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EPL stadium 'ban on banana balloons' → Man City reveals why it's a 'cop-out'

The most common scene in European leagues such as the English Premier League is red flags. Not only when the team wins, but also when the team they are supporting loses, they burst into flames and make a mess of the stadium. Although they sound dangerous, many soccer fans bring them into the stadium and set them off. The red flame translates to "red flame," and it looks like a battlefield.
 
It's a dangerous thing to bring to the stadium. However, surprisingly, each club has its own list of prohibited items that cannot be brought into the stadium.

Why do Man City fans have inflatable bananas? | Football | Metro News
 
Obviously, anything that can harm people is prohibited. Also, you can"t bring racist slogans or pictures that are offensive.
 
However, there are some items that English Premier League clubs have banned from stadiums for surprising, or even ridiculous, reasons.
 
The Daily Star recently listed five of the most ridiculous items you can't bring to a soccer match. From the Premier League and other leagues alike. 카지노사이트 
 
The most surprising item is a once-popular cheering device. Vuvuzelas. Vuvuzelas were popularized by the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, but they're now banned at all Premier League clubs. They're confiscated at the entrance by stadium security.
 
It really is a global phenomenon that started with the World Cup in South Africa. They're banned because they make such an annoying noise. Of course, you can use them outside of the Premier League.
 
Banana balloons are also banned in some Premier League clubs. It's a bit odd that you can't bring balloons, but they are banned at Manchester City. Banana balloons were once popular at Premier League clubs, but City have banned them.
 
The reasoning was simple. It could distract other spectators. If you look at the picture, the banana balloons are not the stick balloons that fans think they are. They're yellow, almost human-sized banana balloons that, when waved or held, obstruct the view of those behind them.
 
This has been known to cause fans to clash with each other and turn violent, which is why security has banned them. Of course, teams like Arsenal have rescinded the ban, but it's something that eventually fades away.
 
Celery is also on the list. Chelsea has banned it. Chelsea fans started singing "Celery," a song by the British pop-rock duo formed in London in the early 1980s, but the song wasn't the problem. Some fans carried celery onto the pitch and performed chopping, and in 2007, a fan hit Arsenal's Cesc Fabregas with it. Chelsea subsequently banned fans from bringing bunches of celery into the stadium. 
 
 Senegalese parrots were also banned. This happened in the quarterfinals of a tournament between lower league teams in England when the referee blew his whistle to stop play. Fans, referees, and players panicked at the sudden sound of the whistle. In fact, the referee didn't blow the whistle at all, but rather a Senegalese parrot that perfectly replicated the sound of the referee's whistle.
 
A woman named Irene Kerrigan, who entered the stadium with her pet Senegalese parrot, was ejected for disrupting the game.
 
Pigs are also on the no-fly list. Animals are not allowed in the stadium, but this has actually happened in the Russian league. In May 2006, I snuck a show pig into a bag to watch a match between Spartak Moscow and Zenit St. Petersburg in Moscow. Once inside the stadium, the pig grunted and was ejected.