Articles

Gor Mahia has taken a long path back to the top

 





During the dark ages, even the Mashemeji derby could not draw crowds

“Blackberry” joined veterans like Zablon Otieno “Pro” to start the resurgence of the club




11 thoughts on “Gor Mahia has taken a long path back to the top

  • jakoyo

    Omera this time we are on top to stay……gini wabikano

    Reply
  • @#1 Jakoyo. The pattern for Gor winning the title has been established i.e., every 18 years. The next time they will win it again will be in the year 2031…jini wabikano

    Reply
  • Alego tat yien

    Not clear.
    I think Mwakio deserves a position in the new office.
    Oduor12 why can’t we convince mr. Mwakio to vie for the position of secretary general instead of campaigning for people who have not shown interest.
    I propose mr. Mwakio for the seat of secretary general, what is your take blogers. Rachier should remain as the chair.
    From his postings you can see that Mwakio knows what is ailing our football. Please Mwakio i urge you to give this idea a positive consideration, i know you as a very passionate member of this club.

    Reply
  • ODUOR12

    Our immediate priorities (according 2 me) should be
    1. To lift the GORTV Shield on 16/11/13 & being 3 times in a row we retain the shield 4 keeps. Mapunda kazi kwako. I STILL ASK WHERE R THE PREVIOUS TITLES WON.
    2. Support Dan’Flava’ 2 aim 4 the golden boot.I wish him a hat trick kesho.
    I advise EC 2 avoid the ‘high’flat rate gate fees & switch 2 Nyayo stadium 4 the 2 remaining home games. In order encourage high attendance terraces shld b reduce to 150bob(even 100) & VIP 450bob. ……

    Reply
  • Even if you vote the jobless Raila to office, bado ni 18 years until you win again. The best you can do now is to make sure your children are brought up in a desciplined way so that there wont be Hooliganism the next time they win again (which is in 18 years time)

    Reply
  • ODUOR12

    contd..
    With “GOALS, ENTERTAINING SOCCER & GUARANTEED SECURITY” MIN. ATTENDANCE 4 A GM HOME GAME SHLD B 15K FANS which Tokowanda can’t hold.
    Assume 14k terrace fans @100 = ksh.1.4M plus 1K VIP fans @450 = ksh.450K to give a total of ksh.1.85M instead of the Ksh. 1M from 3K fans paying ksh.300.
    Imagine the effect on the players of 15K plus fans edging them on.
    Affordable entry fee will reduce the incidences of corruption @ the gates.
    I urge members(not EC) 2 fix the gate fees during the nxt AGM

    Reply
  • Alego tat yien

    I don’t expect anybody to give Ingo a response. Just ignore him

    Reply
  • ODUOR12

    @ Alego.T.Y a few ways Mwakio cld stand a chance;
    1. Campaign on a platform of affordable tickets 4 TPL 2 b 150 4 terraces & 450bob VIP.
    2. Undertake 2 gaurantee security @ all home games. Not hard outsource this & have police arrest & prosecute hooligans
    3.Align himself 2 AR & a qualified legend. Btw if a candidate 4 GM chair comes up with a beta sponsorhip than Tuzo then I don’t see the nid 4 AR, he’s apparent lack of transparency is a big concern.
    Kidero please mek Tokowanda a 20k seater venue.

    Reply
  • Mwakio P

    Fellow bloggers, please read through this article on measures that need to be taken to stop or reduce hooliganisms in all our matches. I appeal to Admin of Gor Mahia and AFC as well as FKL, KPL, Police and government to apply some of the proposals for good of the game in future.

    We must make a resolution to eradicate hooliganism in all our stadiums.

    Summary of measures taken to prevent football violence

    Introduction
    In the years following the Second World War, the total spectator attendances each season in the top four divisions in England were around the 40 million mark. In Season 1985/86, following years of problems with hooliganism and immediately after the Bradford City Fire and the Heysel Stadium Disaster, attendances fell to an all-time low of just 16 million spectators in a season. Football stadia were regarded by the public as not very safe places to visit.

    After Heysel, English clubs were excluded from European competition for a period of five years. The Government and Football had to act. The football authorities introduced membership-only areas in grounds and the football in the community scheme was started to build bridges between the clubs and their local communities and to promote better behaviour by spectators. However, the Government’s plan was to introduce a 100% identity card system for all football fans wanting to attend matches. This was in the process of being developed when the Hillsborough Stadium Disaster occurred in April 1989; the ensuing Taylor Report persuaded the Government to shelve its plans for an ID card scheme due to concerns raised in the report about possible safety issues arising at the stadium turnstiles. Coming so soon after the Bradford Fire and the Heysel Disaster, the Hillsborough Disaster and the recommendations made in the Taylor Report changed the face of football grounds in this country.

    Football stadia today are safe and welcoming places, offering good quality facilities to supporters. There are no pitch perimeter fences. All stadia in the top two divisions, and many in the lower divisions, are all-seated. Supporter violence inside stadia is very rare. Some confrontations between supporters do occasionally take place, but on a very limited scale and usually some way away from the stadium environment. Attendances are now back up to around 30 million per season.

    There follows a summary of the main measures introduced to prevent violence and to improve the match day experience for football supporters. These measures have been developed over a period of time, as part of an ongoing collaboration between Football, Government and the Police.

    National Legislation
    The Government has introduced a series of legislative measures to combat hooliganism. The following types of behaviour have been made a criminal offence:
    ? Entering a stadium when drunk or in possession of alcohol
    ? Possession of alcohol on trains and/or coaches when travelling to a football match
    ? Throwing any object at or towards the pitch or spectator areas
    ? Entering the pitch without lawful excuse
    ? Indecent or racist chanting or tribalism chanting
    ? Ticket touting

    Under the legislation, any person convicted of a football related offence must receive from the Courts a football banning order. This order prevents the offender from attending any football match at home or abroad for a minimum period of three years. Failure to observe this ban is itself a criminal offence.

    The Government has established the Football Banning Orders Authority to maintain a register of all banned persons (at 30th January 2012 there were 3,058 persons in UK on the register) and to liaise with police forces to ensure that banned persons are required to report to a police station whenever the England team plays matches abroad. This is very powerful legislation and has proved to be the main cornerstone in the drive to reduce the risk of violence occurring in football.

    Police
    The Government has established a UK Football Policing Unit which is jointly overseen by the Home Office and the Association of Chief Police Officers. It brings together various strands of the football policing infrastructure, including the Football Banning Orders Authority, the former NCIS football intelligence section, UK National Football Information Point and the ACPO football policing support team. The UK Football Policing Unit specialises in the monitoring of football related disorder and the collation of intelligence to help prevent it.

    Police forces across the country have developed a great deal of expertise in dealing with football- related disorder. The Association of Chief Police Officers has produced a best practice document with guidance on the policing of football matches. There are training courses for police match commanders and for football intelligence officers and there is an annual conference of match commanders which helps further to share best practice. Representatives of the football authorities meet regularly with ACPO and attend the annual conference.

    Football intelligence officers are assigned to follow each football team at home and away matches, to gather intelligence and to “spot” any potential trouble-makers or ringleaders or banned offenders who may turn up at matches. Football intelligence officers produce a report on each fixture which is logged by the intelligence section of the UK Football Policing Unit and which is available to view by other football intelligence officers. In this way, an intelligence officer representing any football club is able to find out up to date information on the behavioural trends of the supporters of any team in the country. This information will be used as a basis for the risk assessment made ahead of each match.

    The main focus of the policing operation at a football match is on keeping rival groups of fans apart. Where possible, the travel arrangements of the visiting team’s supporters are monitored. Supporters’ club coaches may be met by the police at a rendezvous point on the edge of the city and escorted to the stadium. The car and coach parking areas for the visiting fans will ideally be close to the stadium entrances for the visitors and police may supervise those areas before and after the match. Pedestrian routes from the train station to the stadium may also be monitored by police and, if necessary, groups of away fans may be escorted to the stadium by police.

    Measures introduced by Football
    The use of segregated areas, keeping the rival fan groups apart, has significantly reduced problems of spectator misbehaviour inside stadia. The introduction of CCTV cameras in all grounds has also been a major help in preventing violence, as film footage of offenders can be used as evidence in a court of law and can therefore lead to conviction and a football banning order. Any problems that do occur mainly happen outside or away from the football stadium.

    Since the 1989 Hillsborough Stadium Disaster and the 1990 Taylor Report on football stadium safety, there has been a massive building and stadium improvement programme undertaken in this country. More than 30 new stadia and over 200 new stands have been constructed.

    Since 1994 each club in the top two divisions in England has been required, by national legislation, to restrict the admission of spectators to seated accommodation only. This has helped to improve spectator behaviour and having an identified seat for each spectator also makes it easier to control, identify and monitor spectators.

    Under new safety legislation, each football club has a stadium safety certificate, issued by the local authority. As part of the safety certificate, each club is required to have:
    ? A designated Safety Officer, responsible for the safety management operation at the stadium on match days;
    ? Stewards trained to a nationally-recognised standard;
    ? A computerised turnstile counting system, recording each spectator admission through every turnstile and immediately registering same on a display monitor in the stadium control room. Through this method, the Safety Officer can see at any moment the exact number of spectators in each area of the ground. An alarm may sound on the monitor when an area reaches a specified percentage of its allowed capacity.
    ? Closed circuit television (CCTV) cameras covering key areas of the ground;
    ? A stadium control room with radio communications links to steward supervisors and police, CCTV display monitors, access to the public address system and a display monitor linked to thecomputerised turnstile counting system.

    If the local authority is not entirely satisfied with the efficiency of any of the above items, it may reduce the capacity of the whole stadium or specific areas of the stadium accordingly.
    Many Safety Officers have a police or fire service background. They are responsible for the recruitment and training of stewards (unless the stewards are supplied under contract by a steward agency). A national Football Safety Officers’ Association has been formed.
    The football authorities have produced a stewards training programme, used by all clubs in the top four divisions.

    All clubs are issued with a standard set of Ground Regulations. These posters are displayed at the entrances to and inside the stadium. The Ground Regulations make it clear that entrance to the stadium is subject to acceptance by the visitor of these Ground Regulations. The Regulations specify the list of articles that cannot be brought into the stadium and they give the stewards the right to search any or all spectators and to remove offenders from the stadium.

    The following behaviours are expressly forbidden:
    – the throwing of any object;
    – unauthorised entry onto the playing area;
    – the use of threatening behaviour or racist, homophobic or foul and abusive language; persistent standing in a seated area;
    – smoking in any area inside the stadium;
    – attempting to enter the ground whilst drunk;
    – possessing alcohol when entering the ground or in a part of the ground from which the event can be directly viewed;
    – entering a part of the ground reserved for supporters of the opposing team.

    Segregated areas of the stadium for home and away supporters have become a feature at all football grounds since the 1970’s. These features have been designed into the new stadia and stands that have been built.

    In most cases, the rival fan groups are separated not by steel fences, but by sterile areas created by fabric netting placed over rows of seats. If necessary, one of both sides of the netting could be reinforced by a line of stewards.

    Most clubs in the Premier League play to full houses and most of their supporters are season-ticket holders. Clubs will ban any person who is arrested or ejected from a stadium and supporters are aware that they would risk losing their season ticket if they were to misbehave.

    A number of football clubs have also introduced travel clubs for their away matches – clubs only issue tickets for an away match to supporters who are members of the travel club. Anyone who misbehaves risks losing their travel club membership and therefore the right to a ticket for an away match. Clearly, it is possible that any person who is not a member of the scheme could easily obtain and use a ticket bought by a friend who is a member unless the host club makes identity checks at the stadium entrances and unless the visiting club does the same at the visitors’ entrances. In this case the visiting club would have to provide a team of stewards to travel to the away match and check the identity of the fans entering the visiting sector.

    Finally, The Football Association has the power under its disciplinary rules to impose sanctions on a football club following misconduct by that club’s supporters.

    Liaison between Football and the local police
    Before the start of each season, football liaises with the police, both at club and national level, to plan and review the fixture calendar. In collaboration with the police the national fixture programme for each day of the football season is prepared in such a way so as to ensure that the paths of fans of various rival teams do not cross when they are travelling around the country to away matches by road or railway.

    Safety in the stadium is the responsibility of the club management. The role of the Police is to prevent crime and to maintain public order. However, to achieve a smooth operation requires both parties to work closely in partnership. A Statement of Intent signed by both parties sets out a joint understanding of the different roles of the club safety management team and stewards on the one hand and the police on the other.

    Police will attend games at the invitation of the host club. Under the UK law football clubs have to pay for the costs of police officers deployed inside the stadium or on club property under a special services agreement.

    As soon as the fixture list for each season has been published, the club and local police will meet to discuss the categorisation of each home match – each home match will be risk assessed and categorised according to that risk. Category CS (Club Security) means that the match will take place with the football club and its stewards providing the only security presence, with no police officers in attendance. Category A is a low risk game, B is medium risk, C is high risk and Category C IR (increased risk) means a very high risk game. A formula is agreed between the football club and the police before the start of each season setting out the numbers of police officers that will be deployed to the different categories of matches.

    The match categories agreed at the start of the season can be reviewed as the season progresses. Further meetings between the club and the police are usually held two weeks and also 24/48 hours before each match and the latest intelligence from both police and the club safety officer will be discussed at those meetings, possibly leading to a revision of the match categorisation and an increase or decrease in the number of police officers to be deployed at the match.

    Special measures for high-risk games
    For high-risk games, the home club and its local police might consider an earlier kick-off to reduce the potential for alcohol consumption by spectators and to lessen the risk of violence. In England, football matches are traditionally played on a Saturday at 3 pm, but high-risk games can be brought forward to a 12 noon or 1 pm kick-off on the Saturday, or moved to the Sunday when the roads and the city centre are usually quieter.

    For exceptionally high-risk games, the two clubs, in collaboration with the host club’s police force can consider requiring the away fans to travel in an organised coach convoy to the match. In such cases the away supporters have to buy a voucher in advance of the game, which they can exchange for a match ticket on the coach. They will meet at their club’s stadium and travel in a convoy of coaches, under police escort, to the other club’s stadium and the tickets are only handed over in the coaches. Some clubs with fans who might live a long way away from their stadium have arranged a rendezvous point for supporters nearer to the home club’s stadium, for example at a motorway service station.

    The Football Association

    Ways of stopping hooliganism

    Anti-Hooligan Measures
    Police and civil authorities in various countries with hooligan problems have taken a number of measures, including:
    a) banning items that could be used as weapons or missiles in stadia, and searching suspected hooligans
    b) banning identified hooligans from stadia, either formally via judicial orders, or informally by denying them admittance on the day
    C) moving to all-seated stadia, which reduces the risk of disorderly crowd movement
    segregating opposing fans, and fencing enclosures to keep fans away from each other and off the pitch
    D) banning opposing fans from matches and/or ordering specific matches to be played behind closed doors
    e) compiling registers of known hooligans
    f) restricting the ability of known hooligans to travel overseas.

    Reply
  • CONGRATULATIONS BOYS!

    congratulations are in order to the K’ogalo class of 2013 for lifting this years Tusker Premier League trophy.

    Eighteen solid years is a long wait but with hard work and perseverance our golden boys have done us proud again. We can afford to uncork the champagne and celebrate a job well done.

    Let me also congratulate our coach Bobby Williamson and indeed the technical bench for the wonderful work they did to ensure not only did we stay at the top but also lift the prestigious trophy for the thirteenth time equaling the record held by our decades long rivals, AFC Leopards.

    The green army,which i proudly belong, i salute you. You have remained loyal and faithful from the first whistle to this far. The green and white jersey is now a phenomenon, no wonder the term ‘GINI WASEKAO’ has gone not just viral but also found a permanent place at Wikipedia.

    The league is not yet over and as i type, only two ours remain for another mouth watering encounter between kogalo and Kakamega Homeboyz at Kasarani this afternoon. I urge the boys to keep the momentum till the last whistle of the season is blown. We want to set unassailable records in terms of points.

    I must also say that the Annual General Meeting is around the corner and various names of candidates have been floated on this blog. Let me reserve my comment for now for we still have time to interrogate our prospective candidates. As a professional club with a big following, there is need for the candidates to present manifestos. This would give us an opportunity to gauge them against this blueprints.

    Reply
  • Alego tat yien

    @Pareyio, No need to reserve your commends. Let us all support Mwakio for the seat of S|G. From his postings on this site you will find the kind of blueprint that you have just mentioned. I feel convinced that this man can perfom and transform our beloved MAHIA if given a chance.
    We have just beaten homeboys 1-0. Congrats boys!

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *