Angry Manchester United fans STORM onto the pitch at Old Trafford
Manchester United fans force Liverpool clash to be POSTPONED after hundreds of protestors BROKE IN to Old Trafford – smashing equipment and climbing on goals – to demand Glazers sell the club, before clashing with police outside the stadium
- Hundreds of Manchester United fans were able to storm Old Trafford and get onto the pitch ahead of their Premier League match with Liverpool on Sunday afternoon
- The fans are protesting against United’s American owners, the Glazer family, in the wake of the doomed European Super League project
- A huge crowd assembled outside Old Trafford hours before the match and smoke flares were set off
- Then several dozen protesters breached security cordons to get inside the stadium and onto the pitch
- The match, due to kick off at 4.30pm, has been called off and will now take place at a later unconfirmed date
- Another group tried to blockade the Lowry Hotel where United are staying to prevent them boarding team bus
- They were pushed back by police in riot gear as the players remain in the hotel awaiting news about the game
- CLICK HERE to follow our live blog of the latest events at Old Trafford
Hundreds of Manchester United supporters stormed the pitch at Old Trafford ahead of their game against Liverpool in protest at the club’s American owners, the Glazer family, before clashing with police in ugly scenes.
Greater Manchester Police have confirmed two officers have been left injured with one officer being ‘attacked with a bottle and sustaining a significant slash wound to his face, requiring emergency hospital treatment.’
The local derby match has now been postponed, with broadcaster Sky Sports confirming it will go ahead at a later date, which is yet to be decided.
There were clashes as fans tried to break police lines outside the stadium, with officers drawing batons to keep the crowds back and bottles and other projectiles thrown. A line of riot police, backed by horses, pushed the crowds back from the area where the players were set to enter the ground.
The storming of Old Trafford came after many more blockaded the entrance to the Lowry Hotel where the United players and staff are staying and use each weekend prior to a home fixture.
Representatives from the two teams and the Premier League came together to convene and discuss the situation at 4pm, after which it was determined that for safety reasons the fixture could not press ahead.
Both teams were held back at their team hotel by Greater Manchester Police, while match referee Michael Oliver was also delayed in accessing the ground.
Tensions escalated when police moved in to move the protestors away from the Old Trafford forecourt with batons drawn
Some fans lifted red barriers to hurl at the police lines as efforts were made to clear the Old Trafford exterior
Police attempted to clear the crowds from away from the player entrance and tunnel area at Old Trafford
Bottles and other projectiles were hurled at the riot officers from the protesting fans as tensions escalated
The Glazer family, United’s owners, signed the club up to the European Super League before making a u-turn 48 hours later amid a furious backlash
Hundreds of Manchester United fans have stormed the pitch at Old Trafford in protest at the club’s American owners ahead of Sunday afternoon’s match with Liverpool
One fan among those who stormed Old Trafford grabbed the corner flag as they stormed the pitch ahead of the match
The crowd that breached Old Trafford perimeter gathered in front of the south stand, lighting smoke flares and chanting
Fans were finally dispersed and the local area was brought under control, but banners against the Glazers remained behind
A police helicopter was deployed to keep a constant watch over the stadium after it was announced the game is postponed
T-shirts were made specially for the protest as United fans spent the week before the big derby match making preparations
A discarded protective face mask was seen on the floor outside the Lowry hotel, which appeared to be coated in blood
At around 6pm local reports in Manchester confirmed the gathered crowds which remained at the Lowry hotel had begun ‘thinning,’ though one supporter was reported to have been taken away by police causing uproar among fans.
The Manchester Evening News reported that the remaining fans ‘got very angry and started throwing bottles,’ before police ‘got kitted up in full riot kit.’
Earlier, at the height of the protests, section of the crowd had shouted ‘we want Glazers out’ and ‘United, United’ as they ran onto the pitch. Outside the Lowry, others chanted ‘we decide when you play’.
One protester was filmed picking up a camera tripod from a pitchside media position inside the stadium and hurling it onto the pitch.
Others tried to get down the tunnel, while another took a corner flag and some swung from the crossbar of one of the goals. Many were clutching beer bottles.
Later, television footage from inside the ground showed a smaller number of fans still inside the stadium. Some clambered over the seating to taunt stewards before police moved in.
Thousands had assembled at an organised protest outside Old Trafford against the Glazer family and their efforts to sign United up to the European Super League.
Officials at Old Trafford also convened an emergency meeting to determine whether any Covid-19 protocols had been breached following the stadium invasion. Fans were not due to be in attendance at the game.
Footage in the aftermath started to circulate on social media, appearing to show one individual within Old Trafford who had makeshift stitches placed over a nasty, bleeding cut on his face.
The man could also be seen to have a bruised eye, and was understood to have been hit by a missile thrown by supporters.
Just after what should have been the scheduled kick-off time, police succeeded in pushing back the crowds and clearing the Old Trafford forecourt, while the residue of banners, flares and protest items could be seen strewn across the floor.
United were one of six Premier League clubs who initially signed up to the doomed Super League project last month. They all withdrew 48 hours later following a furious backlash from the wider football community.
Joel Glazer made an apology to supporters for signing up to the doomed Super League project but many United fans carried placards at the protest reading ‘apology not accepted’.
The departure of the team bus on the short journey from the Lowry Hotel in central Manchester to Old Trafford was delayed as police tried to force back the crowds and restore order.
Riot police did manage to clear the area around Old Trafford at around 4.30pm – when the game should have started
A red flare is let off inside Old Trafford as Manchester United fans protest on Sunday after they breached security lines
The scale of the numbers protesting outside Old Trafford can be seen in this picture taken outside the east stand corner
Protesting fans set off smoke flares outside Old Trafford as they make their feelings known before some got inside
Flares in the club’s original colours of green and yellow were set off outside Old Trafford as fans made themselves heard
Thousands of United fans protested outside and inside Old Trafford against the Glazer family, who bought the club in 2005
Some demanded the installation of Germany’s 50+1 ownership model at the protest, which ensured voting right for the fans
Security personnel battled in vain to keep the protesters outside the stadium but barriers were kicked down
A ring of riot police surrounded the steps leading up to the hotel entrance to allow the players to board the team coach safely but the United squad remained at the hotel an hour before kick-off.
Players were spotted looking out of windows on the third and fourth floors of the hotel as they awaited news as to whether the match would go ahead as planned.
Smoke bombs were set off both outside the Lowry and outside Old Trafford. Dozens of police in riot gear lined up to keep protesters at a safe distance from the entrance to the upmarket hotel.
At Old Trafford, it is believed those who gained access to the ground did so via the Munich Tunnel, after pushing down barriers, despite the attempts of security guards to prevent that happening.
Once inside, they kicked footballs laid out for the pre-match warm-ups. Many of the fans wore green and gold scarves – the colours of Newton Heath, the predecessor of Man United – which have become emblematic of the anti-Glazer movement.
But the crowd did quickly disperse back outside the stadium after a few minutes at around 2.20pm, just over two hours before kick-off.
A police officer deals with a smoke flare thrown through a glass window inside Old Trafford after fans breached the ground
Angry fans make their feeling known outside Old Trafford as part of Sunday’s protests against the unpopular Glazer family
Fans light coloured smoke flares in front of the ‘United Trinity’ statue of George Best, Denis Law and Bobby Charlton
Fans told the glazer family their apology over joining the breakaway European Super League wasn’t accepted
Fans in green and gold protest scarves chant outside Old Trafford on Sunday afternoon ahead of the match with Liverpool
However, TV footage did later show a small pocket of protesters still in the stands in a corner of the stadium an hour later.
Some were filmed climbing over seats to goad security personnel in one corner of the stadium before police managed to move the group out through the tunnel area by the Stretford End.
The match carries great significance to the Premier League title race as Manchester City will be confirmed as champions if Liverpool beat United.
Speaking on Sky Sports, former Liverpool star Jamie Carragher said: ‘The feeling of Manchester United and Arsenal fans towards their owners was a lot bigger than the Super League. I think that’s why they’ve protested so much.
‘This is not just about the Super League for Manchester United – this goes back 10 or 15 years ago when they were taking money out of the bank and charging season ticket holders if they didn’t want to go to a Carling Cup game, or maybe a Europa League game and just taking money off fans.
United were one of six Premier League teams signed up to the European Super League project – before being forced to u-turn
A masked supporter in a green and gold scarf with a smoke flare outside Old Trafford during Sunday afternoon’s protests
‘I totally get the frustration of Manchester United fans, and Arsenal fans, I think they’re in a similar situation with their owners. Every football fan in some way should stand with them.
‘We don’t want to see games called off, no-one wants to see that, but supporters are frustrated with the ownership of their own clubs. What we spoke about with the Super League, and supporters stopping that – we saw the scenes at Chelsea as well – supporters coming together is powerful.
‘Me even as a Liverpool fan, being part of those six clubs that tried to move away, I cannot criticise Manchester United fans for how they’ve gone about things basically.
‘An ownership running their club for the last 15 years has had no thought whatsoever for them. They do spend a lot of money, but I go back to what they did with the season tickets and they state of the club now compared to when they first came in.’
Fellow pundit and Manchester United club legend Roy Keane added: ‘The reason they’ve done it today is because it’s Liverpool at home. They could’ve done it against Roma but it wouldn’t have got as many headlines,” Keane said.
‘Today is a huge game, there’s huge interest from all over the world and there was an opportunity for United fans to make a huge statement and that’s why they did it today because it was Liverpool, the last few weeks have just pushed United fans over the edge.’