Proffesor
Your understanding of the term FOOTBALL VIOLENCE is different to mine.
I am not talking about a few drunks being locked up for rowdy behavoir.
I am talking about gangs of youths setting on another football fan for wearing the wrong colour scarf.
I'm talking gangs of youths chanting "your all a load of wankers" as they walk through Birmingham on their way to the station. The police do not arrest them because there are 200 of them and only 20 police men and if they each arrested 1 there would still be 180 left, so the police have to be pragmatic...... And no arrests appear on the statistics.
Visit any football grounds to see the large numbers of police deployed to separate and shepherd the fans out of/into the area. And observe the damage done along the way.
Visit any hospital A & E near a soccer ground and see who's there and why.
I take it you don't actually go anywhere near football grounds on match days.
It happens not only in England but all over the world where soccer is played.
And is definitely not the same as a few unconnected drunks being locked up as individuals at other public events.
Due you really think that the type of incident you describe (and I am not denying it happens occasionally associated with football) would not be reported to the police and recorded in the official figures that are released each year for football related incidents. Of course they are. And the numbers of these incidents are declining year on year and resulted in about 1800 arrests last year (inside and outside grounds at all matches at every level of football down to non league) out of about 38,000,000 attendance across all matches and all divisions.
And yes I do go near football grounds on match days - because often I am attending that match. Do you? Do you know what you are actually talking about.
And actually of those 1800 arrests the vast majority are of the type you describe as 'a few drunks being locked up for rowdy behaviour'. Last year there were less than 300 arrests for 'violent disorder', which would include (but not be limited to) what you describe as 'gangs of youths setting on another football fan for wearing the wrong colour scarf' with the victim ending up in A&E.
So for 38,000,000 attendance events there are a few hundred arrests for violent disorder - hardly a common occurrence at football matches, surely you'd agree if you actually bothered to look at the evidence rather than your blinkered prejudice. So, no A&E departments aren't filled with football fans admitted as victims of football related violence.
And why is this so different to the drunken violence and arrests in Cardiff flowing last February's Wales vs England rugby, or the arrests (at a much higher number per game than in English football) in the 2011 rugby world cup in New Zealand, or the 15 arrests per year (just in the ground) at the small number of rugby games at Twickenham - again at rates similar to or probably higher than in top flight English football.
So I am not complacent - I don't want to see any incidents, but a small number are almost inevitable at major events involving rival fans and with alcohol involved. However you want to see the numbers declining (as it is in football), and that decline to be a longstanding an consistent trend (as in football) - you want it taken seriously (as it is in football). What you don't want is complacency (as in rugby), failure even to properly report and monitor incidents and trends (as in rugby), with a clear impression of an increasing problem (as in rugby) that no one really seems to want to address because it is just 'high spirits' (as in rugby).