Two shot after Raiders-49ers game

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Two shot after Raiders-49ers game
Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO -- A man wearing a shirt slamming the San Francisco 49ers was seriously wounded as gunfire erupted in the parking lot after the team's NFL preseason game, while another man sustained lesser injuries in an earlier shooting, police said.

The violence occurred after the 49ers' 17-3 victory Saturday night over the Oakland Raiders at Candlestick Park, police Sgt. Michael Andraychak said.

A 24-year-old man was treated at San Francisco General Hospital for life-threatening injuries, and a 20-year-old man was hospitalized with less serious wounds, Andraychack told The Associated Press.

Their names were not released.

The violence comes months after a San Francisco Giants fan was severely beaten by two men in Los Angeles Dodgers gear outside Dodger Stadium after the teams' season opener March 31. Two suspects have been charged in the case.

Police Sgt. Frank Harrell said that in Saturday's attack the 24-year-old man, who was wearing a T-shirt referring to the 49ers with an obscenity, was shot two to four times in the stomach, according to reports in the Oakland Tribune and the San Francisco Chronicle. He drove his truck to a gate and stumbled to security, Harrell said.

The other man was shot before that in the parking lot and had superficial face injuries, Harrell said.

"We are treating it as separate shootings, but we believe they are related," Harrell told reporters outside the stadium.

Harrell said police took a man in a Raiders jersey off a party bus before it left the stadium and were calling him a suspect.

The suspect and the two victims had all attended the game, Harrell told the newspapers.

The 49ers issued a statement acknowledging the shootings and the investigation, but offering no further details.

In violence during the game, the Oakland Tribune reported that a 26-year-old San Rafael man was assaulted and knocked unconscious in a men's restroom. Police said he was hospitalized and a suspect was arrested. There was no immediate indication that it was connected to the postgame shootings.

In the Giants fan attack in March, the two men accused in the beating, Louie Sanchez, 28, and Marvin Norwood, 30, have pleaded not guilty.

Bryan Stow, a Santa Cruz paramedic, suffered severe brain injuries and remains hospitalized.

Stow's doctor said this month that he has made "significant improvement" despite a series of ups and downs since his near-fatal attack. He said Stow is awake, breathing on his own, can move slightly and has been able to interact with his family.

The attack drew widespread attention and focusing the spotlight on security at Dodger Stadium, and the intense rivalry among Dodgers and Giants fans.


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press
 
It's a shame that people feel the need to use a huge crowd and a sporting event to commit these type of crimes.

I know Cleveland Browns games have been a pretty violent place for a lot of years. The annual Steelers game in Cleveland is particularly violent. The Steelers have been the Browns biggest rival for as long as I can remember. There has also been a rivalry between the actual cities of Cleveland and Pittsburgh as well. A lot of it is tied to the steel industry, and more recently, the demise of the steel industry.

Pittsburgh seems to have the most fans in other cities. It's mostly bandwagon fans from when they've won Super Bowls. But, there are a lot of people around here who are Steelers fans just to be a-holes, and still others who just simply hate the Browns and so they root for their biggest rival.

There just doesn't seem to be much that angers a drunk Browns fan much more than seeing somebody wearing a Steelers jersey in Browns Stadium.

That being said, while there have certainly been a number of fights (and the occasional video footage of a Steelers fan, wearing a Steelers jersey, being urinated on after passing out in the restroom), I've never heard of anybody suffering life threatening injuries as a result of what happens there.

It seems like it may be simply a matter of time though as society seems to be circling the drain faster and faster every day.
 
It seems like it may be simply a matter of time though as society seems to be circling the drain faster and faster every day.
i don't think the violence is getting worse so much as we are getting almost instant reporting of the violence that does occur. i'd say cleveland's lack of extreme violence has more to do with luck than anything else. take drunk (usually) fans mixing it up and sooner or later it will go too far.
 
It's a shame that people feel the need to use a huge crowd and a sporting event to commit these type of crimes.

I know Cleveland Browns games have been a pretty violent place for a lot of years. The annual Steelers game in Cleveland is particularly violent. The Steelers have been the Browns biggest rival for as long as I can remember. There has also been a rivalry between the actual cities of Cleveland and Pittsburgh as well. A lot of it is tied to the steel industry, and more recently, the demise of the steel industry.

Pittsburgh seems to have the most fans in other cities. It's mostly bandwagon fans from when they've won Super Bowls. But, there are a lot of people around here who are Steelers fans just to be a-holes, and still others who just simply hate the Browns and so they root for their biggest rival.

There just doesn't seem to be much that angers a drunk Browns fan much more than seeing somebody wearing a Steelers jersey in Browns Stadium.

That being said, while there have certainly been a number of fights (and the occasional video footage of a Steelers fan, wearing a Steelers jersey, being urinated on after passing out in the restroom), I've never heard of anybody suffering life threatening injuries as a result of what happens there.

It seems like it may be simply a matter of time though as society seems to be circling the drain faster and faster every day.

Ain't that the truth......there's more Steelers bars around here than Redskins bars.

We have a lot of people who attended college in the Pittsburgh area here. But once they get out of college, they can't find a job in Pittsburgh and end up moving to the DMV.

I don't have a problem with them, most of my best friends are from Pittsburgh. But when football season comes around and, instead of just being a "Go Steelers" thing, it ends up being "Pittsburgh is the greatest city on earth and this is why Maryland sucks" thing.

I finally have gotten to where I tell the obnoxious ones who pull that line: "If Pittsburgh (a city with a much higher unemployment rate than the overall area which they live) is so much better than DC/Maryland/NoVA, why don't you move back there?"

I love sports, but I don't buy in to this whole "my city/state is better than your city/state because our football team is in the Super Bowl" thing. The quality of a sports team in no way measures the quality of life in an area.

KKFan's post emphasize this, how Philadelphia is so much better than Maryland because the Phillies are the better baseball team. I've been to Philadelphia and I, honestly, will never go back to or through that city.

And yes, this is something that seems almost exclusive to Pennsylvania sports fans.
 
i don't think the violence is getting worse so much as we are getting almost instant reporting of the violence that does occur. i'd say cleveland's lack of extreme violence has more to do with luck than anything else. take drunk (usually) fans mixing it up and sooner or later it will go too far.

I'm not sure I buy that arguement. In same cases, I can see that, but if people were getting shot at sporting events in the past, I'm sure we would have heard about it.
 
We have a lot of people who attended college in the Pittsburgh area here. But once they get out of college, they can't find a job in Pittsburgh and end up moving to the DMV.

I don't have a problem with them, most of my best friends are from Pittsburgh. But when football season comes around and, instead of just being a "Go Steelers" thing, it ends up being "Pittsburgh is the greatest city on earth and this is why Maryland sucks" thing.

I finally have gotten to where I tell the obnoxious ones who pull that line: "If Pittsburgh (a city with a much higher unemployment rate than the overall area which they live) is so much better than DC/Maryland/NoVA, why don't you move back there?"

I love sports, but I don't buy in to this whole "my city/state is better than your city/state because our football team is in the Super Bowl" thing. The quality of a sports team in no way measures the quality of life in an area.

KKFan's post emphasize this, how Philadelphia is so much better than Maryland because the Phillies are the better baseball team. I've been to Philadelphia and I, honestly, will never go back to or through that city.

And yes, this is something that seems almost exclusive to Pennsylvania sports fans.

PITTSBURGH RULES:D
 
I'm not sure I buy that arguement. In same cases, I can see that, but if people were getting shot at sporting events in the past, I'm sure we would have heard about it.

2003:
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/wire?id=1625187

2009:
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2009/04/fan-dies-after-fight-at-angels-game-.html

And here's a rather lengthy article from back in 99.
http://books.google.com/books?id=zz...gK#v=onepage&q=sport stadium violence&f=false

It' nothing new, unfortunately. We've heard about, you've just forgotten about it...
 
Ridiculous.

We have a lot of transplants here in AZ, who bring their allegiances to teams from elsewhere. Thankfully, with the Cards recent success, some of these people are not necessarily converting over, but at least partially have jumped on the Card's bandwagon. That's a good thing.
 
Ridiculous.

We have a lot of transplants here in AZ, who bring their allegiances to teams from elsewhere. Thankfully, with the Cards recent success, some of these people are not necessarily converting over, but at least partially have jumped on the Card's bandwagon. That's a good thing.

Yeah, I've heard that nobody in Arizona is from Arizona. I had a sister that moved to Mesa, Arizona several years ago. She lived there for about 12 years until her husband died and then she moved back here.
 
I lived in Fla for 2 and a half years. Think I knew only 2 or 3 people born there.
 
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