 May 2001 Division 2 Playoff - Following a goaless first leg at the JJB Stadium, Wigan took the lead midway into the first half. It was the introduction of Nicky Forster that influenced Reading to score two goals in the last five minutes and seal their place at Cardiff.
  • Wigan v Reading (8 May 2005) Football League Championship - Wigan beat Reading 3-1 to gain promotion to the English Premiership for the first time in their history. Some unruly Wigan fans assaulted Reading players, although no arrests were made.
  • West Brom v Portsmouth (15 May 2005) FA Premier League - West Brom defeat Portsmouth 2-0; combined with other results, this completed one of the most amazing escapes from relegation in English football history. West Brom became the first team since the advent of the modern Premiership in 1992-93 to escape relegation after being bottom of the table at Christmas. Once all results came in and West Brom were secure, thousands of Baggies fans at The Hawthorns ecstatically ran onto the pitch. Many Portsmouth fans joined the celebrations, as one of the teams relegated at West Brom's expense were their arch-rivals Southampton.
  • Reading v Derby County (1 April 2006) Football League Championship - Reading beat Derby County 5-0 to claim the Championship title one week after gaining promotion to the English Premiership for the first time in their 135 year history. In all 15,000 fans ran on the pitch, although no arrests were made. [2]

It is also tradition at some clubs, for example Motherwell, for fans to invade the pitch in a good-natured manner at the end of the last home game of a league season.

[edit] American sports

Oregon State football fans prepare to rush the field in a historic upset of #3 USC in 2006
Oregon State football fans prepare to rush the field in a historic upset of #3 USC in 2006

In American sports, a pitch invasion is known as "rushing the field", and is a common, although increasingly rarer, occurrence after a team wins a championship, upsets a higher-ranked team, and/or a particularly dramatic outcome. The phenomenon is most common in college sports, especially American football. Traditionally, when fans rush the field at an American football game, the goalposts are torn down by the spectators, and the sod is torn up. The cost of repairs, the interference with the game (it is impossible, for example, to have a point after try in American football with the fans on the field), and the danger to players and fans has caused many teams to employ riot police to physically prevent fans from rushing the field, a controversy in and of itself. However, with the widespread advent of artificial turf such as FieldTurf some schools are becoming more lax about students invading the pitch. In baseball, a pitch invasion is typically undertaken by one or a small number of attention seeking fans or pranksters, rather than a large number of people. Almost universally, the perpetrator will be ejected from the ballpark.

College basketball has a similar phenomenon, known as "storming the court". This normally happens when a team pulls off a major upset or defeats a major rival, and is somewhat de rigeur on the lower levels of the sport (in some gyms, the only way to exit from the stands is to go on or near the court). However, more recently some conferences have begun cracking down on "excessive" court invasions: for example, when Tennessee fans stormed the court after a major victory over then-#2 ranked (and eventual national champion) Florida at Thompson-Boling Arena in 2006, the Southeastern Conference fined the Vols athletic department $25,000 for "failure to control its fans".

[edit] Famous pitch invasions

  • Kansas City Royals vs. New York Yankees (October 14, 1976; American League Championship Series): Chris Chambliss hit a walk-off home run in game five of the series to send the Yankees to their first World Series in twelve seasons. Fans rushed onto the field while Chambliss circled the bases. The scene was so frenetic that Chambliss himself wasn't even sure he touched home plate in the chaos, and had to be escorted back onto the field after fans had left to step on home plate in view of the home plate umpire.
  • Detroit Tigers vs. Chicago White Sox (July 12, 1979; American League): In a promotion famously known as Disco Demolition Night fans were invited to bring disco records with them to Comiskey Park. The records would then be destroyed in between games of a doubleheader. Fans were so caught up in the anti-disco mania that a near-riot broke out and the second game had to be cancelled. The game was eventually forfeitted by the White Sox.
  • LSU vs. Kentucky (November 9, 2002; SEC football): Kentucky looked as if they would pull off a home upset of the Tigers when they held a 30-27 lead with two seconds left and LSU with the ball at their own 26-yard line. As Quarterback Marcus Randall heaved a Hail Mary pass downfield, fans rushed onto the edges of the field ready to celebrate Kentucky's victory. However, the pass was deflected off two Wildcat defenders and into the hands of LSU wide receiver Devery Henderson, who was able to run into the end zone to cap a 33-30 win for LSU and leaving the fans on the field stunned at the turn of events. The play would come to be known as the Bluegrass Miracle.
  • University of California, vs. Stanford University (November 20, 1982; Pacific Ten football): In the final seconds of the 1982 Big Game against the University of California, Berkeley (Cal), band members (as well as players from both teams) ran out onto the field, thinking the game was over. Cal players lateralled the kickoff back and forth, with Cal's Kevin Moen dodging through the band for a winning touchdown, which he ended by running over trombone player Gary Tyrrell in the end zone. "The Play" is celebrated by Cal fans and inspires the ire of many Stanford fans. To this day, it remains one of the most famous plays in American football history. (The game does not end until the last play ends, even if the game clock runs out of time while the last play is still in progress. A penalty was called as a result of "The Play", but it was only because the spectators and band members had crowded onto the field while the game was in progress.)

[edit] References

'Steward hurt in cricket chaos' - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1393761.stm

[edit] External links