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The late 1960s saw the rise fan violence and football hooliganism throughout England; Millwall was one of several English teams that saw elements of hooliganism develop within its fanbase. The club's fans created the chant "No one likes us, we don't care" in response to sustained criticism of their behaviour from the press and media, who perpetuated an image of them as violent hooligans. It originated as a football chant sung by supporters of the English association football club Millwall in the late 1970s. It is sung to the tune of (We Are) Sailing by Rod Stewart. It has since been adopted by supporters of several different sports teams around the world. The chant reached a worldwide audience when Millwall reached the 2004 FA Cup Final. Other memorable songs you will find in the video are "Rocking all over the world" and "Let 'em come".
0:00-0:15 INTRO
0:15-0:38 NO ONE LIKES US
0:38-1:23 ROCKING ALL OVER THE WORLD
1:23-2:45 LET 'EM COME
2:45-3:00 HELLO, HELLO WE ARE
3:01-3:29 WE'RE THE FAMOUS MILLWALL
3:29-3:51 MIIIIIIILLLLL
3:52-4:08 YOU'LL NEVER BEAT MILLWALL
4:09-4:20 WHAT THE F**KING
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Disclaimer : This video was created to show the audience one of the sides of the 'Casual' subculture that appeared in 1970s England. 'CULTURE DEALER' does not own the video clips or the music, i.e. all rights are reserved to their respective owners. If the owner/s would like to get the music or video clips removed, I have no problem in doing so. (There is no negative impact on the original content)
The original firm associated with Millwall was known as F-Troop.
The hooligan firm still exists today. However, the firm is not as large as it was at its height in the 1980s. This is due in part to ex-Millwall chairman Theo Paphitis’ introduction of a membership scheme following the events outside The New Den on the evening of the Birmingham City play off semi-final in May 2002. Sergeant Russell Lamb of the Metropolitan Police Service, a veteran of the May Day and Poll Tax riots, described this as the worst violence he had ever experienced.