"Turkish football needs this," Turkish association deputy chairman Goksel Gumusdag said.
On  Tuesday, tens of thousands of women and children flocked to see  Fenerbahce play Manisaspor in Istanbul, many wearing the yellow and dark  blue shirts of Fenerbahce. The match, a 1-1 draw, had been scheduled to  be played in an empty stadium as punishment for unruly fan behavior.
The  association changed its rules this week, barring men from attending  games played by teams sanctioned for fan trouble. Instead, it allowed  women and children under 12 to watch for free -- although a few men were  in the crowd Tuesday.
"The  answer has been quite clear that the more families you have in the  stands, the better the atmosphere you get," Karen Espelund, the first  women's delegate appointed to the UEFA executive committee, said from a  UEFA meeting in Cyprus. "I think this has the potential of filling up  the stands, but it's definitely also a strategy of having a slightly  different type of atmosphere."
The  women certainly changed the tone at 50,000-seat Sukru Saracoglu  Stadium, greeting the visiting Manisaspor team with applause rather than  the usual jeers.
Even the players from both teams got involved, tossing flowers to the crowd before the match.
"It's  not always that you see so many women and children in one game," said  Fenerbahce captain Alex de Sousa, adding the memory of the night would  stay with him forever.
Outside  the stadium, men gathered and coordinated chants with the fans inside.  The men screamed "Yellow" outside, while the women responded with "Blue"  inside. After the match, some men waited for their wives and children  to come out of the stadium.
On Wednesday, Fenerbahce thanked the women who made their way to the stadium, and praised their understanding of the game.
"It  was a good indication of Turkish women's knowledge of football," said  Yasemin Mercil, a female member of Fenerbahce's board of directors. "The  women knew when to shout, when to protest. They blatantly showed that  it is not the women who don't know the offside rule."
Fenerbahce,  which could lose its league title from last season because of a  match-fixing scandal, was ordered to play two home matches without any  spectators after its fans stormed the field during a game against  Ukrainian champion Shakhtar Donetsk in July. That prompted the idea to  let in the women and children for free rather than have an empty  stadium.
"It's a very special decision for sure," Espelund said. "In this case, it obviously has worked."
AP Sports Writer Graham Dunbar in Geneva contributed to this report.
© Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights  reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or  redistributed.
 
 
 
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