Manchester Arena attack: Police hope for 'poignant' Man Utd final in Stockholm
Police say it is right for Wednesday's Europa League final between Manchester United and Ajax to go ahead, but postponing the game was discussed after Monday's Manchester Arena attack.
"Very
quickly a decision was taken the game would go on," said Greater
Manchester Police's John O'Hare.
The chief
superintendent anticipates a "poignant" occasion in Stockholm.
The UK terror
threat level has been raised to its highest level following
the bombing, which killed 22 people.
Asked if
postponing the match had been considered, O'Hare told the BBC: "That would
have been discussed, but the whole rhetoric that has got to come out is
terrorism can't win. We can't stop doing the things we enjoy and nourish our
lives."
He said Uefa,
European football's governing body, had "changed some of the planning to
be a bit more respectful and poignant".
O'Hare added
some potential trouble-making supporters from both sides had been identified,
and details passed on to Swedish police.
"You
would like to think the events in Manchester would make people think twice
about wanting to cause trouble and put things in perspective," he said.
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United fans
and officials have said the final is secondary to the "pain and
suffering" in Manchester since the attack
"I think
what happened really put things into perspective," said United executive
vice-chairman Ed Woodward.
"Words
don't really do justice for how we all feel. We're numb."
A minute's
silence will be observed before the final in Stockholm, and both teams will
wear black armbands. The opening ceremony will also be considerably reduced as
a mark of respect for the victims.
"Success
tonight is nothing compared to the pain and suffering back home," Woodward
told MUTV.
"It was
very sombre flying over with the directors - it was all we were talking
about."
Former United defender Phil Neville, who is in Stockholm working for BBC
Radio 5 live, said the club's home-grown players will find it particularly
"difficult".
"When I was told I'd be working on this
match, it felt like it was Christmas Day," said the 40-year-old. "But
I don't want to be at this game now, I want to be in Manchester.
"Players like Marcus Rashford and Jesse
Lingard - they've been brought up in this city. Paul Pogba was brought up in
the city from the age of 14. They will find if difficult.
"From what would be the biggest games of
their careers... it doesn't feel important."
But he added: "Football, for 90 minutes, can
bring a smile back to the faces of the people of Manchester."
Rio Ferdinand, a former England and United team-mate, said
the match was a chance for players "to show Manchester solidarity".
He told 5 live: "Playing after such an
unforgiving and devastating act, I don't think it matters whether you're a red
or you're a blue, you want these guys to go out and represent Manchester and
show the togetherness this city has got.
"It will dawn on the players after that
this is such a huge game not only for Manchester United Football Club but also
for a player to show they can bring a community, a city, a country together by
playing and showing that whatever goes on they will go out there and perform to
the best of their ability."
BBC sports news correspondent Andy Swiss, who
is also in Stockholm, said there will be 1,200 police on duty around the
50,000-capacity Friends Arena, although there is no specific intelligence of
any threat.
United were given 9,500 tickets for the final,
although more fans are expected in Stockholm for Wednesday's match. Several
told BBC Radio 5 live it was a subdued atmosphere.
One supporter said: "I don't want to be
here, I didn't want to come. I've been getting messages all day: 'Look after
yourself.' But it's them who have been targeted - it's Manchester, not
Stockholm."
Another said: "We can't get drunk, enjoy
ourselves, take pictures of ourselves enjoying ourselves in nice scenery and
send them back home to Manchester. We can't do that. The whole mood's
absolutely flattened."
One fan said the atmosphere at the airport was
"like we'd already lost", adding: "There's lads I have known for
years who are absolute jokers who were sat there so quiet. It's so sombre.
We've got to win this now for the people of Manchester. I live near the Arena
and was woken up by the sirens. It's heartbreaking."
Another said: "Football does become
secondary but what we won't do is fall to these people. All we can say is our
thoughts are with these families. We'll get behind our team, and when the
game's finished, our thoughts will turn back to these people."
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