redondo
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jaja!Edi said:That game is very violent on and off the pitch.I saw a show about this derby couple of years ago and the things I saw were ..wow!!..and there are always a lot of policeman when that game is played.Maybe Redondo can tell us more about that derby cos' I'm sure he has been to a lot of games between River and Boca.
RIVER PLATE
Founded: May 25, 1901
Ground: Antonio Vespucio Liberti, "El Monumental" ("The Monumental")
Capacity: 76,687 chaps
Pitch Dimensions: 105 x 70 m
http://www.stadiumguide.com/monumental1.jpg
http://www.barra-bravas.com.ar/ri04.jpg
http://www.rose-hulman.edu/~bohlemma/Images/riverfan2.jpg
River moved away from the area early on in the league's history to a more upmarket district, and they have a slightly more affluent fan base, hence their nickname, Los Millionarios
BOCA JUNIORS
Founded: April 3, 1905
Ground: Camilo Cichero, "La Bombonera" ("The Chocolate Box")
Capacity: 60,245 people
Pitch Dimensions: 105 x 70 m
http://www.horacioargentino.hpg.ig.com.br/bombonera.jpg
http://www.ultrasinside.it/Concorso6/extra/BOCA_JUNIORS_ARGENTINA.jpg
One side of Boca's ground, the Estadio Alberto J Armando, is very strange. It resembles nothing so much as boxes stacked on top of each other and packed very tightly together. Its nickname, La Bonbonera (the chocolate box), is appropriate. On the day of the derby it is packed with hard-core fans.
Who are they?
Argentina's capital Buenos Aires is home to this incredible derby.It's a time when the 'people's team' and 'the millionaires' come together with defeat unthinkable for the passionate fans!The match is always an unforgettable experience, with a sea of colourful flowing banners, screams and roars, chanting, dancing and never-ending fireworks.Boca and River are Argentina's biggest football clubs and they have dominated the national championship for the last 70 years. More than half of the country's football fans support one of these clubs.Both clubs formed in a Buenos Aires area called the La Boca, but in 1938 River Plate earned their 'millionaires' nickname after moving to the affluent Nunez neighbourhood.Boca remained and became known as the people's team, with the majority of fans coming from the local Italian immigrant community.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/media/images/38297000/gif/_38297667_boca_river_298.gif
So what about the rivalry?
The rivalry between Boca and River Plate is the most intense in Argentine football and, perhaps, in the whole of Latin America: the game is a riot of colour, noise and energy.
The game is called the 'Superclasico'.The red and white of River versus the blue and yellow of Boca and the two sets of fans really don't like each other! Boca fans refer to River supporters as 'gallinas' (chickens) because they think River are afraid of everything!And then the River fans hit back by calling their rivals 'los puercos' (pigs) because their stadium is located in a poor Boca area and is said to smell most of the time!The rivalry is more about class and money, with River Plate's support traditionally coming from the high-fliers in the Buenos Aires society.And the Boca supporters tend to come from the working classes and migrant communities.Buenos Aires has the highest concentration of football teams of any city in the world.
La Boca is a tumultuous proletarian neighborhood in Buenos Aires' dockland. It is the heart of the city's huge Italian community. Most of its residents are one or two generations removed from Sicily, Calabria or Naples. Boca Juniors have always been regarded as the team of the working-class. This is born out in their deadly rivalry with the bourgeois River Plate, whose English name and nickname of "the millionaires" testify to their class associations. Games between Boca and River thus evoke connotations of class warfare. In a country where class conflict is also being waged on the streets and in the jungles, this can be dangerous: seventy-four people died at a Boca v. River game in 1968. In 1994 the murder of two River fans by Boca "ultras" caused a national uproar. The River-Boca rivalry is of an intensity and of a political and social significance which is perhaps matched only Glasgow's "old firm" of Rangers (Protestant) and Celtic (Catholic)
This is a century-old rivalry, between teams from the same city, who happen to be the most successful and popular teams in the country.Trust me, this is serious stuff. So serious, that for security reasons, it was the first time ever in argentine football history that the visiting team´s fans were forbidden from attending the match.
i tried my bit to inform as much as i can and as nutral as i can.no hint of personal opinion.
V A M O S R I V E R
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