Football Hooliganism
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(GQ Magazine, 2015)
FIFA Culture
During the FIFA World Cup
is a month-long football festival where fans from different countries come
together and commit their time and money for their entertainment. So, it is
clear that the FIFA audience will behave in a manner to watch FIFA matches live
regardless of their commitments and engagements. The below image shows thousand
gathering at Seoul Plaza during the 2002 FIFA World Cup.
The FIFA Audience react to
sponsored advertising in FIFA events buy purchasing those brands for example,
many fans buy national team and club jerseys they like. The below photo shows a
Japanese fan wearing an Adidas product while being emotional after Japan lost
against Belgium by one goal in 2018 FIFA World Cup.
Interactive live audience
Sometimes
merely roaring for their respective team on is not enough for the diehard fans
of football. They really have to show the players that they are behind them.
Fans turn up the volume and sing songs to cheer up their players as well as
they create artistic displays in the stadium. There are some examples as
follows.
Tifo
Tifo
is the word used to describe those artistic displays which describe a colorful,
vibrant and usually choreographed visual display by football supporters. These visual displays are carefully planned
and often each individual in the audience forms part of a mosaic by wearing or
holding a particular color. Below image is a tifo raised by Portugal supporters
before the FIFA World Cup 2014 play-off football match between Portugal and
Sweden.
Mexican Wave
This stadium phenomenon is a metachronal
rhythm achieved in a crowded stadium when successive groups of spectators
briefly stand up, yell, and raise their arms. this behavior is often called
“the Mexican wave” because most of the world had their first exposure to this
wild display of team pride at the 1986 FIFA World Cup televised in Mexico. The
love for the wave has never died, and you can still be a part of it at the
Azteca Stadium in Mexico City, the eighth largest soccer stadium in the world
with seats for more than 87,000 spectators. While Mexico would love to claim
the creation of this impossible-to-resist crowd-pleaser, the debate over its
invention has revealed some evidence of earlier waves that have faded away.





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