In the mid-sixties stands of the English stadiums for 70% consisted of "fans" of football violence. Nearly each match came to an end with serious fights, and "to find out desire the strongest" was the main motive for departure to other city. Media became means of public publicity and self-advertisement: some fans even collected newspaper cuttings about "feats".Distribution of movement was interfered by the Eyzelsky tragedy: in 1985 on a final of the Cup of the European Champions between Italian Juventus and English Liverpool because of a collapse of a wall nearly 40 people died, and hundreds were wounded. Then the UEFA discharged for five years all English clubs of participation in Euro cups, and, as a result, the set of hooligan groups stopped the existence. Now the basic principle of any English fan is obscurity and lack of club flowers in clothes. Crossings of the conflicting groups happen far from stadiums, and the carried-out actions are planned for weeks and carefully miscalculate.