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How it all began!


Premership football and I had had a big bust up. Was it the state of English footie and the arrival of the prawn sandwich battalions imposing a more sanitised product upon the ranks of fans who had kept going to the matches?
Nobody wanted to go back to the days of Heysel, Hillsborough and fighting fans but had it gone into overdrive in the opposite direction?
Premiership prices had forced me to put family first but yet these increases and massive sponsorship deals had only served to feed the players greed, rather than being invested in youth programmes, cheaper tickets for the disadvantaged, community programmes…
Was I just blaming football for all the injustices that existed in the world…?
As it was, my only contact with the sport that had seen me through my formative years and into marriage and fatherhood was now through listening to radio commentaries, match of the day and casual glances at the results of Whitley Bay’s own non-league team. Odessa maintained her enthusiasm for Middlesbrough through Radio Tees and so I allowed myself to be carried along with their highs and lows. England’s failures in various Euro championships and World Cups only entrenched me further in my views that the Premiership was evil and to blame for all manner of the country’s problems.
Little was I to know how my life was to change after a visit to a pre-season friendly in France’s Loire Valley.
August 2008
Tours v Niort
Hardly a hotbed of football: the Loire Valley, synonymous for fine wine and a regular venue for our annual holiday since 2005. I’ve no idea why I was drawn to watch a barely publicised friendly featuring two teams that had competed in Ligue 2 (Niort) and the Ligue National (Tours) – basically the 2nd and 3rd tiers of French football yet we found ourselves on a warm, August evening sitting in a football stadium: our first experience of family football.
The stadium was empty, with only the covered stand open, as expected of a pre-season friendly in any country and there was a relaxed atmosphere amongst the loyal fans who had wandered along on that Friday evening. Polite applause greeted the teams as they emerged but this was broken by four young lads who’d made the 89 mile journey from Niort as they lit four red flares, holding them aloft like beacons as they shouted:
“Niort, Niort, Niort, Niort!” One for each of them!
That was the last we heard from them. In typical French fashion the home fans looked, shrugged shoulders then carried on their conversations, paying no more attention to the young upstarts who’d interrupted them with their high jinks. There were no stewards dashing across with fire extinguishers, no heavy police presence and nobody was thrown out of the stadium. The flares eventually died out and the foolishness of youth consigned to a distant memory for the regular home fans.
This relaxed (laissez-faire) atmosphere was added to by the sight of the Tours manager Daniel Sanchez emerging onto the touchline wearing jeans and a shirt: I doubted whether the likes of Dalglish, Ferguson and Robson even knew what jeans were, never mind having the audacity to stand on the touchline brazenly wearing them!
The game itself ended 1-1 with Niort delighting their fans with the lead only for Tours to force their fans into applause in the second half with an equaliser. The end was almost signalled apologetically as the referee blew for full time and everyone trooped off – the fans still carrying on their conversations that had been interrupted by the flares one and three quarter hours before.
Still in shirt sleeves we wandered through the tree-lined rows of the empty car park to our before driving back to our tent. Relaxing and calming was hardly how we had been used to watching football yet it seemed entirely appropriate and agreeable. We’d do this again next year – I’d see to that.


August 2009: Tours v Le Havre – Coupe de la Ligue 1st round
Our lives were changing.
 Jasmine and I had been to see non-league Whitley Bay play at home and we’d seen them recover from 2-0 down to win 3-2. Not only that but they followed that up by winning the FA Vase at Wembley. Jasmine had also decided to join her friend playing for North Shields under 10 girls’ team (even though she was only 8). Football was back into our house again: watching and playing. To honour getting onto the team she was bought a strip. She had already decided that she would support mum in her times of woe by supporting Middlesbrough (Holly had decided to support Newcastle to be on Dad’s side: probably only to wind Jasmine up).
Our positive experience of the previous year’s holiday had made me determined to repeat if not better our foreign footie experience. This time it would be a competitive game: although I still expected to see a manager in jeans.
Tickets were bought on line from the Tours ticket office and we were to pick them up at the box office on production my passport. Apparently this was normal but I wondered the reaction when my British passport was pulled out: an instant banning order as a potential football hooligan or much disgust and spitting on the floor. Being English, especially, made me extremely conscious about the reputation our various groups of supporters and stag parties had even though I was obviously with my family I still felt like I could be an unwelcome guest at a select party (being held in an enormous warehouse).
I needn’t have worried: tickets were dispatched without a hint of distaste in the “Merci” and “Bon match”. Bon match? Could you imagine English ticket offices inviting you to enjoy your match? It was akin to a shopkeeper wishing you to: “Have a nice day”.  
The ground was mostly all open, with the seating behind one goal covered with a massive mural depicting the sponsors logos as if they were being carried above the heads of a packed crowd: a slightly optimistic situation considering the empty expanses around the ground. Fans were clustered in pockets around the stadium but there was a larger crowd than we’d experienced on our previous visit and there was even the sight of passionate fans unrolling banners supporting the team expertly written in graffiti: the Tours ultras were here, with names like: KOP Tourangeau and Tours N’Boys flapping in the gentle evening breeze, and it added a bit of edge to an otherwise calm, warm Summer’s evening. There was no biting wind off the North Sea or sheets of rain drenching you to the skin. If this was French football: it got our seal of approval: shorts and t-shirts weather and football was the ideal. Under these conditions it didn’t really matter the standard of football you saw.
The idea of Ultras had never taken off, or been considered, in England. All fans were considered to be loyal and the only difference between supporters was how much they wanted to pay for a match and where, and with whom, you wanted to sit with. The nearest England came to ultras was the groups of hooligans that disgraced each club in the 70s and 80s: our own take on a theme. Yet these seemed to be no more than groups of supporters having an identity and a voice. I remember the role Newcastle United’s Supporters’ Club played in organising away trips, selling merchandise etc before they had both franchises taken away from them by the club. They had been set up when times were hard for football and when the good times arrived had found themselves pushed aside. It was reassuring to see that there were indeed devoted football fans in what had become our tranquil holiday destination.
The quality of football wasn’t the best and with Tours struggling to make any impression on the Le Havre defence, wayward passes were annoying the home fans who weren’t backwards in venting their frustrations although I doubted the players heard much of it as the open stadium allowed the comments drift into the ether.
The crowd were further annoyed when Le Havre took the lead: a move that made me notice the small pocket of away fans, behind the eight foot fence, clustered around their Barbarians flag to our right. They certainly didn’t look Barbarous to me although there were a few barbarically bare chests on offer: a tribute to their English counterparts?
I hadn’t spotted whether Sanchez was wearing his requisite jeans however the standard of Tours play improved dramatically in the second half as their passing become accurate and quicker. There were pleasingly no aimless punts up field only passing to feet that would frequently break down  to further annoy the home fans.
Chances continued to be created and wasted by Tours until Olivier Giroud tucked away a rebounded shot with less than ten minutes to go. Thoughts of extra time were dispelled when Giroud once again scored, this time scoring with a cross between a diving header and a belly flop. The home fans lapped the goals up and cheered every time there was a backheeled pass, of which there were many, as the home team grew in confidence. There were Gallic gestures from the away fans as Jasmine (7) celebrated next to the partition fence then both sets of fans set off for the exits chattering incessantly. Despite being 10 o’clock at night we were still warm and had no need for the waterproofs and sweaters we’d brought with us: after all, being British, you never could tell what might happen to the weather!
Once out of the stadium, intense discussions were hastily broken up as everyone raced for their cars and soon the air was filled with chalky gravel dust clouds as the Tours’ wacky races began. In true French fashion, most drivers had managed to lodge a Galois at a jaunty angle into their mouth as they drove off with their elbows resting on their open car windows, beeping incessantly as the competition to leave the car park intensified. Nobody had left early, unlike in England, as they would have missed out on their traditional fun! We decided to remain avid spectators, enjoying the sport on offer, before we too set off back to our campsite.

 However, supporting Tours was not a viable option for us since the Loire was a difficult place to get to from Newcastle.
For Christmas I had bought a Playstation portable to while away the odd moment of spare time and bought Fifa 08: as it was going cheap. After playing as Niort for a while I began to look out for my new adopted French team. Scrolling through the team strips, I had to admit there was a lack of imagination: all red, all white. I wanted something to stand out. Nice had a smart black and red strip, however they were further away than Tours: a nightmare for a home match. Similarly Marseille, however on top of that there was something about their constant success that didn’t sit right with me.
It was then I was drawn by the yellow and red checked squares of the Racing Club de Lens. Lens – Northern France – near to Calais should I ever want to visit them…I checked their background and history (didn’t do to be caught unawares). Lens – once strong mining town, now all closed (comparisons to the Northeast and the Miners strike in the 1980s, Maggie Thatcher, milk snatcher). Once French Champions in 1998 and recently promoted to Ligue 1: former glory, just like Newcastle. The fickle hand of fate had struck me just like a casual trip to Newcastle Arena had ended up with 13 years spent following Newcastle’s ice hockey until their demise (ironically in my home town Whitley Bay’s Hillheads Rink).
From May onwards I poured over the internet to research my new team: in my opinion we just seemed to complement each other: the colourful pageant, the down to Earth ideals the caring owner… just as Odessa and I had felt when we were getting married: nature simply took hold and carried us along. So, once again, fate had struck, pulling me into an inescapable yellow and red whirlwind.



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