Fingerprints - Sign o' the Times
FC Copenhagen 3-1 Brondby (20:03:11)
Around a year ago prior to the FC United v North Ferriby United game, me  and my mates noticed a group of lads we haven't seen before in our local, clad  in expensive 'hoolie-chic', writes Matt Wilkinson. Not the usual sartorial look for an Evo-Stik Premier  League game, granted, so we asked them who they followed. "Brondby" was the  answer, followed by a friendly explanation of their touring the North-west of  England on their own European Football Weekend.  



A bond was formed and we promptly showed them the best pubs Manchester can  offer on a Saturday night together with all the drunken buffoonery that entails.  A pledge was made that night that we were to come and visit the guys for the FC  Copenhagen (FCK) v Brondby (BIF) derby game (the 'New Firm', no less) sometime  next year. And so it was a few months beforehand cheap flights were secured  together with dodgy accommodation (more of that later!)
However, bad news was broken to us a couple of weeks before, it seemed the  Brondby guys were boycotting the game. We were welcome to attend the game on our  own, but after the explanation for the boycott, there was no chance of that  happening, given FCUM's own history of protest and defiance. The previous derby  game at Parken (FC Copenhagen's ground) was riddled with crowd trouble, so  Brondby as a club felt duty bound to take action. This resulted in the novel  idea of fingerprinting every Brondby fan in order to obtain a ticket. Naturally  this didn't go down well with the fans, and all the various supporters groups  vowed to boycott the game forthwith.
We were promised a lively weekend, whatever happened, so landed in a chilly  Copenhagen to find our lodgings. Four of us had made the trip from Manchester  with one of our crowd having a well-deserved reputation for securing the  cheapest possible accommodation, resulting in being booked into (delete as  applicable) the coldest, insect-riden, noisiest, smelliest hotel room around.  And this weekend was no exception. Cheap? Yup! Subterranean? Yup! Sharing with  insects? Yup! Site of a terrorist bomb explosion? Yup!
Anyhow, the game was set for Sunday afternoon, and as it was Friday  night,our hosts treated us to a tour of Christiania (If you like your 'smoking',  you'll love the place!), before an informal tour of the deserted Brondby  Stadion, or as they prefer to call it, 'Kim Vilfort Stadium'. A beery night  followed, but we were encouraged to turn up on Saturday for the peculiarly  European tradition of supporting the team during training.
Brondby's training ground is next to their stadium, so easy enough to find,  we weren't however counting on finding 1,000 of their lads supporting the team  as though it was the game itself, tifo banners, flags, flares were everywhere...  not the kind of thing you'd find at Carrington, Cobham or Melwood...
Brondby IF fans show their support to the  first team ahead of the derby clash with FC Copenhagen, which they were  boycotting in protest at the requirement for a fingerprint to purchase a match  ticket
After yet another Tuborg induced outing around suburban Copenhagen and the  next day a hungover morning stumble around tourist sites, we were directed  towards the centre of town towards the only bar that was big (and stupid) enough  to show the game to all those not attending. The pub had five bars on four  levels. Although it was a generic Irish themed bar, it was slightly more  reasonably priced than anywhere else, (i.e £4 a pint as opposed to £7!) so we  grabbed a spot and waited.
Minutes later we noticed a roar coming down the street, so went out to have  a look and noticed around 1,000 Brondby lads marching with a huge banner making  their feelings known regarding the fingerprint issue, along with numerous smoke  bombs, flares, and a Viking roar which told me to get out of the way. The lads  began pogoing down towards the Irish bar amidst clouds of noxious yellow smoke  and I promptly lost my space in the bar, doors shut, giant security staff having  none of my dumb Englishman routine.
They'll be coming down the road...
All was not lost, our friends from Brondby had found refuge in a Scottish  bar round the corner, and we squeezed inside. We we're reliably informed by our  friends that losing 1-0 to FCK would be seen as a decent result, so should  Brondby score, we anticipated things could get lively. However, in the 25th  minute, Brondby did the unexpected and actually took the lead through Nicolaj  Agger (Daniel's cousin) and the place erupted like nothing I'd ever seen. 
Complete pandemonium, glass pint pots were smashed against any surface,  people were jumping on top of and behind the bar, grabbing and smashing anything  in sight, lots of hugging, grabbing and shouting into each others faces... this  is how I imagined the Viking hordes pillaged North East England in the Ninth  Century. Me and the English lads crouched in an almost foetal position to avoid  the flying glass (and beer of course).
The joy didn't last for long, the inevitable arrived just after half time  with an equaliser from Cesar Santin. From then on in, FCK took control and  scored a couple more to finish BIF off, with ex Chelsea man Gronkjaer netting  the third. Naturally the mood changed to one of disappointment, and even anger  in some quarters, with lots of people arguing with each other, bar staff,  security and inevitably, the Police.
Not the greatest ending to the weekend, and we didn't even get to the game.  But thanks to the support, friendliness, hospitality and outright passion of the  Brondby lads, it was certainly a weekend to remember...
Good beans?
Before the days of taking fingerprints to watch a football match; European Football Weekends went to this fixture. Read about that match day experience HERE.
Follow both Matt and European Football Weekends on Twitter
Follow both Matt and European Football Weekends on Twitter
- Feel free to comment below - 
Good read!
ReplyDeleteFun to read something from a different angle than has been the norm. Also good to see most of my prejudices surrounding Brøndby and their lame, ignorant thugs they call fan seem to be based on facts ;p
ReplyDeleteGreat read. Good to see the fervent support of a Danish non-franchise club who have been in existence for longer than a lot of their contemporaries. Their fans may be a handful but they are passionate and genuine. Give me them compared to the glory hunters at FCK anyday..
ReplyDelete@UK readers:
ReplyDeleteDon't pay attention to JP's ramblings. Sour grapes.
Anonymous, not really sour grapes to be honest. Just aint keen on Franchise football wherever it is in the world. Scandinavia has its fair share of franchise clubs and clubs that have re-wrote (reinvented?) their history through amalgamation with other teams. That is the North American way and as a North American would say....that sucks
ReplyDeleteAnyway, no big deal, each to their own. We all have our own opinions on what is right and wrong for a football team and I ain't looking to argue. Copenhagen is a great trip and even better when the cheap bars are found..
ReplyDelete@jp
ReplyDeleteUnlike the amalgamation between Brøndbyøster and Brøndbyvester off course...
Offcourse,- you are too much of an idiot to recognize the difference between two amateur clubs merging together in the early sixties, and the franchise bastard, created from two pro-teams in the early nineties, whos place in the top of the league have been financed by cheap loans and supports from local politicians.
ReplyDeleteHello, what a great blog you have here, I have followed him for some time now and the contents are spectacular.
ReplyDeletecongratulations
I have already referenced this link on my blog, I invite you to visit:
http://thebluefactoryofdreams.blogspot.com
Over FC Porto.
This week-end, there is a Benfica-FC Porto, FC Porto where will celebrate if he wins ...the title!
Greetings
What a laugh, you obviously don't even know your own history. The only reason Brøndby is still around is due to heavy financial support from the local politicians and the city. Both before and after Interbank.
ReplyDeleteAlthough you two teams clearly dislike each other, surely you don't want to see future derbies played out with no away fans? And also, don't you think that taking fingerprints of fans wanting to attend a football match is a step too far?
ReplyDeleteCan you at least agree on that?