Buenos Aires (AFP) – The second leg of the Copa Libertadores final has been postponed for the second time in as many days following an attack on the Boca Juniors team bus by River Plate fans, organizers Conmebol said on Sunday.
The match between the Buenos Aires arch-rivals was due to be played at 2000 GMT on Sunday after initially being postponed on Saturday following the attack near River’s Monumental stadium, which left Boca players with injuries from shards of broken glass and suffering the effects of smoke inhalation.
“There isn’t a level playing field to play the final. That is why Conmebol have taken the decision to postpone the final of the Libertadores and to call a meeting of the presidents of both clubs in Asuncion to find a new date,” Conmebol president Alejandro Dominguez said.
South American football’s governing body took the decision after Boca called earlier on Sunday for a postponement and demanded that River face punishment, suggesting a series of measures including forfeiting the match.
“After the acts of violence suffered in the vicinity of the stadium, Boca… requests the suspension of the game, as well as the application of the corresponding sanctions provided in Article 18,” Boca said in a statement on their website.
Among the sanctions available under Conmebol’s Article 18 are “disqualification from competitions and exclusion from future competitions”.
It includes other options, including a fine, the deduction of points and being forced to play a game behind closed doors.
– ‘Shameful image’ –
Boca captain Pablo Perez and midfielder Gonzalo Lamardo required hospital treatment after River fans attacked the bus with pepper spray, sticks and stones.
“We’ve given a shameful image to the world,” lamented Dominguez.
The meeting between Boca president Daniel Angelici and his River counterpart Rodolfo D’Onofrio will take place on Tuesday at Conmebol’s headquarters in the Paraguayan capital Asuncion.
Saturday’s attack initially moved Conmebol to announce that kick-off had been delayed but Boca players emerged from their dressing room to talk to the press and insisted they were in no condition to play.
Veteran forward Carlos Tevez told Fox television: “They’re forcing us to play.”
Images had been circulating on Argentine television of players stepping off their team bus rubbing their eyes from the effects of the pepper spray, while others from inside their dressing room showed them being treated for cuts by doctors.
When Perez returned from hospital, he was wearing a large white bandage over his left eye.
from World Soccer Talk https://ift.tt/2FHF27c
No comments:
Post a Comment