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Sep. 09, 2024
Wales bucket hat - Wikipedia
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Wales football fans wearing bucket hats
The Wales bucket hat (Welsh: het bwced Cymru)[1] is a colourful bucket hat worn by supporters particularly of the Wales national football team.[2] The hat was originally red, yellow and green, designed by Spirit of '58. It initially gained wide popularity during Wales's participation in the UEFA Euro championships.[3] Other designs of the bucket hat have subsequently become available. Giant versions of the bucket hats were placed in city centres around Wales during the FIFA World Cup.
Background
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Until , Wales had not qualified for the football World Cup tournament since , where they had lost in the quarter finals to the eventual winners, Brazil.[4] The team subsequently had little success, with a low point being reached in the s when only 11 fans travelled to Georgia and then Finland to watch their team play.[2] However, by they had found new confidence, qualifying for the EURO championships, reaching the semi-finals and receiving an 'outstanding contribution' award from UEFA.[2]
Spirit of '58[
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North Wales football fan, Tim Williams, had been following the Wales national team across Europe and noticed that the only items available for fans to wear were the replica Wales football kits. In he created a company in his spare time, Spirit of '58, and began designing and distributing alternative memorabilia, shirts and the red, yellow and green bucket hat.[4] He says the colourful hat was designed to introduce a bit of fun and was inspired by a favourite band, the Stone Roses.[4] Others have pointed out the yellow is the colour of the daffodil[4] (a national symbol of Wales). The merchandise celebrated Wales's new 'golden generation' of football players and renewed international success.[3] When Wales qualified for the European Championship in , business was so brisk Williams began working for his business full time.[4] Williams sells the hats online or from his shop in Bala.[5][6]
Popularity
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Giant bucket hat sculpture (Nov ) in The Hayes, CardiffThe red, yellow and green bucket hat was often seen at overseas Wales football matches,[7] but it first came to widespread popularity during the European football championship, where it became strongly associated with Wales supporters.[3][8]
The hats were again popular around Wales's qualification for the European Championships.[5]
World Cup
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Wales qualified for the FIFA World Cup in Qatar by beating Ukraine on 5 June . Sky Sports television pundits (and former Wales internationals) Danny Gabbidon and Ashley Williams immediately donned Wales bucket hats live on-air as the final whistle of the game was blown.[4][9]
The bucket hat became part of the Football Association of Wales's (FAW) strategy of improving the profile of Welsh football.[10] Five 10-foot (3.0 m) tall illuminated bucket hats were installed as public art in city and town centres across Wales, including Cardiff, Swansea, Bangor, Wrexham and Aberystwyth.[10] A giant red Wales bucket hat was installed in Doha and unveiled by the FAW the day before the first Wales football match, with Wales first minister, Mark Drakeford, in attendance.[11] BBC Wales took a large inflatable version of the Wales bucket hat on tour through Wales, including the Rhondda, Baglan, Builth Wells and Bangor.[12]
On 21 November, fans and FAW staff, including former Welsh international football captain Laura McAllister, were told by stadium stewards to remove their rainbow bucket hats before they entered Doha's Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium for Wales's opening match against the United States. The rainbow coloured version was designed to show support for the LGBTQ+ community.[13] In response to the incident the Football Association of Wales said that they were "extremely disappointed" by the reports and said that they would address the issue with FIFA.[13] The rainbow hats were being made by a company based in Llanelli, RCS Teamwear, in collaboration with the FAW.[14]
References
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Laura McAllister told to remove rainbow bucket hat
Qatar World Cup: Laura McAllister told to remove rainbow bucket hat
Laura McAllister said it was important to confront a lack of tolerance
Laura McAllister, a gay woman and past Fifa Council candidate, said she was told she could not wear the hat for Wales' opener against the USA.
Ms McAllister said she then smuggled the hat into the stadium.
Fifa - world football's governing body, which is responsible for the tournament - has been asked to comment.
The "rainbow wall" version of Welsh fan hats shows support for the LGBTQ+ community.
The Football Association of Wales (FAW) said it was "extremely disappointed" by reports that supporters and FAW staff members were asked to remove and discard their Rainbow Wall bucket hats before entry to the Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium.
"The FAW has collated information on these alleged incidents and will be addressing this matter directly with Fifa today (Tuesday)," it said.
A Welsh government minister said it was seeking "urgent clarification that rainbow bucket hats or laces or T-shirts are not banned from stadia".
'Heavy handed'
Video footage taken of the incident appears to show officers telling her to remove the hat.
"It was pretty heavy handed... It was quite intimidating," Ms McAllister told BBC Breakfast.
"I'm experienced enough to cope with it but if it had been a young person, a young girl who hadn't been prepared for that, it would have been a very unpleasant and intimidating experience.
"As we were queuing to go into the stadium we'd heard that there'd been issues with some people in front of us who'd been asked to take off their hats to go into the stadium.
"So fortunately a few of us further back in the queue knew what was likely to happen," she said.
"And sure enough as we went through security we were told by some of the stewards that we couldn't enter the stadium wearing our rainbow hats."
She said "right away" a few officials gathered round her and told her that she had to take the hat off.
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"We were told it was a regulation - clearly I work in football, I work with Uefa, so I know the regulations - so I asked which regulation it applied to and we weren't told that."
Ms McAllister said the hat was "snuck" into the stadium after the incident.
"I certainly wasn't going to give it up. It's an important symbol of everything that we're about in Welsh football at the moment and hopefully the wider nation.
It comes after national team captains, including Wales' Gareth Bale, were told not to wear One Love armbands. Homosexuality is illegal in Qatar.
"We're here to live our own values as a nation and with Wales being in the World Cup for the first time in six decades, it's important to show what our country's all about, and that is about inclusion and tolerance and diversity," Ms McAllister said.
Laura McAllister said the response she faced from security was "heavy handed"
The incident comes despite previous assurances that fans would be allowed to wear them.
"We need to speak for the LGBT people at home who didn't feel able to come to Doha because of the regime and its position on gay rights," Ms McAllister said.
"We're all horribly compromised by being here so make no mistake, so by being here we also need to make sure we don't compromise on our values."
She stressed that Fifa had said it would allow the rainbow symbol in the stadium.
Ex-Wales footballer Laura McAllister says Qatari security asked her to remove a "rainbow wall" bucket cap
"It was the complete opposite of that," she said. "It was contrary to everything we were being told to expect really, and that was what was so disappointing."
"If Fifa calls for an inclusive World Cup then we need to include everyone in that," she added.
A group of her friends had rainbow wrist bands removed, she said, and another friend had his rainbow laces removed from his shoes.
The bucket hat has become the must-have accessory for Wales fans over the past decade.
Tracy Brown
Tracy Brown, pictured (second from left) with fellow members of Rainbow Wall, Wales' LGBTQ+ supporters' group
The yellow, green and red hats are worn in their thousands by the so-called Red Wall, with a rainbow version also produced.
Tracy Brown from Rainbow Wall, Wales' LGBTQ+ supporters' group, told BBC Radio Wales Breakfast she was not surprised fans were asked to remove the hats.
"We were all anticipating that this would actually happen," she said.
"Fifa have a habit of going back on their word. That started a couple of days before with the drinking issues within stadiums."
She said the threat of sanctions for individual players wearing OneLove arm bands, which promote diversity and inclusion, had put everyone in a "difficult situation".
"Obviously LGBTQ+ groups were not happy with that decision and yes, we have done a lot of work with the FAW [Football Association Wales] and will continue to do work. But now we have to work out another way to be vocal for discrimination as a whole," Ms Brown said.
"This is not just about the rainbow wall, this is about discrimination for everybody. This is about all of our human rights."
Meanwhile, an American journalist, Grant Wahl, said in a Tweet he was stopped for half an hour by security for wearing a rainbow-themed t-shirt.
He was later allowed to enter the stadium perimeter, he added.
"Finally a commander came through, said I could go through, and apologised," he told the BBC.
Rainbow laces
Wales' Rural Affairs Minister Lesley Griffiths told the Senedd that she also knew "somebody in Qatar last night that was asked to take their rainbow laces out of their trainers".
Ms Griffiths was answering First Ministers Questions while Mark Drakford returns from watching the Wales-USA game.
Answering a question from Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price, she said the Welsh government had been "in dialogue" with the British embassy in Doha seeking "urgent clarification that rainbow bucket hats or laces or T-shirts are not banned from stadia, and I very much hope we won't see a repeat of that".
UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said he raised issues about "being a welcoming World Cup host" with Qatar during a visit for the start of the tournament, after reports that fans wearing rainbow clothing had faced problems.
"I've just returned from Qatar. We raised the issues of being a welcoming host nation and the Qataris are very keen to do so," he said.
"My duty is to make sure that the English and Welsh fans that are in Qatar to enjoy the football are able to do so: enjoy themselves, be themselves, and be safe and secure whilst they're doing it."
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