Nice, Marseille summoned to disciplinary hearing after abandoned match
The south stand of Nice's Allianz Riviera, where police said the trouble was concentrated, will be shut for the next four matches and anti-projectile netting erected in front of it.
Published : Aug 24, 2021 07:02 IST
Nice and Olympique de Marseille were summoned to a disciplinary hearing on Wednesday after its weekend Ligue 1 match had to be abandoned due to crowd trouble, the French professional league (LFP) said on Monday.
The south stand of Nice's Allianz Riviera, where police said the trouble was concentrated, will be shut for the next four matches and anti-projectile netting erected in front of it, the most senior interior ministry official for Nice and the surrounding region said in a statement.
"Those fans should clearly never have been allowed to get onto the pitch," French Sports Minister Roxana Maracineanu told BFM TV, adding that the trouble was all the more regrettable given how sports venues had been empty for several months due to COVID-19 health protocols.
"These incidents are an insult for sport and football."
The trouble was also condemned by Christian Estrosi, the mayor for the city of Nice.
"This violence is unacceptable. Sanctions must be taken by the French football league once they have found out who was responsible," he said.
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A judicial probe is under way into Sunday's trouble, added local French media reports. The game was abandoned in the 75th minute on Sunday after Marseille players clashed with home fans who pelted them with missiles and stormed onto the pitch.
Marseille midfielder Dimitri Payet was struck by a bottle thrown by Nice supporters as he was about to take a corner.
After he hurled the bottle back at them, a full-scale brawl ensued when some of the fans rushed onto the field.
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Players from Nice and Marseille retreated to the tunnel and play was held up for 90 minutes before referee Benoit Bastien declared the match abandoned.
Nice players had returned to the pitch shortly before the match was called off but Marseille's team refused to join them.
Nice president Jean-Pierre Rivere had appealed for calm over the stadium's public address system during the delay but angry Marseille players and staff refused to carry on.
Marseille president Pablo Longoria said the club had decided not to continue with the match despite a decision by the soccer authorities that play should resume.
Revere partially blamed Payet and his teammate Alvaro Gonzales for the chaos after they retaliated by hurling bottles back at Nice fans and accused Marseille staff of hitting some of the home players.
The clashes marred the image of France's top-flight just as the league was hoping to win more viewers across the world following the arrival of Argentina great Lionel Messi at Paris St Germain.