During the match of the women’s handball players of the Super league from Adygeya and Krasnodar Region organized in Maykop within the framework of the Russian championship on December 29, a scuffle between the fans from among the visitors of Adygeya and its inhabitants took place. With the help of the militia unit the visitors were put in buses and sent back home, and the interrupted match finished with a defeat of the Adygeya sportswomen.
"Our handball players lost, - the journalist of the republican newspaper "Adyghe Mak"("Adyg’s Voice") Nurbiy Emtyl told to “Caucasian unit" correspondent. - But at one of the moments they began intercepting the initiative. Then a debut started".
After several offensive acts, from the sectors, where there were Krasnodar fans, parts of the plastic seats were thrown, he said. A part of them fell on the handball field, but the most part of them fell on the party of the fans of the owners. Besides the windows of the sport hall were broken. The fans from Maykop town answered having joined the scuffle.
Several militiamen arrived did not managed to stop the fighting fans, the additional unit was called, the journalist added. "I am often present at the sports matches, I write about sports much, - he said, - but I hadn’t seen anything like that. Especially, during a handball match. You see, in the team "Kuban - Krasnodar" – counter of "AGU-Adyif" there are several sportswomen – ex-pupils of the Adygeya sports school".
"I spoke to those sportswomen after that match, - Nurbiy Emtyl explained then, - They approved that were not their fans, they were football fans who fought. The same opinion was stated by their trainer Anatoliy Skorobogatov, who had worked in Maykop for a long time, too".
The incident should not remain unpunished, the journalist considered. And especially because the Krasnodar fans, crushing the sports hall, shouted: "Russians go forward!" "That is a fascist slogan, - he said, - especially, when it is proclaimed by those, whose majority was in fair intoxication or took in even more powerful "dope".
NatPress