Uruguay coach Marcelo Bielsa thinks his players deserve an apology, not sanctions, for going into the stands at Bank of America Stadium and participating in a fight with Colombia fans following his team’s 1-0 Copa America semifinal loss.
An angry Bielsa criticised tournament organisers for not doing enough to protect the families of players seated behind the Uruguay bench and he justified players taking matters into their own hands to protect their loved ones.
“We are in the United States, the country of security,” Bielsa said through an interpreter during an emotional 45-minute news conference Friday.
CONMEBOL, South American soccer’s governing body, said on Thursday its disciplinary committee opened an investigation.
“It is unacceptable that an incident like this turns passion into violence,” the federation said in a statement.
Asked if he feared sanctions for his team, Bielsa grew irate.
“The sanction does not have to be for the footballers, but for those who forced them to act like this,” Bielsa said.
Uruguay had the option of seating families in luxury boxes instead of in the crowd.
The team returns to the same venue for Saturday night’s third-place game against Canada. While the crowd is expected to be more subdued, the same level of security is planned.
A raucous crowd of more than 70,000 the vast majority of whom were wearing Colombia’s colours attended the match on Wednesday night at the downtown Charlotte stadium, home of the NFL’s Carolina Panthers and Charlotte FC.
There were only a few small patches of Uruguay fans in the crowd at the start of the game, many of them behind the team’s bench.
After an emotional and physical game that included seven yellow cards and one red, a fight broke out in the stands and drinks were thrown. Shoving and punches ensued. The melee grew in terms of the magnitude of people involved before more than a dozen Uruguay players, including Darwin Nez, climbed a small set of portable stairs into the crowd.
Bielsa said not enough precautions were in place and an emergency exit path for Uruguay fans was not provided. Many in the Uruguayan soccer association delegation got away from the fighting by climbing down onto the playing field while Mecklenburg County Police and security restored order as the stadium was cleared.
The melee in the stands lasted more than five minutes.
At one point during the news conference, Bielsa got into a heated exchange with a reporter who wound up leaving halfway through.
“You should have asked me if we have received an apology, not if I fear sanctions,” Bielsa shouted.
Bielsa said he didn’t plan to talk about the incident but couldn’t hold back.
“I am very afraid of sports revenge,” Bielsa said.
Sebastin Cceres was the latest Uruguay player to express concern over how the events unfolded.
“What happened after the game is something that anyone would have done,” Cceres said.
“I went up to check that my family was OK and I tried to take a teammate with me so that it wouldn’t continue.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
First Published: Jul 13 2024 | 1:52 PM IST