Sunday, April 3, 2011

Match abandoned: FC St. Pauli is now the shame of the neighborhood

Besides his job as a detective chief inspector's Fabian Boll 20 hours after a week. At the station 17 in Hamburg, he is responsible for the big boys: fraud, assault, arson, theft are the tasks it faces. Boll would be in on Friday night was well suited to make the bad beer mug pitcher from St. Pauli, but with a ligament tear in the left ankle hobbled the 31-year-old taken right across the field.

In the 77th Minute he was replaced and then had to watch as not only the sporting debacle took its course, but the club lost by the fan attack on a linesman Thorsten Schiffner his aura as a sympathetic underdog of the league. "I was perplexed when the break came," Boll said after the meeting.

"This is something I have not experienced too, and I've been playing for a few years. This is not a credit to the club, but a slap in the face. We now have to live with the consequences. "Boll, on the football field for the dirty work in midfield in charge and in his job as a police officer certainly suffering tested had the dimension of the sport already painful match against Schalke, that when the score was 0-2 in the 88th Minutes by referee Aytekin Deniz had been broken off, one of the first recognized.

On Black Friday, the opening of the 28th Game day, had the FC St. Pauli not only three points on their way to hoped-league are allowed, but suffered a severe loss of image. Perhaps the beer mug throwing a still night, taken offender from the main stage the last approximation of a club that in the public image so far so different, so strange was coming, so colorful, and constituted an enrichment of the elite class, the rest of the league.

Since this weekend is St. Pauli by the attack of an individual well finally made equal with the other 17 national league. At St. Pauli is now just as gepöbelt in Dortmund and Cologne, there are already now Vip lounges and Ultra-groups in the stands, the image of the peaceful political backing from the trailer with a left neighborhood appears long since obsolete.

Many may seem like the loss of innocence. Helmut Schulte still knows the old, the lovable St. Pauli, from 1987 to 1991 he was head coach of the then chronically strapped club with a loyal fan culture and peaceful. The supporters in the stands were considered the greatest pound of the club, but with the change of football the way to cross-class event event has changed the composition of the visitors in the stands at the Millerntor massive.

"That was a bad day for St. Pauli," said sporting director Schulte yesterday morning at the training ground of the club. "I'm the unlikely sorry. They are 20, 30 people doing something. 99.9 percent of the audience behave properly and are individual people affected, "said the 53-year-old.

"You can the audience with us now, but do not take into custody."

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