More Than A Game - Wrexham v Chester
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Article from Four Four Two Two magazine
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Wrexham's Frontline hooligan
firm have given FourFourTwo the nod to travel with them on
the train to Chester, home of their most hated rivals. We've
brought a photographer along, although it's been made
abundantly clear by our hosts that if things 'go off', then
the camera will have to do the same. On arrival in Chester,
we'll spend time observing a major police operation - one
that has prevented officers from 50 miles away taking leave
- to keep the rival fans apart.
We'll also meet supporters from both sides of the divide,
and while no Chester or Wrexham fan pretends this is the
biggest derby in football, they do believe the clash is
genuinely more than a game. It's a unique encounter, one
that's as much about class and nationality as football.
Given that Wrexham have historically tended to play in a
higher division, border skirmishes between the teams from
middle-class Chester of England and working-class Wrexham of
Wales are not played out with the regularity of other
derbies. So as the two clubs prepared to meet in the league
for the first time in over a decade, the words 'eagerly' and
'awaited' began cropping up in local newspapers as
frequently as police warnings that any hooliganism would not
be tolerated.
It's 8.57am on Wednesday, December 28 2005, a normal working
day, when we walk into the cavernous Wetherspoons pub in
Wrexham town centre. Inside, around 100 lads aged between 16
and 50 are already drinking. Most would happily classify
themselves as members of the Frontline, a long-established
group of wily casuals whose website opens to the
Stereophonics song, As Long As We Beat The English. One of
Wrexham's nicknames is the Red Dragons, yet the only
evidence of red in this boozer is the discreet Prada Sport
labels worn by many. A Wrexham fan wearing a replica shirt
here would look as incongruous as Father Christmas riding a
cow in the Grand National.
The intention is to get the 11 o'clock train 10 miles to
Chester. The monied post-Christmas shoppers who flood the
city will be in for an unpleasant surprise if they see
Wrexham's marauding mob. The police, who wait by the train
station to escort the Frontline and prevent such an
occurrence, are fully aware of the potential for disorder
and have made the game a midday kick-off to reduce the
probability of trouble. It hasn't down well with fans who've
had to take the day off work.
English and Welsh police are co-operating closely, with
intelligence officers monitoring the Frontline's movements.
At the moment, these consist of frequent visits to the bar.
The leaders in the Frontline are doubtful that they'll get a
chance to attack Chester's '125' firm, but they live in
hope.
A gaunt and dishevelled figure enters the pub. He doesn't
look like he'll make it to the bar, let alone Chester. He
begins scrounging for money. The lads don't give him any but
they tolerate him, some shaking his hand. "Twenty years ago
he was one the top lads in Wrexham," explains one hooligan.
"He always had the best trainers, girls, everything. He's a
smackhead now. Shame."
The drug addict won't be going to Chester, but the violence
addicts will, a band of brothers frisky with anticipation as
they prepare to cross the border into enemy territory.
Several have just come out of prison or finished banning
orders for smashing up a pub opposite Chester station in
2004. One has the incriminating CCTV footage that was used
in evidence against the perpetrators on his mobile phone. It
lasts for five minutes, as 20 or 30 deranged Frontline
persistently attack the Deva Mail and Sports Club with
bottles, poles and any other objects they can muster. "Cost
me my flat and missus that," says Chas, one of the main
Wrexham heads. "If I hadn't been nicked I would have
probably left all this behind. But I'm back here now, aren't
I?"
Chester and Wrexham haven't met in the league for 11 years
and it's the blues of Chester who remember the 1995's
Valentine's Day meeting more fondly than Wrexham's reds.
Reduced to nine men, Chester came back from 2-1 down to draw
2-2 at the Racecourse Ground.
"I've never played in a game that had as much incident as
that one - two sent off, a missed penalty and four goals,"
says Gary Bennett, who turned out for both teams during a
distinguished lower league career. "Everyone in the Wrexham
dressing room was gutted afterwards; we couldn't believe how
nine men had got a draw against us. The Chester fans were
singing, 'You couldn't beat nine men," adds Bennett, still
revered as 'Psycho' by Wrexham fans.
"Every player who took part in that game is held in such a
high regard by City fans," says Chester fan Jim Green, "If
Andy Milner ever falls on hard times I know 100 people who
would give up their beds for him."
Bennett has been on the winning side for Chester in the same
fixture, too, in a 1987 third round FA Cup. "It was snowing
and Wrexham led 1-0 at the break - but I managed to get two
second-half goals," he says. "Wrexham fans always remind me
of that one. I also played in a Freight Rover Cup game where
fans were ripping up seats and throwing them. You have to
expect the unexpected when Chester and Wrexham meet."
What you can always expect is mutual disdain. One Chester
website has a section called: 'They've scored against the
Wrexham', which boasts: "In a perfectly ordered society,
streets would be named after them. When it comes down to
heroes they're right up there with Spartacus, Hercules,
Theseus and, yes, even Biggles. By scoring for Chester
against our arch-rivals, the goats, they have genius shining
from every orifice."
Goats is a favoured Chester moniker for Wrexham, along with
'Wrectum' and 'Sheepshaggers'. Wrexham use many colourful
profanities to describe Chester, the least offensive being
'Jester Pity'.
Back at the pub, bad news filters through: the game's been
called off. Chester's pitch, which straddles the English and
Welsh border, is frozen. The reaction is surprisingly
measured, probably because the news is not entirely
unexpected. "Means the re-arranged game will be at night
now," offers one. "That means a better atmosphere,"
interjects another.
The Frontline considers going to Chester regardless, but the
arrival of two police intelligence officers in Wetherspoons
makes them reconsider. "Boys," says an officer in a firm,
businesslike tone. "We're passing on a message from our
Chester counterparts that resources will now be focused in
the Wrexham area for the rest of the day."
Nobody replies, but the few nods indicate that they've got
the message and the Frontline contemplates the long day
ahead. They've got plenty of time - it's not even 10am.
Wrexham's population of 43,000 makes it one of the smallest
places to have a Football League club. Only the towns of
relative newcomers Yeovil, Rushden and Boston have fewer
inhabitants. Wrexham grew because of industry, including
brickworks, steelworks and a brewery making Wrexham lager.
Coal was also mined in surrounding villages, including
Gresford, famous for its colliery disaster of 1934. Yet
mention Gresford to the Frontline and they talk about a riot
that erupted during a 1990s Sunday League game between a
Chester and a Wrexham-based team after hooligans from both
sides came to watch.
The 1970s offered mixed fortunes for Wrexham. The side
played in the European Cup Winners' Cup four times and
reached the sixth round of the FA Cup twice, but the decline
of Wrexham's traditional industries had a devastating
effect. "I can remember my dad losing his job and we wanted
to leave Wrexham to get a job elsewhere," remembers one fan,
"but everyone else wanted to do the same and house prices
dropped so we couldn't. Everyone in my school seemed to be
on free meals. But dad still found money to take us to the
match."
Wrexham's economic situation has improved in the last two
decades, but it remains the antithesis of well-heeled
Chester. Many Wrexham lads are happy that it stays like that
and are proud of the hard-bitten reputation of their town.
Chester never relied on traditional industries like Wrexham,
instead hosting a large white-collar workforce involved in
financial services. Chester's riverside setting, cathedral,
Roman walls, and historic racecourse have long been a
tourist magnet. The clock on the town hall only has three
faces, with the Wales facing side remaining blank because,
according to the architects, "Chester won't give Wales the
time of day." An archaic law states any Cestrian (a resident
of Chester) may shoot a Welshman with a longbow if he
loiters within the walls after sunset - although this law no
longer offers legal protection against prosecution for
murder. "I'd like to see them try it," says one Wrexham lad.
"Wrexham boys see themselves and the town as downtrodden by
the well-to-do of Chester," says Chester fan Jim Green, "but
parts of Chester like Blacon or the Lache are as bad as
Queens Park in Wrexham."
Queens Park (renamed Caia Park in an attempt to improve its
image) is a troubled Wrexham estate of 14,000 which was
plagued by riots between asylum seekers, residents and
police in 2003. Some members of the Frontline were involved.
With a population of 90,000, Chester is over twice the size
of its rival, yet their support is around half of Wrexham's,
partly because Wrexham attracts fans from all over North
Wales. "The people of Chester don't deserve a Football
League club," says Wrexham supporter Paul Baker. "Chester's
too posh for football. They're into rowing, lawn tennis,
golf and all that."

Baker - who is unlikely to be ever be employed by the
Chester tourist board - continues: "The Cestrians are stuck
up their own arses. Wrexham lads look out of place there. We
wear sensible clothes; they wear pink shirts and have gel in
their hair. We go out on the steam (beer), throw it down us
and have a laugh. They just want to have a drink or two and
chat up the ladies. That's why a lot of Wrexham girls go out
in Chester - they like to be treated well and know we're a
bunch of piss-cans."
One irony is that the Frontline fuel Chester's prosperous
economy by purchasing their designer threads in the city's
superior shops. "Most Wrexham lads buy their clothes in
Chester as there's more choice," says Wrexham fan Irish.
"But even as a teenager the Chester lads would stop you and
ask where you are from. You had to have your wits about
you."
It's not just Wrexham fans who question Chester's support.
When Chester were in turmoil under Terry Smith, the
controversial American owner who briefly installed himself
as team manager, Mark Lawrenson opined: "The trouble is that
Chester is not a footballing city."
"There was an outcry over Lawrenson's comments but
ultimately, as much as it pains me, he was right," says Jim
Green. "We've a population of nearly 100,000 within the city
yet cannot pull in 3,000 for a league game on a Saturday. I
think the council and the city in general lack the passion
of our counterparts in Wrexham - something I'm pretty
envious of. Wrexham could, and previously have, pull in over
10,000 every week if they were doing well - something
Chester will never do."
Other Chester fans view it differently. "Try telling people
that Chester's not a football city when witnessing the
passion at a Wrexham derby match or the tears that were shed
when we were relegated to the Conference," says Sue
Choularton of the Chester Exiles, a long-standing
supporters' group with 100 members around the world. "Lawrenson's
comments actually helped because they galvanised the Chester
supporters' groups into action and ultimately led to the
downfall of Smith."
Green reckons there are differences in the identity of the
respective populations. "North Walians see Wrexham as their
identity - if you tell somebody you live in Coedpoeth, a
village five miles away, then nobody knows where that it is,
but people have heard of Wrexham. Chester, meanwhile, is a
small city, overshadowed by Liverpool and Manchester. Until
Hollyoaks, not many people outside the North West knew where
we were. We've basically got five suburbs and that's it -
villages any more than five miles outside of the city prefer
to have their own identity. It's much more in keeping with
the Cheshire mindset to tell people you live in Tarporley or
Little Budworth than Chester, despite their close
proximity."
Three months later, we're back in Wrexham, this time for the
visit of Chester. It's late March and the teams have still
to meet this season. A line of police riot vans is parked
outside Wrexham General Station, just 200 metres from the
Racecourse Ground. The police have again set a noon
kick-off, but with daffodils hinting of spring in a blustery
North Wales, there's little chance of this game being called
off.

Despite an abysmal run of form that has seen them plummet to
92nd in the Football League, Chester have sold 1,340 tickets
and around 250 of them, among them known thugs, are due to
arrive at the station half an hour before kick-off. They
will be met by a unit of handy-looking police in body armour
who look like they've spent more time filling in hooligans
than forms behind a desk.
"Our job is to facilitate the safe passage of visiting
supporters," says one Robocop. "I used to work in a large
Midlands city where we had serious problems. Now I'm based
in North Wales where we get little storms in teacups. But
this lot need keeping apart."
Aware that the police will prevent them getting anywhere
near the visiting supporters, the Frontline remain in a town
centre pub. Some of them have hung a flag from a bridge of
the Chester/Wrexham bypass to greet the visiting fans. It
reads: "Welcome to Hell", or at least it does for a short
while before police remove it. There are even dark
murmurings of bricking the train before it arrives, a little
ironic on a train line that was built partly to transport
bricks.
The vast majority of the 7,240 crowd, easily Wrexham's
biggest of the season in a functional stadium that holds
15,500, has no intention of causing problems. They hold the
hooligans in contempt, pointing out that their cash-strapped
clubs haven't got the money to fund huge police operations,
evidence of which is everywhere. Above in a dark grey sky,
the North Wales police helicopter hovers loudly whilst dog
handlers prevent groups of Wrexham fans forming on the
ground. All the time CCTV cameras record events. Irish
points to one whirring CCTV camera.
"I hate that," he says. "It stops us doing anything." He
also identifies various individuals as they make their way
towards the Racecourse Ground. "He's a big Man City fan," he
says after shaking hands with a handy-looking lad who
clearly doesn't visit his dentist as often as he should. By
that, it's assumed that he's Man City and Wrexham. "I once
bit his City tattoo and it bruised for months," adds Irish,
who goes away with Manchester United. "A lot of the lads
will watch Liverpool, Everton, United or City too." The
lower-league club benefit from these two-team fans, who can
often watch Wrexham at 3pm on a Saturday, and still fit in a
trip to Old Trafford or Anfield for whenever TV dictates
kick-off time in the Premiership.

Five minutes before the Chester train arrives, Irish is back
on his mobile. "The Frontline are coming up through the town
now," he says, visibly excited. Sure enough, police are soon
holding all Wrexham fans behind a roadblock 100 metres from
the station. They want the area cleared so that the English
can pass.
"You move - especially you!" bellows a policeman in a half
balaclava which masks most of his face. He's talking to
Irish. The Chester fans spill off the train into the station
car park where they're surrounded by police. "Ing-er-land,
Ing-er-land, Ing-er-land!" they sing, a mixture of Burberry
clad lads and straight, scarf-wearing supporters. "Sheepshaggers!"
they shout in the direction of the Wrexham mob behind the
police lines.
"North Wales," respond the Wrexham fans. You hear Welsh
spoken among some fans. "We're proud to be Wrexham and we're
proud to be Welsh," says Chas. "South Walians don't always
have it. They call us English or even Scousers, but for us
it's Wrexham first and Wales second."
The police operation works impeccably, as the Chester fans
are escorted down Mold Road into the away turnstiles. Five
minutes later, the Wrexham fans are allowed to follow and
they attempt to catch up, but like greyhounds chasing a
rabbit, their target is always just out of reach.
Most of the Frontline stand in the seats adjacent to the
away end which is named after former chairman Pryce
Griffiths, a local businessman who has kept Wrexham afloat
for much of the last 25 years. Griffiths was a fan who
helped build terracing before he became a director in 1977,
then chairman between 1988-2002. Now a life president of the
club, his popularity endures, although some Wrexham fans
criticised him following the sale of his shares to Alex
Hamilton, the despised former chairman.
Hamilton wanted to knock down Wrexham's Racecourse Ground,
their home since 1872, and replace it with a shopping
development. This was the venue for the first ever Wales
international in 1877, and is the ground where Anderlecht,
Manchester United, AS Roma, Porto and Hadjuk Split turned up
to play Cup Winners' Cup ties, even if they left as soon as
they could afterwards. When protests put a stop to
Hamilton's plans, Wrexham slipped into administration and
were hit with a 10-point deduction which saw them relegated
to the league's basement division last season. Still, at
least the relegation meant that Wrexham got to play Chester.
Like many rivals, both sides have more in common than they'd
like to admit. Despite their proud histories, both have
recently been threatened with extinction because of serious
financial problems. "Because both fans have suffered from
dodgy chairmen, a lot of the hatred is now being replaced by
closet respect," says Chester fan Nigel Hutt. "There are
many on both sides who hope that both clubs survive their
problems." Jim Green agrees: "I have the greatest sympathy
for what Wrexham have gone through over the last 18 months
having been there myself. I truly hope that they get through
it - so we can stuff them next season."
The feeling, however, isn't always mutual. "I'd rather
Chester didn't exist at all," says Wrexham fan Paul Baker.
"I despise the club and a city which is full of people who
are full of themselves. At the very least, I want Chester to
go down."

In the weeks leading up to today's game, Chester, whose
record transfer fee received is still the £300,000 that
Liverpool paid for Ian Rush in 1980, have suffered an
alarming slump, losing 12 games from 14 and slipping from
sixth to bottom of League Two - perilously close to the
Conference league which they left as champions in 2004. You
know a club is struggling when the players registered as
numbers 35 and 36 are in the starting line-up. Their current
malaise is evident from their deflated, woeful performance
in a first half dominated by Wrexham, who take a two-goal
lead and see a penalty saved. The second Wrexham goal is
greeted by a stirring chant, to the tune of Men of Harlech:
"Wrexham Lager, Wrexham Lager, feed me 'til I want no more,
feed me 'till I want no more." They even sing along in the
posh seats.
"Wrighty, Wrighty what's the score?" they add, pointing in
the direction of Chester manager Mark Wright. In his second
spell as manager, the former Liverpool and England defender
looks forlorn. "Going down, going down, going down," add the
Wrexham fans, from behind advertising hoardings for roof
trusses, printers and plastics. "Going bust," retort the
Chester fans in the Eric Roberts (Builders) stand, unfurling
a "Goatbusters" flag.
Chester's second-half performance is more spirited and they
pull a goal back through Jake Edwards in the 89th minute. A
chance of immortality on the banks of the River Dee beckons
for Chester's Paul Ellender, but he squanders a last-minute
chance from six yards out.
Wrexham fans applaud at the final whistle, waving flags of
St David in the direction of the visitors. Yet the Chester
fans congratulate their team, too - they've witnessed a
spirit absent in recent months. The police helicopter
reappears above. The Frontline leaves the ground and cram
round the exit from the away end. Hoods go up and caps go
down, but the police have got everything under control and
start pushing them back. Even the shouts of "stand!" from
the frustrated hooligans are half-hearted.
As we wait for the Chester fans to be escorted past to the
station, two lads clock the photographer. "Are you
FourFourTwo?" They're keen to talk, but don't want to give
names.
"I'm 49," says one. "I did all the getting married, having
kids and foreign holidays, but I got bored. I missed this.
You can't beat following Wrexham. We know Wrexham is a shit
hole, but we're proud of what we're got, proud of the number
of lads who follow the team for the size of the town.
Chester is bigger and our support is twice theirs. They
don't want a football team in Chester."
The Chester fans are soon being escorted past the Turf Hotel
in the corner of the ground where we're stood. "Sheepshagging
bastards," one shouts. A lone Wrexham lad lurches forward.
"Come on then," he taunts. A policeman pulls him to one side
for an explanation. "Look, there's hundreds of them and
about 10 of you. My shield is not going to offer much
protection is it?" The lad takes his point and walks away.
"The police have got it organised today," notes the ageing
hooligan. "We'd absolutely slaughter them if we could get
near, but I can remember Chester coming here and running us
all over the place," he says.
"No they didn't," objects his mate. "They've never run us,"
"They did."
"Chester have never done Wrexham."
"They have."
This one, it seems, will run and run.
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