Thursday 28 February 2019

Football fans brave Venezuela’s match-night terrors


Caracas (AFP) – As dusk creeps into the streets, Caracas becomes a ghost town. But something is moving tonight in the shadow of the football stadium.

Fans float in small groups along the sidewalks. The green of the floodlit pitch gleams through gaps in the grey concrete edifice.

FC Caracas need to beat their Peruvian opponents Melgar by three goals in a second-leg game to qualify for the group stages of the Copa Libertadores.

But venturing out on match night in Caracas is about more than sporting odds and rivalries. It means braving crime and shortages.

“The situation the country is in complicates everything. Transport is difficult at night,” says Daniel Mendoza, a thin 25-year-old with curly brown hair under a beanie hat.

“Football helps you endure the situation the country is in, for a while.”

– Make some noise –

Red shirts appear in the hardcore fans’ stand behind the FC Caracas home goal in the Olympic Stadium. The drums and horns start up.

“The Red Demons, ever loyal, ever present,” reads a slogan painted on the stand, which is less than half full.

An official announces there are 3,500 fans at the game: about a tenth of the stadium’s capacity.

“There used to be more excitement, and more people,” says Mendoza.

“With the situation the country is in, people’s spirits have dropped. You don’t feel the atmosphere as much.”

For Venezuela’s most successful football team, there is more than just glory at stake in this game.

Winnings from a big club tournament would go down well in a country suffering hyperinflation.

FC Caracas used to wear kits by Adidas but had to switch to a local brand two seasons ago. Last year Venezuelan footballers complained that Adidas balls have been replaced by inferior quality ones.

Mendoza’s ticket for Tuesday’s match cost the equivalent of $2.70 — more than half the Venezuelan minimum monthly wage. As a telecoms engineer, his own salary is around $50.

“In recent years I’ve started hearing fans yelling against the government” at matches, he says.

“I’ve no doubt there are pro-government people here as well. But there aren’t enough of them to make a big noise.”

– Match-night security –

In the streets leading to the stadium, a different kind of tension reigns.

Caracas residents warn constantly of violent crime: get robbed and there will be no neighborhood police to help you. Get shot or stabbed and there are few medical supplies to put you right.



from World Soccer Talk https://ift.tt/2C1ncaZ

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