The Irish Mail on Sunday

CHELSEA EMBROILED IN RACISM CONTROVERS­Y

- By Joe Bernstein

A RACIST culture existed at Chelsea years before the period of alleged abuse mentioned in testimony from three youth-team members against former coaches Gwyn Williams and Graham Rix, according to one ex-player.

Former Wales internatio­nal Nathan Blake, who went on to have a successful career with eight different clubs, gave a harrowing account of the treatment he suffered as an apprentice before leaving the club at the age of 17.

‘It was the worst period of my life,’ says Blake. ‘I couldn’t believe what was happening. Every other word was c**n or n **** r. I got it all the time in training, even when I washed the kit. Black players were a new thing to Chelsea.

‘So the racist comments carried on. There was no point me asking staff to do something about it — they were joining in. Just because I didn’t laugh when they told jokes about black people I was seen as having a chip on my shoulder. One member of staff even took the black players aside and told us he didn’t like our haircuts.’

Blake, now 45, revealed his heartache in an interview in the 1990s. His concerns were not further publicised at the time but the memories came flooding back after last week’s allegation­s about what is said to have happened at Chelsea in the 1990s, including claims that Rix threw a cup of coffee over one of the players, allegedly left another with a bloodied nose after throwing a football at him, and that he and Williams addressed players with racial slurs.

On behalf of Rix and Williams, lawyer Eddie Johns said: ‘Our clients deny all and any allegation­s of racial or other abuse. These allegation­s were the subject of a thorough investigat­ion by specialist officers of the Metropolit­an Police Service [who] did not consider there was sufficient evidence even to report it to the Crown Prosecutio­n Service.’

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