Swansea City vs. Hull City Live Stream: Watch Online English Premier League UEFA Streaming EPL Match

Dec 09, 2013 03:10 PM EST

Swansea City and Hull City are going at in UEFA English Premier League play on Monday and comes after a wild weekend on the schedule that saw a number of tough results, including Arsenal pulling a draw with Everton and Chelsea losing their match in an upset in stunning fashion and now these teams meet up after losing to the Gunners and winning over Newcastle.

Swansea City got a victory at 3-0 on Wednesday against Newcastle and Hull City suffered a defeat at the hands of Arsenal in the league leaders of the table. Swansea is currently in 10th position on the table, while Hull City is at 12 and both will try to move up as Arsenal kept their lead while Chelsea fell down and Liverpool moved up.

Check here for the Premier league live coverage.

In World Cup news from Reuters.com: Shocking violence at a Brazilian championship match this weekend is not an indication of what can be expected when the South American country hosts the World Cup next year, FIFA said on Monday.

At least 30 people have been killed in incidents in and around Brazil's stadiums this year, one expert said, after three people were seriously injured when fans fought running battles at the Atletico Paranaense versus Vasco da Gama match.

Sunday's game on the final day of the season had to be halted for 70 minutes. Some players broke down in tears as they watched fans chase each other round the terraces, trading blows and hitting each other with home-made sticks and weapons.

"For a country that is hosting the World Cup next year this is very sad," said Alessandro, the Vasco goalkeeper. "The stadium isn't safe. From what we can see the fans aren't segregated."

A police helicopter landed on the pitch to ferry one unconscious fan to hospital. The game was eventually restarted and Atletico won 5-1, relegating Vasco to the second division.

The fighting brought back memories of the blackest days of European football in the 1980s and it was another graphic sign that football violence is worsening in Brazil.

"Something has changed, and for the worse," said Mauricio Murad, a Rio de Janeiro sociologist who wrote the book 'How To Understand Football Violence'.

"Over the last five or six years violence inside stadiums was under control and it was only bad outside the grounds. What we've seen over the last few weekends is a return to violence inside the stadiums."

Brazil's Sports Ministry called for swift punishment for hooligans. In a statement it said it would consult with public prosecutors and police chiefs over future policing of matches.

There were no police inside the Arena Joinville where the game took place yesterday because the home side had opted to use private security guards.

President Dilma Rousseff condemned the troublemakers and called for a special police station to be set up to deal with football-related incidents.

However, Murad said authorities have long known about the problem and had not taken any serious action. At least 30 people have been killed in and around stadiums this year in Brazil, seven more than last year, he said.

Murad blamed organized fan groups, many of whom are sponsored by clubs, for much of the trouble.

Lance, Brazil's best-selling sports newspaper, said 234 had been killed in football violence since 1988. The paper recently called the organized fan groups "gangsters dressed up as football fans" and blamed the authorities for not doing more.

The paper suggested police take simple steps such as making known hooligans report to police stations on match days, a tactic that was successful in England.

"The problem is not the lack of laws but the lack of commitment and rigor shown by authorities in upholding the laws that exist," the paper said in a front-page editorial in October after fans fought with police at the Sao Paulo derby between Sao Paulo and Corinthians.

On Monday, the paper printed the colorful World Cup logo in black and white. The tournament will be held in South America next year for the first time since 1978.

FIFA was quick to tell fans they should not fear violence at next year's tournament that will be held in 12 new or totally modernized stadiums across the country.

HEAVY SECURITY

Unlike Sunday's game, which was organized by local clubs under the auspices of the Brazilian Football Confederation, World Cup matches are organized by FIFA and will count on heavy security both inside and outside the stadium.

In addition, only eight percent of tickets for each match go directly to the fans of the teams involved.

"For the 2014 FIFA World Cup a very comprehensive security concept is in place in an integrated operation between private and public security authorities to ensure the safety for fans, players and any other stakeholder involved in the event," FIFA said in a statement.

"The concept has worked very well during the FIFA Confederations Cup and is built on models used at previous FIFA World Cups." The Confederations Cup took place in Brazil this year.

The worry for Brazilians is not just what will happen during the World Cup, but also what will happen afterwards. Authorities say the new stadiums will produce a more sophisticated supporter who will watch the match in safer, more comfortable surroundings.

Yet some of the most depressing incidents this year took place in stadiums built for the World Cup. Fans from Vasco and Corinthians battled each other and police at the Mane Garrincha stadium in Brasilia in August, just three months after Brazil opened the Confederations Cup at the stadium.

"If things change, it is not because we have new stadiums but because we have policies in place designed to prevent, repress and educate," said Murad. "That's the only way that things are going to change."

(Reuters)

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