Advertisement
FA General Secretary Alex Horne. Sean Dempsey/PA Wire/Press Association Images
DISAPPOINTED

English FA disappointed by Serbian bans

Football’s governing body in England has described the UEFA sanctions as “disappointing”.

THE ENGLISH FOOTBALL Association have labelled the punishments UEFA have handed to Serbian players and officials as “disappointing”.

A number of England players and coaches were involved in a mass brawl after the final whistle in the Under-21 Euro 2013 playoff second leg, which confirmed the England’s qualification for Israel in 2013.

UEFA subsequently banned two of the Serbian coaches and four players, as well as handing them a 66,000-pound (80,000 Euros) fine and ordering them to play one match behind closed doors.

However, the FA have reacted to what they see as punishments that do not fit the crime in a statement on their official website.

“We are disappointed with the sanctions levied by UEFA with regards to the racist behaviour displayed towards England’s players,” FA General Secretary Alex Horne said.

“Let’s be clear, racism is unacceptable in any form, and should play no part in football. The scenes were deplorable and we do not believe the sanction sends a strong enough message.”

The English FA also expressed their disappointment in the one and two-match bans handed to Tom Ince and Steven Caulker, as well as the upholding of Danny Rose’s suspension for their part in the events in Krusevac.

The players will miss the opening game of their Euro 2013 campaign – versus Italy – and Caulker is set to be forced to watch the second group game against Norway from the sidelines too.

“It is the FA’s vehement belief that its players and staff acted correctly in the face of provocation, including racist abuse and missiles being thrown,” Horne said.

“We are therefore surprised to see that two of our players have been given suspensions.

“We shall await UEFA’s reasoning but it is our intention, at this stage, to support our players and appeal these decisions.”

Head coach Stuart Pearce reiterated his belief that his players and coaching team were innocent victims, adding: “I am concerned to see our players suspended by UEFA and we will continue to support them.

“I maintain that our players played no part in the aggression. From what I witnessed our players and staff were forced to protect themselves in the violent scenes that followed the game.”

The English FA confirmed they will await the written reasoning from UEFA before proceeding but suggested they will appeal the sanctions handed to their players.

UEFA hand out fines, bans for England, Serbia brawl

No charges for Chelsea fan over ‘monkey’ gesture