BainesTerminal Boardom
The overwhelming majority of incidents involving death and injury in football stadia can be attributed to terracing and circulation areas associated with terracing. The one major exception was Valley Parade. Complacency is a very dangerous animal.
As I mentioned previously, Simon Inglis has done some cracking work on football stadia. For example:
"At Anfield before 1994, typically there would be 10-25 injuries per game on the Kop ranging from bruised heads to broken limbs. Since conversion to seats, the numbers have fallen to 2-3 for the entire ground."
Is terracing really worth the risk?
Comparable stats for the safe standing areas in the Bundesliga would be of interest. Comparisons to old style terracing, which will never be re-introduced, are not really relevant.
But who pays for the conversion? Those clubs that bolted seats straight onto terracing as at Southend would be ok. But what about the Mad Stad? Whole swathes of the stadium would have to be completely replaced as the seating angle is way too steep for terracing.
The irony is that had the clubs and football authorities taken their responsibilities more seriously, there is every likelihood that there would still be terracing.
Legislation to consider:
Since 1992, FIFA have decreed that no standing would be permitted at World Cup qualifiers
Italian government decreed no standing for all stadia with a capacity greater than 10,000
Since 1998, no standing in UEFA sanctioned club fixtures (UEFA Cup, Champions League, Inter-Toto)