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Away Days | Travel, Movement, and the Geography of Football Culture

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Away days are one of the purest expressions of football culture. They are built around movement – leaving home, travelling across the country or continent, and temporarily occupying another place for the sake of the game. The match is only part of the experience. The journey and who you travel with is what defines it.

England Fans Italia 90 © Robert Davro
England and Scotland fans travel by train during Italia 90 © Robert Davro

Travel creates routine and ritual. Early trains, motorway service stations, pub stops, walking routes to unfamiliar grounds. Over time, these journeys become embedded in personal and collective memory. Certain stations, streets, and pubs become tied to specific matches and seasons.

Photographically, away days are about transition. Platforms, carriage interiors, roadside stops, ticket queues, unfamiliar stadium approaches. The environment is constantly changing, but the group remains the same. This contrast between movement and belonging is central to the visual story.

Middlesborough Fans at Boundary Park
Middlesborough Fans at Oldham’s Boundary Park. Lower Block Edition – Going to the Match © Richard Davis
Newcastle United fans, St James' Park. Toon Army 1996
Newcastle United fans away at Blackburn Rovers. Lower Block Edition – Toon Army 1996 © Keith Pattison
Blades 1989-90, Sheffield United, Bramall Lane. © Bill Stephenson
Sheffield United fans travel by coach for an away fixture. Lower Block Edition – Blades 1989-90 © Bill Stephenson
‘A Casual Look: A Photodiary of Football Fans, 1980s to 2001’ by Lorne Brown and Nick Harvey.
Brighton fans at Thornton Heath station, on their way to Selhurst Park. © A Casual Look
Port Vale, And You'll Never Know photo zine, Conrad Tracy
Vale fans in pub on an away day. Lower Block Edition – And You’ll Never Know © Conrad Tracy

Clothing, bags, scarves, and posture all change slightly on away days. There is a sense of purpose and awareness that differs from home matches. People move differently, gather differently, observe their surroundings differently. The atmosphere is shaped as much by travel as by football.

Away support also creates temporary communities. Groups occupy pubs, train carriages, and sections of cities for a few hours, then disappear again. These moments are temporary but intense, which is why they are so important to document.

Lower Block approaches away days as part of football’s cultural geography – mapping the movement, routines, and environments that supporters pass through. The culture of the game is not only found at the stadium, but in the journeys that lead to it.

Lower Block partners with photographers, brands, galleries, and cultural institutions to document football culture with integrity. For consultancy, archive research, or collaborative editorial projects, read more abut our services and how to get in touch.

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