Los Angeles Times

Rule-breaking fans are costing Mexico, Serbia

- By Kevin Baxter kevin.baxter@latimes.com Twitter: @kbaxter11 The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

MOSCOW — The Mexican soccer federation was fined $10,000 for “discrimina­tory and insulting chants” during Sunday’s World Cup game against Germany.

FIFA also is considerin­g further action against fans who take part in the chant. A source told ESPN’s Rene Tovar that if the chants continue during matches, stadium security would begin to identify and remove the offending fans from the stands.

FIFA, under pressure to stop racist and anti-gay activity in Russia, is using a new anti-discrimina­tion procedure for the World Cup. Under the procedure, referees are instructed to stop the game for an announceme­nt on the publicaddr­ess system when discrimina­tory behavior is seen or heard. If it continues, the official can suspend the game, and then abandon it if the behavior persists.

That procedure was not used after the anti-gay slur was chanted Sunday.

Mexico striker Javier “Chicharito” Hernandez, one of the team’s most popular players, called on his country's fans to stop their anti-gay chanting.

“To all Mexican fans in the stadiums, don’t shout ‘pu --’ ,” Hernandez said on an Instagram post Wednesday. “Let’s not risk another sanction.”

The Mexican soccer federation has been repeatedly been fined over fans’ antigay chants, but the sanctions haven’t escalated. The federation and players previously have urged fans to stop the chant through public statements, but that has proven unsuccessf­ul.

Serbia also was fined $10,000 on Wednesday over its fans’ “offensive and political” World War II-era banner at the team’s 1-0 win over Costa Rica. Serbia has had problems with far-right nationalis­t fans in the past. Burger King sorry

Burger King has apologized for offering a lifetime supply of Whoppers to Russian women who get pregnant by World Cup players.

Critics assailed the offer, announced on Russian social media, as sexist and demeaning.

The announceme­nt was removed from Burger King’s social media accounts but was still circulatin­g among Russian social network users. It promised a reward of free burgers to women who get “the best football genes” and “ensure the success of the Russian team for generation­s to come.”

In a statement to the Associated Press, Burger King said, “We are sorry about the clearly offensive promotion that the team in Russia launched online.” It said the offer “does not reflect our brand or our values and we are taking steps to ensure this type of activity does not happen again.”

Ads in Russia often play on sexist stereotype­s, notably ads around sporting events like the World Cup..

Spirits high and low

The World Cup is in crisis. Russia is running dry.

Parts of the nation’s capital apparently were unprepared for the throngs of fans that have descended on its restaurant­s and pubs. As a result, supplies of beer and spirits such as vodka and whiskey are getting dangerousl­y low.

“We just didn't think they would only want beer,” a waiter at an upscale downtown restaurant told Reuters. “There are really a lot of people in Moscow ... and they are all drinking. It’s hot, and it’s football.”

That restaurant ran out of draft beer Monday; restocking is taking longer than usual because suppliers’ stocks are also running out.

Beer sales in Russia have fallen by around a third in recent years as duties have risen and rules have been tightened on sales and advertisin­g. Brewers had not been expecting a major reversal of the trend this year even with the World Cup.

Blatter sighting

Despite being banned by the organizati­on he headed for 17 years, former FIFA president Sepp Blatter attended Wednesday’s Portugal-Morocco game as a guest of Russian leader Vladimir Putin. Both did essential work to help ensure Russia won the tournament hosting rights eight years ago.

The public appearance is the first for Blatter, 82, outside his native Switzerlan­d since July 2015, two months after American and Swiss investigat­ors unsealed sweeping investigat­ions of corruption and bribery linked to internatio­nal soccer and marketing officials, including some FIFA vice presidents. He announced his intention to resign days later and is banned from official soccer duty until October 2021 for financial misconduct during his rule.

But the FIFA ban doesn’t prevent him from attending games. He also plans to see Brazil play Costa Rica in St. Petersburg on Friday.

Royal visit

Japanese princess Hisako Takamada attended her country’s upset win over Colombia on Tuesday in Saransk, becoming the first member of Japan’s royal family to visit Russia in more than a century. The princess is expected to attend Japan’s next two group stage matches against Senegal and Poland.

Russia and Japan have been locked in a territoria­l dispute over four contested islands, which the Soviet Union took at the end of World War II. It has kept the two nations from signing a peace treaty formally ending their hostilitie­s.

Concussion concern Noureddine Amrabat can’t remember his first World Cup match even though he was playing in it.

“Five, six hours, gone. Totally gone,” the Morocco midfielder said of the concussion sustained when he collided with Iranian midfielder Vahid Amiri in his team’s opening match. “When you think about it, it is a little bit scary.”

Five days after a clash of heads sent him to hospital for a brain scan and 24 hours of medical supervisio­n, he was back in the lineup Wednesday and played the entire match in a 1-0 loss to Portugal, in defiance of FIFA guidelines and his team doctor. The players’ union, FIFPro, was highly critical of what it called “yet another alarming example of a player being put in harm's way.”

Despite having expressed shock about Morocco’s initial pitch-side treatment of Amrabat’s concussion last Friday — the apparently dazed player was sprayed with water and slapped on the face, seemingly to wake him from his stupor — FIFA absolved itself of any responsibi­lity in the team decision to field him again so quickly.

Amrabat wore a padded skull cap in warmups and the first 15 minutes of the match but took it off because he was too hot.

After the initial concussion diagnosis, Morocco team doctor Abderrazak Hefti had said Amrabat wouldn’t even train for a week. But the player said he overruled the physician.

Jolted by criticism of concussion cases in 2014, FIFA introduced guidelines intended to provide players with better protection and give team doctors more authority. Moroccan officials appeared to ignore the guidelines. FIFPro said Amrabat shouldn’t have played again so soon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States