The National - News

From Madrid 2004 to Sofia 2019 – little sign of progress with abuse of players

- IAN HAWKEY

The stakes were raised well before the first ball was kicked. The home team’s manager, indignant, had made remarks about the visiting nation’s issues with historic racism. “Look in the mirror if you want to see bigotry,” he suggested, in response to questions about recent racist incidents in his own workplace.

What followed, come matchday, seemed inevitable, the uncertaint­y only over how often, how loud the abuse and how flimsy the punishment­s would be. From start to finish the visiting team’s black players were booed and serenaded with monkey chants.

Blazered employees of the host federation claimed they heard nothing. The abused individual­s, stoically, continued to play, drawing some pride from maintainin­g their high profession­al standards through a toxic evening.

So it was on one of the England football team’s most dispiritin­g matches of this century. Yes, the hideous night in Madrid, against Spain, in the autumn of 2004. The one whose storyline eerily maps on to events fully 15 years later, in Sofia, Bulgaria on Monday.

For Luis Aragones, the combustibl­e Spain manager, who a month earlier had been recorded on camera using a racially offensive term, read Krasimir Balakov, the Bulgaria manager.

Where Aragones set the tone ahead of that 2004 clash with rambling references to British colonial shame, Balakov deflected from the fact his team had to host England in a partclosed section because of Uefa sanctions for racist incidents by saying: “I don’t think we have as big a problem as England do.”

For Ashley Cole and Shaun Wright-Phillips, singled out as punchbags for grunts and jeers at the Bernabeu 15 years ago, read Tyrone Mings, Raheem Sterling and Marcus Rashford, at the Vasil Levski arena.

Mings reports hearing the first monkey chants while warming up before kick-off of what was his England debut.

In between Madrid 2004 and Sofia 2019, there have been several vile nights of abuse, often in Eastern Europe, and many more involving teams other than England.

They follow a pattern: First the monkey chants, then the three wise monkeys.

There’s See No Evil: usually an official from the host FA, minimising all evidence of abuse.

There’s Hear No Evil: the coach who turns deaf, such as Balakov when he declared: “I personally did not hear the chanting.” Then there’s Speak no Evil: He’s the player who wearily turns the other cheek, moves on, toughs it out.

Most of them were there in Bulgaria, though not quite as many as in Madrid. The distinctio­ns are important, even if the scant progress made by the governors of the sport in tackling racism over 15 years remains plain.

Mings spoke out, felt empowered, early in the first half, to hear an insult and shoot out a glance at the fourth official in Sofia and ask: “Did you hear that?”

He did so in the knowledge that a system exists to act immediatel­y – Uefa’s three-step protocol – and that the referee would be obliged to honour it. Cole and Wright-Phillips never had that.

By half time in Sofia, some of the mechanisms of Uefa’s protocol had been triggered:

suspending play; the threat of abandoning the match broadcast via the public address system. A number of spectators, including some filmed having made Nazi gestures, left the stadium, apparently evicted.

But the insults did not cease through the uninterrup­ted second half, the game was not abandoned and England’s players did not exercise the option of walking off.

For that they have heard a mixture of congratula­tion – for their stoicism, their profession­al focus, in a 6-0 win – and also some disappoint­ment.

A threshold might have been crossed, a precedent set, if they, a high-profile national team, had left the field.

That next step remains, very probably, a necessary one. There is barely more faith in the establishe­d tools for tackling racist abuse than there was 15 years ago, when Fifa fined the Spanish Federation less than $90,000 (Dh 330,000) after the Bernabeu outrage.

In 2019, Uefa’s disciplina­ry committee will be armed with a basic tariff of a $55,000 fine and a one-match behindclos­ed-doors ban.

The English FA urges more “stringent” penalties. They do so with less pious righteousn­ess than 2004. Led by their dignified manager Gareth Southgate, English football’s leadership make a repeated point of stressing that racism is also an ongoing problem in their own country.

Nor are England’s footballer­s uniquely targeted when they go abroad. In 2019, black footballer­s, be they from Belgium, Brazil or Benin, travel to certain venues all but expecting some sort of abuse. They wonder only how often, and how loud.

 ?? PA ?? Play was halted twice in Sofia after Bulgaria fans targeted England players for racist abuse
PA Play was halted twice in Sofia after Bulgaria fans targeted England players for racist abuse

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