but the driver behind it was the late and unfortunate MP David Evans, a former chairman of Luton Town. Evans, a member of the Conservative Party’s so-called ‘The Broadmoor Wing’, made the unusual decision in 1985 to ban all fans of Luton’s Kenilworth Road after the infamous Millwall supporters. On the other hand, Luton’s own supporters will have to register and obtain an identity card at the turnstile.
Moynihan, seriously, wore the band Charlton Athletic to his television shows – he was a deputy for Lewisham East nearby at the time, but he carried Delhi Bazaar Satta King his football knowledge lightly, as he kept telling us. that the only way to stop hooliganism is to bring in all the fans. cards. The government was rather hostile to football, except for the support of Ken Clarke of Nottingham Forest, and made no effort to gain the game’s popularity like any other government.
Education and training in the market town of Oxford of Thatcher kept her away from the professional football and industrial regions from which she arose. His government coincided with the darkest years of English hooliganism, but he firmly refused to admit that it was the social rather than the football problems he was facing.