Following the Victory against Arsenal, Steve Kean was
paraded across a number of media outlets, including Sky Sports, as the Messiah.
Every time you turned the Radio or TV On, he was there spouting the lines which
we were to get accustomed to during his reign.
After the protest March against Arsenal, I thought that
would be it, they would either remove him as Manager or the supporters would
take the Arsenal Victory as the Turning point.
Within 24 hours of returning home from the Protest march,
the emails, messages and tweets started to roll in to ask what was planned for
the next home game, as some supporters wanted protest to continue and stated
the result against Arsenal did not change a thing. Other supporters said that
the target was all wrong and all protest should be aimed at Venkys’s and needed to continue.
Around social media, it was really a mixed bag, of those
agreeing with the above and some supporters who were of the opinion that we
needed to back the Manager and the Owners and take our pathetic protest elsewhere,
as we were not Blackburn Rovers supporters and a disgrace to the club and Jack
Walker. Other things which I remember reading at the time including:
1.
Who is this idiot Mullan? he can’t string a
sentence together.
2.
Mullan has had his two minute of fame and should
jog on.
3.
Mullan is not even a Rovers fan
4.
Mullan is someone’s puppet
It was not nice reading some of these comments, as I’d not
been subjected to this type of grief before, especially as I’m quite a private
person. I could handle the comments, but it was difficult knowing my family
were also reading these and in particular my mum and wife Laura, who I had
married on the 14th May 2011, which incidentally was the day Steve
Kean was stopped for drink driving.
With so many supporters divided on opinion, and me finding
myself at the focal point of what we do next?
The real answer was, I did not actually know what to do? I knew whatever
was next; I could not do it alone.
This
is when a gentleman named Simon Littler; who ran a Face book Group called “Sack
Steve Kean”, stepped forward and said he would help. Knowing someone was going to help publically
lifted a big weight off my shoulders, as too many people had offered help in the
background, but did not want to be seen helping publically, which was their prerogative,
but did make me feel like I was being thrown as a lamb to the slaughter.
Simon was different to me, he was much louder, a far more
confident person and if truth be told, he was not afraid to ruffle feathers. He
had his own opinion and had his thought process was firmly on the removal of Steve Kean
as the Manager of our club. I was always of the opinion that everyone has a
voice and it’s important to capture the majority’s opinion without ignoring the
minorities. After a couple of phone conversations with Simon, we both decided that the opinion
within the supporter base was too divided and the best course of action would
be to speak with the club and open dialogue. We agreed to meet with the Ground
Manager John Newsome and the Police at Ewood Park, the Monday after the
Newcastle Fixture.
Rover played Newcastle away and lost 3-1, which brought more anger within sections of the supporter base, calls for a much bigger protest against Manchester City was being muted across social media as the Arsenal result now seemed a distant memory. We attended the meeting and made it perfectly clear that protests would continue and we called for a sit in to take place after the Manchester City fixture. The club agreed to this, as did the Police, and the plans were put in place, with it being advertised locally, through social media and through a press release.
Rover played Newcastle away and lost 3-1, which brought more anger within sections of the supporter base, calls for a much bigger protest against Manchester City was being muted across social media as the Arsenal result now seemed a distant memory. We attended the meeting and made it perfectly clear that protests would continue and we called for a sit in to take place after the Manchester City fixture. The club agreed to this, as did the Police, and the plans were put in place, with it being advertised locally, through social media and through a press release.
In the week leading up to the Manchester City fixture, I got
a twitter DM from Glenn Pegden who was one of the owners of the BRFCS Supporter
site, which is the largest online forum for Blackburn Rovers. He told me that 9
members of the Fans Forum had been picked to go to Pune and they may possibly
have a chance to meet with the owners.
He wanted to be careful that some of the attendee’s of this trip were
not being seen by the club to be aiding the up-rising within the supporter base
which had lead to protest. Although I had never met Glenn, We had spoken via
Twitter a number of times and I’d always found him helpful and courteous. I
never really knew what the Fans Forum was, I didn’t know the club had a section
of supporters who met with the club monthly, or how this forum had been put
together. After a bit of research it became apparent that they do not discuss
footballing matters and their meetings were predominantly to discuss issues
surrounding the supporter experience.
One thing I can say about the Pune 9 trip, is this trip was being
organised long before the protest started and it was merely con-incidental that
suddenly supporters were going to Pune as part of a showcase friendly with
local Indian team Pune FC. Glenn asked me at the time to keep it out of the
public domain as the fans forum would announce it themselves via an agreed
statement amongst their members in due course. I respected his wishes and never
spoke about it prior to it becoming public knowledge.
The day after speaking with Glenn via messages, I received a
call from Rovers then PR Guru, Paul Agnew. I’d read about Agnew on forums and he
did not appear to very popular in various circles he had come into contact
with. However I’m not the type of person to have my own opinion swayed by
others.
He started the call by telling me, “I had it all wrong,
Steve Kean should not be the target of the supporter’s abuse, but it should be
the owners”. He started quizzing me on who and what I knew, and was in particular very
angry that a trip was being arranged to Pune for 9 members of the Fans Forum.
He accused me of being Glenn Pegden’s puppet, and stated that the owners of the
BRFCS website were behind the protest. He also told me Simon William’s days at
Rovers were numbered, which at the time I thought, “Why are you telling me, I
would not know Simon Williams if I passed him in the street”. After being quite
abusive with me for 15 minutes, he then calmed down and said, “look Glen, I know
you are not the one behind all this, but take a step back for a minute, we are
currently on the lookout for fan representation on the board, you seem very
passionate about the club and I can promise you this, things are changing in
the background, and we will soon be in a
position where you and I can talk about some real exciting things, I will get
you a meeting with Kean and you will realise you are actually batting for the
wrong team, you are batting for the team who are out to damage the club”.
I was
quite taken aback with what he said, I thought to myself, is this guy for
real??? I also thought, how can a PR Guy suddenly be making sweeping statements
that people are going to be losing jobs, whilst other people like supporters
are potentially going to be getting jobs?
This was one of the first times I knew deep down inside that
there was something going on at Rovers very untoward. I had heard quite a few
rumours over the previous 12 months and looked very closely at the events
surrounding the removal of Allardyce and the then Board of Directors, John
Williams, Tom Finn and Martin Goodman. I had recently put together a blog post called,
Puppet or Puppeteer, which was based on my interpretation of the things I had
been told and through research I had done through the internet and other forms
of communication I had previously had from former employee’s of the club.
Anyway in the end I took his call with a pinch of salt,
although my wife Laura told me “Glen, you need to distance yourself from this
movement as we are now getting calls at home from people who we have never given
our number to, whilst lots are supporting you to do this, but how many of them
are publically standing there with you to actually take some of the weight off
your shoulders”. Laura did have a very valid point, but at the same time,
having been a victim of bullies as a child growing up, I Was not about to give
into what appeared to be a movement to discredit my intentions.
Match day came, and Rovers were hammered at home to
Manchester City 4-0, there were chants throughout the game for the removal of Kean,
whilst this was the first time I actually saw physical violence in the stands,
as supporters who were against the protest clashed with those who were
protesting. Although it was a minority, it was very sad to see as emotions were
running high.
At the end of the game, Simon Littler addressed the
supporters who had gathered in the Blackburn End to stage a sit in protest, he
made it quite clear this was to be a peaceful protest and we had to follow the
rules which had been put in place by the club and Police.
It was always our
intention for protest to be peaceful as delivering the message the right way
was important. As the protest started the PA Machine was turned up full blast to
try and drown out the supporter’s chants, I was later told by John Newsome some
months later, this was under the instruction of Paul Agnew. The protest lasted
around 30 minutes with around 1000 supporters staying behind with Banners to
air their frustrations. The protest went off with no issues, bar the odd supporter
who refused to leave, who were eventually ejected by the stewards.
With Rovers having no domestic fixture now for two weeks,
Simon and I decided it was time to Call an open supporters meeting.
We put this plan into action, picked a venue and issued a
press release, calling on supporters to attend to put across concerns and put a
plan in place going forwards. Uncle Jack’s public house kindly agreed to
provide the venue free of charge. We were not sure what to expect from the
meeting, as opinions had been mixed. For
every supporter who supported us, we had another lined up ready to lambast us.
In my next Blog, I will talk about the open supporters
meeting, the communication chain which started with the club and the
accusations of Dark Forces.
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