Residents around Fratton Park have jokingly claimed that even the local seagulls are refusing to fly over Portsmouth’s famous stadium after the electric atmosphere created by Pompey supporters during the club’s dramatic Championship survival push.
Fans packed into Fratton Park throughout the final weeks of the season, producing deafening noise levels as Portsmouth battled to secure their place in the division. The Fratton End in particular became the centre of attention, with chants reportedly echoing across the south coast long after full-time.
According to amused locals, the city’s famous seagulls have now “changed flight paths completely” to avoid matchday chaos.
“One flew over during the warm-up and immediately turned back towards Southsea,” joked one supporter outside the ground. “By half-time they were nowhere to be seen.”
Social media was flooded with clips of bouncing crowds, smoke-filled celebrations and thunderous chants after Portsmouth’s crucial home victories, with some fans even claiming windows shook in nearby streets whenever Pompey scored.
The club’s survival fight transformed Fratton Park into one of the loudest grounds in the Championship, earning praise from pundits and rival supporters alike. Even opposition managers admitted the atmosphere played a major role in Portsmouth’s late-season resurgence.
Local birdwatching groups, meanwhile, have denied reports of an “official seagull boycott,” although one member humorously admitted:
“If I was a seagull trying to relax, I probably wouldn’t fly over the Fratton End either.”
Portsmouth supporters, however, see the story as another sign that the famous Fratton Park atmosphere remains one of English football’s most unique experiences.
As one fan proudly declared:
“Opposition teams can leave if they want… but now even the birds can’t handle it.”











