Marlborough Express

EPL under fire as racism row simmers

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When Fifa asked every competitio­n to enforce a three-step procedure in response to racism at matches, the English Premier League did not follow the advice.

That disregard of the protocols set out by Fifa secretary general Fatma Samoura in a July letter to every national associatio­n has created confusion as English football reels from another marquee game being tarnished by racism.

Tottenham have asked the Premier League to clarify the procedures it follows in the wake of the fallout from Chelsea defender Antonio Rudiger reporting being subjected to monkey noises from the home fans in Monday’s London derby.

Rudiger’s complaint was swiftly followed by a warning announceme­nt to more than 61,000 fans in the Tottenham stadium: ‘‘Racist behaviour among spectators is interferin­g with the game.’’

By ordering the announceme­nt, referee Anthony Taylor was clearly following the first step of the the Fifa and Uefa anti-racism protocol, which then allows the suspension of the game and eventual abandonmen­t if abuse continues.

But the Premier League has a more involved six-step reaction plan that does not provide the clarity offered by the instructio­ns provided by Fifa and European body Uefa for referees to follow.

The priority for the Premier League is ensuring ‘‘the match is not unduly interrupte­d,’’ which leads to the league not demanding referees seek an in-stadium warning to fans to cease the racism. The first step after being informed of racism in the Premier League is instead to ask the fourth official to inform security authoritie­s, who should seek out the perpetrato­rs.

So, when three warnings were issued at Tottenham at 10-minute intervals, there was confusion not just for television viewers worldwide and experts who believed the game could be abandoned because of repeated abuse but also the home team.

‘‘When the incident was conveyed to the referee Anthony Taylor, he took the decision to call for the implementa­tion of stage 1 of the Uefa protocol — rather than the Premier League protocol — and asked for an announceme­nt to be made, as well as requesting a further announceme­nt which created a misconcept­ion that any issue was on-going,’’ Tottenham said in a statement.

‘‘The Premier League protocol differs from Uefa protocol in that it does not call for an announceme­nt rather that the individual(s) be dealt with by the safety team in the first instance.’’

Fifa made clear in the letter on July 25 to football officials worldwide they should follow the three-step procedure, highlighti­ng that it was a message to ‘‘all member associatio­ns, leagues, clubs and disciplina­ry bodies.’’

Fifa did not respond to a question about the Premier League not following its protocols that were first enforced by the governing body at the 2017 Confederat­ions Cup in Russia.

One German internatio­nal recounted how simple and effective the protocol was by recounting his own experience­s of racism while playing club football at the time in Italy for AC Milan: Rudiger.

‘‘The referee should speak to the stadium announcer if racism is happening in the stadium, then I think a warning is reasonable,’’ Rudiger said. ‘‘If it still doesn’t stop then I think it’s good that the game is aborted.’’

While Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho called for wider societal action to stamp out racism at football, he also complained about an unflatteri­ng song aimed at him by Chelsea fans.

‘‘I think it was not a nice song and nobody speaks about it,’’ said Mourinho, who led Chelsea to three Premier League titles across two spells in charge. AP

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