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  1. Seven clubs that have large organised hooligan firms are AIK (Firman Boys), IFK Göteborg (Wisemen) Djurgårdens IF (DFG) Hammarby IF (KGB) Malmö FF (True Rockers) GAIS (Gärningsmännen) and Helsingborgs IF (Frontline), though several other football, bandy and ice hockey clubs have active hooligan followings. [150]

  2. Football hooliganism was once so bad in English football, it was considered as the 'English Disease'. Clashes were a weekly occurrence with fences having to be erected to separate rival firms. Modern day crackdowns led by advancements in CCTV has sedated hooliganism from its 1970s peak but that doesn't mean it's not around.

  3. Hooligans of FC Berlin with masked faces during a match between FC Carl Zeiss Jena and FC Berlin in 1990. Hooligan firms (also known as football firms) are groups that participate in football hooliganism in European countries. For groups in Latin America, see barra brava and torcida organizada.

  4. The host of the 2012 European championships happens to have a huge hooliganism problem that's led to dedicated government legislation. The problem spreads across Poland, and is particularly...

  5. Despite the club's small size, Wrexham Football Club has a significant football hooligan element known as the Frontline. [125] It has been involved in riots with many firms in the UK, such as those of Chester City , Everton, [ 126 ] and Port Vale .

  6. Jul 25, 2021 · The era when hooliganfirms’, who would arrange to fight each other before a game and prompted a major police presence at least one fixture every week, has gone.

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  8. Jun 22, 2016 · Violent communities. Recent research suggests that football hooliganism does seem to provide potential fertile ground for more organised, acquisitive criminal activities in several ways.