The Star Malaysia

Sporting Lisbon in shock after horrific training ground attack

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Lisbon: A shocked Sporting Lisbon will play in Sunday’s Portuguese Cup final despite a horrific ordeal that saw a 50-strong gang of masked and hooded men brutally attack players and officials at training.

Wearing T-shirts bearing the club’s emblem, the mob invaded Sporting’s training ground on Tuesday and went on the rampage, terrorisin­g players and personnel and vandalisin­g dressing rooms.

Dutch internatio­nal Bas Dost, Sporting’s top scorer this season, required stitches to his neck. A photograph of his bloodied face appeared on social media.

“It was a distressin­g situation and we are all shocked,” the striker, with 27 league goals to his name this season, told Dutch news website Algemeen Dagblad.

“This is a drama for everyone, I am empty,” the 28-year-old added to Portuguese website Ojogo.

He had scored in Sunday’s 2-1 loss to Maritimo Funchal which left Sporting in third and missing out on Champions League football next season.

Argentina internatio­nal Marcos Acuna and Croatia’s Josip Misic

It was a distressin­g situation and we are all shocked. Bas Dost

were also assaulted in the raid on Sporting’s Alcochete training base in the Lisbon suburbs.

The team met their players’ union on Wednesday to discuss how to react and whether to pull out of Sunday’s Cup final against Desportivo das Aves.

A team statement later confirmed that despite their frightenin­g ordeal they would face Aves on Sunday.

“We are not in a physical or psychologi­cal condition to resume normal training immediatel­y,” the players said.

“But because the Cup final is a celebratio­n of Portuguese football, and also out of respect to our club, we will play in the final.”

According to the players’ union, some players are set to quit the club after this closing game of the season.

Portuguese police have made 23 arrests, according to the government.

Several hundred Sporting fans made their way to the team’s Alvalade stadium on Tuesday night to lend their support to their stricken team’s players and management.

Sporting issued a statement, decrying what it termed “acts of vandalism and the attacks on (our) athletes, coaches and profession­al staff.”

The Portuguese Primeira Liga said: “The perpetrato­rs of these incidents are not fans of football, they are criminals.”— AFP

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