

A Nottingham Forest fan alleged to have been stamped on by Sheffield United player Oli McBurnie has claimed he was singled out and attacked after telling the star: âYouâre shit at football, Iâm better than you.â
George Brinkley told Nottingham Magistratesâ Court he genuinely feared for his life after being put in a headlock by McBurnieâs team-mate, Rhian Brewster, during a pitch invasion following last seasonâs Championship play-off semi-final at the City Ground.
Prosecutors claim Scotland international McBurnie, who was wearing a protective boot over an injury, suffered âa loss of temper and controlâ as 27-year-old Mr Brinkley celebrated Forestâs penalty shoot-out win on May 17.
McBurnie, 26, of Knaresborough, North Yorkshire, who has scored nine goals in 18 games this season, denies a single charge of assault by beating, claiming he lost his balance after going to the aid of a team-mate.
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After social media footage alleged to show the assault was played to the court on Wednesday, Mr Brinkley said he invaded the pitch from the Peter Taylor Stand because of the âadrenalineâ of Forest reaching a Wembley final.
Giving his account to a district judge via a video-link to a witness room, Mr Brinkley said he had been sitting near the dug-out, in the second row of the stand, for the match.
He told the court: âAt half-time I spoke to a couple of (United) players.
âI said âOli McBurnie you are shit at football, I am better than you and Iâm not a proâ.â
Mr Brinkley said former Swansea City and Barnsley player McBurnie had heard the comment, adding: âHe responded to me, laughing, and said âYou look like you areâ.
âI said âEnjoy the Championship next seasonâ. I had a smile on my face. Hopefully because I was joking, it came across in that way.
âItâs just a bit of banter, isnât it?â
I did genuinely fear for my life because I have had head injuries in the past and my head is very sensitive
George Brinkley
Asked by prosecutor Simon Jones how McBurnie had reacted, Mr Brinkley said: âHe had a grin on his face â quite patronising⦠looking down on me.â
Describing what he claims happened moments after Forestâs 3-2 penalty shoot-out win, Mr Brinkley told the court: âI celebrated with the two people directly behind me. I jumped over the advertising boards â I had that much adrenaline going through me.â
After joining other fans in hugging Forest defender Steve Cook, Mr Brinkley said, he saw that United forward Billy Sharp had a nose bleed.
âMy instant reaction was shock,â the supporter added. âI didnât know how it had happened.â
Invited to tell the district judge what happened next, Mr Brinkley said: âI got headlocked to the ground. I was laid on my back.
âOli McBurnie stamped on me once, stamped on me twice, then went to stamp on me for a third time, but then got pulled away.
âMy instant reaction was to kick him but I didnât because I knew what the repercussions would be.â
The alleged victim said he knew his assailant was McBurnie because he was the only person he had seen wearing a protective boot.
âI couldnât get up because of the people around me,â he said. âI felt that I was going to get my head kicked in.
âI did genuinely fear for my life because I have had head injuries in the past and my head is very sensitive.â
The court heard that Mr Brinkley did not realise it was Brewster who had put him a headlock until he saw social media footage of the incident.
During cross-examination by McBurnieâs barrister, Lisa Judge, Mr Brinkley was asked if he was suggesting that the striker had selected him out of a crowd of hundreds and assaulted him âpurely because you had said he was a shit footballerâ.
Ms Judge asked: âHe (McBurnie) said âAha, thatâs the man who said I was a shit footballer, I am going to stamp on him?'â
Mr Brinkley answered: âI believe so.â
Later in his evidence, Mr Brinkley denied his claims of assault were âbrought about by a desire for compensationâ.
He was also warned to be respectful after addressing Ms Judge as âbabesâ and accusing her of trying to âsugar coatâ what had happened.
He told the court: âThe video doesnât lieâ, before being asked whether his claims of being stamped on were âmade-up fantasyâ.
Mr Brinkley answered: âNo itâs not â not at all.â
The trial has been told McBurnie maintains that he did not make any physical contact with Mr Brinkley.
In a statement to police shortly after the incident, the player also said he had lost his balance slightly after being out injured for several weeks.
His statement added: âMy intention at all times was in fact to make sure that I did not make any such contact with him.â
The second witness in the trial was a teenage boy who filmed the alleged assault while on the playing surface.
The youth, who cannot be identified because of his age, admitted he had made an error in his initial statement to police by saying McBurnie, rather than Brewster, had taken Mr Brinkley to the ground.
Giving his evidence via videolink from a witness suite, the boy told the court McBurnie had âchargedâ at the alleged victim with an aggressive look on his face.
âHe was very angry by the look on his face,â he told the court. âItâs quite obvious that he was stomped on.â
Prosecutors dropped a common assault charge brought against Brewster in July.
The trial continues.