One-Eyed Baz - The Story of Barrington 'Zulu' Patterson, One of Britain's Deadliest Men. Barrington Patterson & Cass Pennant. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Barrington Patterson & Cass Pennant
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Биографии и Мемуары
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781782193784
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top dogs in London, but we always rated West Ham and Tottenham higher at the time. Everyone was geared up, but guys from the black and Asian communities were really geared up for Millwall.

      I left work early that day and met up with the lads in town. ‘We ain’t buying a fucking train ticket! There’s a couple of hundred of us going down there.’ We went straight through the barriers and got on to the train. Some of the lads bought a McDonald’s and others had cans of lager for the train, but there was a big police presence. We had a firm of 200-to-400-strong and everyone was up for the fucking row.

      Everyone sat on the train chilling out, playing cards and cracking jokes. It took us about an hour and a half to get to Euston station. As soon as we got off the train, the police had their own fucking firm there! They were taking photos, asking our names and where we were from. Everyone had scarves over their faces, but they were telling us that anyone covering his face would be arrested.

      I had a Burberry shirt and jacket, blue jeans and trainers and a scarf over my face. We were just about to break off from the police escort when they shouted, ‘Come ’ere, lads! You’re with this lot, ain’t ya?’

      We had a bit of a reputation at this time because we’d stood with a couple of top-rated English firms. So we thought that not only would we be facing Millwall but that we’d also have to fight other London teams – probably West Ham and Spurs. The police put us on another train to the Millwall ground, but we managed to break off and meet up with a couple of guys from Birmingham who now lived in London. Around 20 of us managed to get out of the pub and through a back door, then fucked off and left the rest with the police escort.

      We stayed close by so we could see where the escort was and what was happening. Then the police put us on this train to Bermondsey. As we pulled up, all we could hear was boom – boom! The train was being fucking bricked! I’d never been to Millwall’s ground but I could see it was near a fucking rough housing estate. Through every little corner you could see a firm. The police had their riot shields, but we were being bricked from every corner of the ground. They marched us into the ground, close to the pitch, then put us in an upper tier. We were behind the goal and some of us black lads took our shirts off. They were shouting, ‘Fucking niggers!’ We were shouting, ‘Sieg heil!’ A lot of Millwall were singing to Birmingham, ‘You’ve got a town full of Pakis!’ When Birmingham scored we were singing, ‘One-nil to Pakistan!’

      Nothing could really go off in the ground, so we just stood there laughing. We were singing our songs about what was going to happen when we got outside, how we were going to have it with ’em. We gave ’em the ‘Sieg heil! Sieg heil!’ and you could see they just fucking hated it. The atmosphere inside that ground was electrifying. The police tried to lock us all in about 15 minutes before the game’s end, but I left with the final 15 minutes to go. The police said they were going to keep the Blues behind after the game, but we started fighting them and breaking down doors. We just wanted to get out and get at fucking Millwall!

      All of a sudden, the gates opened and it was like a battleground, like derelict buildings on a bombsite. There were bricks everywhere, cars turned over and a police horse had been fucking slashed and was lying on the ground! A big firm of us had to walk down to the train station, through a housing estate, and guys were popping up everywhere to try to brick us. They were throwing bricks, bottles, bangers – it was like a proper fucking warzone! This was on a whole different level. Some of the lads were glad the police were there, otherwise someone would have died. They were protecting us with their riot shields. We got on to the train and even that got smashed up – it was bricked from the outside and we smashed it up on the inside.

      Even today, people still talk about that day at Millwall. It was one of the worst ever. It was football violence but there was no actual clash between us. And Millwall didn’t like it because they couldn’t get to us, so they smashed their manor up. We were shocked because there were bricks coming from all different angles, but I think the police were scared. Millwall didn’t come out and fight us though. It’s not as if they stood in front of us saying, ‘Let’s ’ave it!’ And if they had, we’d have been a big enough, game enough firm that day.

      * * *

      Another game that sticks with me was when we went to Tranmere, another cup game. I’ve never been called ‘nigger sunshine’ in my life, before or since. We had a cup match away at Tranmere and a firm-and-a-half turned up for it. We travelled up by train and car. I was still living in Handsworth at the time and some of the guys, including Big Chest Leroy and Rupert, came round to mine. About five of us went in my car. We met up with others in town but everyone shot off at different times. We drove our cars up to a service station outside Liverpool – where we had a laugh and were chatting up the girls – and called taxis to take us into Tranmere.

      I think we got there around 11am. People could tell we were from out of town. From inside the car, we’d ask them where the football ground was, but they just didn’t want to talk to us. People would walk off and ignore us, five black lads in a car, wondering, What the fucking hell is going on? We drove on and asked a group of lads where the ground was. ‘There’s no fuckin’ darkies up ’ere!’ was their answer.

      One of the lads tried to jump out of the car, totally furious, but they warned us, ‘No! You can’t do that around ’ere!’ Just walking down the streets, you’d see a bunch of lads and it was, ‘Darkie! Darkie! Darkie over there!’

      As soon as the police clocked us, they were round us like flies around shit. They locked us in a pub but some of us managed to get out. I got out before the start of the game and it was going off all over the place. We sent some guys over to have a row, so that the police went over to them while we were breaking into the fruit machines. In those days, it was expensive to go up there, so you had to make your money back. We took the machines off, bashed them and raided them.

      We must have been in there a good hour-and-a-half before the police said we had to start making our way to the ground. Everyone started walking and just having a laugh in a firm of about 200 of us. All these Tranmere fans that we had to pass were giving it the wanker sign and more or less all you could hear was ‘niggers’, etc. Even during the match, all you got off the Tranmere guys was ‘darkies’ and ‘coons’. There were a few skirmishes but everyone got into the ground, where the police started to get all agitated and lashed out at us with truncheons. It was clear to me that neither the fans nor the police had ever seen so many black lads at the football in their life and appeared to feel threatened by us.

      RUPERT

      Rupert: I was in Tranmere with him one year on the last game of the season. I always remember that day: we had the end behind the goal and there were no police but for some stupid reason, halfway through the game, they wanted to come in but the boys wouldn’t let them in so it went off between them. They’d been looking on the cameras and trying to target certain members of the firm. After the game, me and Barrington are in the park and all these police have pulled out of nowhere and gone hurtling down the road, so we’ve pulled out and followed them. They’ve all gone into this petrol station and everyone at that station got beats. The police gave it to them and they were all dressed like Robocop.

      We went to the game and there were a few rows, but nothing much. Then we came out and it just went off! All you could hear was: ‘The darkies are over there!’

      Later, we heard that Tranmere were up the road; we all rolled out of the pub and went to find them. They had a firm of around 50; some of them were real dressers but some were like tramps from a local estate.

      We were in some boozer without any character at all, near the train station. Someone walked in and said, ‘They’re over there’ – across the road from the pub. We all piled out and had our bottles ready, lined up on some road on a council estate. It was really rough, with boarded-up windows and houses with no curtains. It was a really trampy area.

      I think there were about 70–80 of us and about 30–40 of them. Everyone brought their bottles out and started throwing them. When we ran out, we ran into them. I was getting bashed all over the place, but we chased and