by londinium » 19 May 2007 10:17
by shadesrwrf » 19 May 2007 11:21
londinium In my opinion, there is no actual reason as to why it shouldnt be allowed to be brought into the stadium, I bet it is not allowed though.
by PieEater » 19 May 2007 11:42
shadesrwrf 12.2 Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor, or bottle, can or other portable container and which could cause damage or personal injury, when entering the Ground or in a public area of the Ground from which the event can be directly viewed.
by Rhys The Royal » 19 May 2007 12:06
by Royal Lady » 19 May 2007 12:15
I've never understood this. You're not allowed to bring in bottles of water, for example, unless the top is removed. You can buy bottles of drink in the concourse but they remove the top. Are they really saying that a small drinks bottle top is a potentially more damaging risk than the plastic bottle itself? Also, if being in possession of a bottle or other portable container is illegal, why do they sell them in the concourses?PieEatershadesrwrf 12.2 Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor, or bottle, can or other portable container and which could cause damage or personal injury, when entering the Ground or in a public area of the Ground from which the event can be directly viewed.
Presumably that means my thermos flask is technically in breach of the rules.
by Dirk Gently » 19 May 2007 12:16
by weybridgewanderer » 19 May 2007 12:31
Rhys The Royal So you can enter the ground with a plastic cup of lager in your hand that you bought from home?
the club website Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor
by londinium » 19 May 2007 12:42
weybridgewandererRhys The Royal So you can enter the ground with a plastic cup of lager in your hand that you bought from home?
what part did you not understandthe club website Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor
by londinium » 19 May 2007 12:46
Royal LadyI've never understood this. You're not allowed to bring in bottles of water, for example, unless the top is removed. You can buy bottles of drink in the concourse but they remove the top. Are they really saying that a small drinks bottle top is a potentially more damaging risk than the plastic bottle itself? Also, if being in possession of a bottle or other portable container is illegal, why do they sell them in the concourses?PieEatershadesrwrf 12.2 Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor, or bottle, can or other portable container and which could cause damage or personal injury, when entering the Ground or in a public area of the Ground from which the event can be directly viewed.
Presumably that means my thermos flask is technically in breach of the rules.
by shadesrwrf » 19 May 2007 12:46
londiniumweybridgewandererRhys The Royal So you can enter the ground with a plastic cup of lager in your hand that you bought from home?
what part did you not understandthe club website Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor
Dont take the quote out of context.
The rule still does not state that you cannot take alcohol into the ground. If you read it properly, there is an 'and' part to the rule.
Therefore taking in a lager in a plastic cup is totally allowed according to this rule.
by weybridgewanderer » 19 May 2007 12:50
by shadesrwrf » 19 May 2007 13:07
Dirk Gently The conditions for Wembley state that you can't bring in any food.
This puts them in breach of the DDA, since they don't sell food there which is suitable for diabetics, gluten-allergics, etc, etc.
The appropriate action to get this changed is in progress...
by papereyes » 19 May 2007 13:15
londiniumRoyal LadyI've never understood this. You're not allowed to bring in bottles of water, for example, unless the top is removed. You can buy bottles of drink in the concourse but they remove the top. Are they really saying that a small drinks bottle top is a potentially more damaging risk than the plastic bottle itself? Also, if being in possession of a bottle or other portable container is illegal, why do they sell them in the concourses?PieEatershadesrwrf 12.2 Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor, or bottle, can or other portable container and which could cause damage or personal injury, when entering the Ground or in a public area of the Ground from which the event can be directly viewed.
Presumably that means my thermos flask is technically in breach of the rules.
I think you miss the point, which is easily done until it is explained to you.
Bottle of drink full up, thrown at rival fan 20 metres away = most of the liquid flies out and fan gets hit by a light empty container.
Bottle of drink full up with top on thrown a rival fan 20 metres away = 'ouch that bloody hurt, you nearly had my eye out you scum'
by londinium » 19 May 2007 13:18
papereyeslondiniumRoyal LadyI've never understood this. You're not allowed to bring in bottles of water, for example, unless the top is removed. You can buy bottles of drink in the concourse but they remove the top. Are they really saying that a small drinks bottle top is a potentially more damaging risk than the plastic bottle itself? Also, if being in possession of a bottle or other portable container is illegal, why do they sell them in the concourses?PieEatershadesrwrf 12.2 Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor, or bottle, can or other portable container and which could cause damage or personal injury, when entering the Ground or in a public area of the Ground from which the event can be directly viewed.
Presumably that means my thermos flask is technically in breach of the rules.
I think you miss the point, which is easily done until it is explained to you.
Bottle of drink full up, thrown at rival fan 20 metres away = most of the liquid flies out and fan gets hit by a light empty container.
Bottle of drink full up with top on thrown a rival fan 20 metres away = 'ouch that bloody hurt, you nearly had my eye out you scum'
Also, you try and throw a full bottle with the top off.
Someone's going to get wet.
by londinium » 19 May 2007 13:21
shadesrwrflondiniumweybridgewandererRhys The Royal So you can enter the ground with a plastic cup of lager in your hand that you bought from home?
what part did you not understandthe club website Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor
Dont take the quote out of context.
The rule still does not state that you cannot take alcohol into the ground. If you read it properly, there is an 'and' part to the rule.
Therefore taking in a lager in a plastic cup is totally allowed according to this rule.
Tell you what, give it a go next season and then report back to us.
by shadesrwrf » 19 May 2007 13:31
londiniumshadesrwrflondiniumweybridgewandererRhys The Royal So you can enter the ground with a plastic cup of lager in your hand that you bought from home?
what part did you not understandthe club website Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor
Dont take the quote out of context.
The rule still does not state that you cannot take alcohol into the ground. If you read it properly, there is an 'and' part to the rule.
Therefore taking in a lager in a plastic cup is totally allowed according to this rule.
Tell you what, give it a go next season and then report back to us.
No need to be sarky, I know they will obviously stop you from entering.
I was just trying to find out, under what grounds they can do it.
Which, no one has come up with yet.
by Forbury Lion » 19 May 2007 13:32
by Behindu » 19 May 2007 17:26
by The 17 Bus » 19 May 2007 17:41
by londinium » 19 May 2007 20:32
shadesrwrflondiniumshadesrwrflondiniumweybridgewandererRhys The Royal So you can enter the ground with a plastic cup of lager in your hand that you bought from home?
what part did you not understandthe club website Being in possession of any intoxicating liquor
Dont take the quote out of context.
The rule still does not state that you cannot take alcohol into the ground. If you read it properly, there is an 'and' part to the rule.
Therefore taking in a lager in a plastic cup is totally allowed according to this rule.
Tell you what, give it a go next season and then report back to us.
No need to be sarky, I know they will obviously stop you from entering.
I was just trying to find out, under what grounds they can do it.
Which, no one has come up with yet.
Apologies for the sarcasm but can I respectfully suggest that you re-read 12.2 until you understand that it does indeed say you can't take alcohol into the ground.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 53 guests