Miami Herald

Neville apologizes for refs rant, calling it ‘a one-off’

- BY MICHELLE KAUFMAN mkaufman@miamiheral­d.com Michelle Kaufman: 305-376-3438, @kaufsports

Inter Miami coach Phil Neville opened his Thursday news conference with an explanatio­n and apology for his weekend rant about MLS officiatin­g, which drew a fine from the league.

“After the game I said the things that I said in the emotions of losing a really important game and in terms of feelings of the last two or three games, feeling a bit hard done by a couple of decisions that didn’t go our way,” Neville said. “I used the wrong terminolog­y to describe how I felt.”

Neville said he has been very supportive of referees since he joined MLS and reiterated that after Saturday’s 1-0 loss to the New York Red Bulls he praised the referee but was upset about video review calls and chose to stick up for his team and club.

“I used the wrong word — cheat — which should never be used towards officials or in games of football,” he said. “I had really good dialogue with both MLS and the PRO referees [organizati­on] in terms of the decisions, my behavior, the word used, and the respect that is needed from both sides, and obviously my assurance that this was just a one-off.”

He said as a new coach in the league he came out of the conversati­ons having learned a lot.

“When you’re a young manager you shoot from the hip sometimes and maybe Saturday I did do that and it was a big learning curve for me in terms of the words I used,” he said. “I really want to move on from it and nip it in the bud.”

Neville’s latest comments come a day after the Profession­al Soccer Referees Associatio­n, which represents more than 200 officials in North America, e-mailed a letter to the coach and MLS commission­er Don Garber saying their members were “outraged” by Neville’s postgame comments.

The organizati­on was also dissatisfi­ed with the league’s response.

“The PSRA is very disappoint­ed both in Mr.

Neville’s comments and behavior, which we find to be unprofessi­onal and reprehensi­ble, and also in the outcome from commission­er Garber,” Steve Taylor, executive director of the PSRA, told the Miami Herald on Wednesday.

Inter Miami is on the road Saturday against the Columbus Crew (6 p.m., My33, CW34, Inter Miami app). The team is desperate to end a five-game losing streak and keep its playoff hopes alive. Miami is in 11th place in the Eastern Conference, eight points shy of the final playoff spot with six games to go.

Miami will be missing key players, as it has the past several games.

Defenders Nico Figal (calf) and Kieran Gibbs (hamstring) will miss the game and may be ready to return for the home game against Toronto next Wednesday.

Winger Brek Shea has a back strain, missed practice the past few days and is questionab­le. Midfielder Victor Ulloa returned to full training Thursday, but his status for the game is unknown.

 ?? ?? Phil Neville
Phil Neville

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States