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In the end, I regard myself as one of the lucky ones I got into the stadium pretty much when the match kicked off and so only missed a minute or two of the game itself, although the situation beforehand had robbed Liverpool fans of the build-up inside the stadium, the chance to belt out 'You'll Never Walk Alone' and to cheer their team onto the pitch for the biggest game of their season. When I finally got to the front of the queue, another gang of around 10 locals tried to force their way in from the side, although fortunately they were repelled by the stewards. I had to rely on news from friends and family as to what was happening with regards to the match, but the queue did finally start moving after more than an hour of not progressing an inch. There were children and OAPs in our queue, all of whom suffered the effects of this tear gas. Our reward was to be tear-gassed by the riot police, even though at that stage anyone who had tried to scale the fence had already got over it. The Liverpool fans in the queue unanimously and vociferously made our displeasure at these actions known as it was obvious those idiots who broke in would only make things worse for the rest of us. I cannot say for certain that these were not Liverpool fans, but they were not wearing Liverpool shirts and appeared to be local youngsters they certainly scaled the 15-foot high fences with an ease that suggested it was not the first time they had done so. It was in this queue that I witnessed a small group of five of six people climbing over the fences at the Stade de France and sprinting up the stairs into the stadium without going through the turnstiles. Once again, the decision to delay the kickoff was not announced outside the stadium at any point, with fans instead relying on word of mouth and news from phones. This was the case for over an hour - we arrived well before the teams were announced - and as kickoff approached, I was adamant that they had to delay the game due to how many Liverpool fans were yet to be allowed entry. Once we finally got to Gate A, I also found myself in queue which was not moving, in front of a gate which was closed, and without any information as to what was going on. I remember thinking that if things did not change, something really bad could happen at Gate Z.
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This was, thankfully, before the main trouble began, but even when battling my way through the very back of the unmanned queue, as a Liverpool fan it was impossible not to think of Hillsborough and fear the worst.
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You had to use your arms to create space to move - and sometimes even to breathe - yet you were reluctant to take your hands out of your pockets having been repeatedly warned that pickpockets were patrolling the area and mixing in with the crowds. Still with well over an hour before kickoff, we had to squeeze our way through an ever-increasingly busy crowd stuck at those two gates, with no movement as the police and stewards refused to let anyone through. I was given Gate A to enter the stadium, and to get there we had to go past gates Y and Z, where the worst of the trouble happened. Once we finally got through that stage we had hoped that the queuing was over, but the ordeal had only just begun. Riot police vans blocked much of the road, funneling all of those fans through a tight space long before we even got to the checkpoints at this bewildering bottleneck. The suggestion that kickoff was initially delayed due to the late arrival of fans was simply an outright lie there is no way they could have believed that, when I was one of thousands who arrived three hours before kickoff and was trapped in an unmoving queue under an underpass for more than two of those hours, with absolutely no information as to what was going on. The changing story from the French authorities further undermines an argument which anyone in attendance already knows to be false. I remember asking those around me over and over again: 'How could they get this so wrong?' I was also at the Euro 2020 final, and the Stade de France experience was a lot, lot worse - the result of the worst organisation I have ever seen at any event and baffling levels of incompetence at a stadium which is used to holding major events. Even accounting for that very flimsy reasoning to any possible prejudice against the arriving fans, there is simply no excuse for how thousands of well-behaved Liverpool supporters were treated at the Stade de France.