July 18 – Manchester United fans were arrested more than any other club in the country last season, according to new Home Office data that brings back memories of the hooliganism problem that blighted the club in the 1970s.
The figures, published Thursday, revealed United supporters topped the arrest charts with 121 incidents in 2024-25, surpassing local rivals Manchester City (94) and West Ham (77). 49% of United arrests occurred at home games, with 34 related to public or violent disorder.
West Ham, who had led arrest statistics for three consecutive seasons, dropped to third place. Overall football-related arrests fell 11% to 1,932 – the first decline since fans returned post-pandemic. However, reported incidents jumped 18% suggesting trouble is spreading rather than concentrating.
Most concerning is the spike in hate crime reports – 420 incidents across those matches, the highest since records began in 2017-18. Of these, 287 related to race, 140 to sexual orientation, with disability and gender identity also targeted. The numbers represent a disturbing 23 percent increase from 2023-24’s 341 incidents.
Drug-related arrests now account for 19% of all cases, up from 9% in 2022-23 when Class A possession became a Schedule 1 offence. Public disorder remains the most common charge at 32%.
Banning orders have reached 2,439 – the highest since 2012-13. West Ham leads with 112 supporters banned, followed by United (108) and Chelsea (80).
“Police up and down the country work incredibly hard to ensure football stadiums are safe,” said Policing Minister Dame Diana Johnson. “Today’s statistics show that these efforts are paying off and strong action is being taken to stop violence and disorder from ruining football.”
While today’s problems pale compared to the 70s and 80s systematic violence, the trends demand vigilance lest football’s darkest period return.
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