Racism: Bulgaria coach apologises to England players

Bulgaria coach Krasimir Balakov has apologised to the England team for the racist taunts they were subjected to during Monday’s European Qualifier.

Raheem Sterling, Marcus Rashford and Tyrone Mings were abused during England’s 6-0 victory – and four arrests have now been made by Bulgarian police.

Bulgaria coach Balakov issued a statement on Facebook on Tuesday, in which he said: “I condemn unconditionally all forms of racism as unacceptable behaviour that contradicts normal human relationships.

“I think that this form of prejudice should be buried deep in our past, and nobody should ever be subjected.

ALSO READ: Racism: England players ready to walk off pitch ―Abraham

“I trained many Bulgarian teams with players of different backgrounds and never judged anyone about the colour of their skin. In addition, I have always actively participated in all initiatives involving unprivileged people or the needy.

“My comments before the game against England that Bulgaria had no problems with racism are based on the fact that the local championship has not seen such a problem on a large scale.

“There may have been isolated cases, but it’s definitely not something you see in the stadium.

“The majority of football fans do not take part in such chants, and I believe that was also the case in the game against England.

“One thing I would like to say very clearly is that as the stadium in Sofia has reported cases of racial discrimination, I sincerely apologise to the English footballers and those who feel offended.”

Popov bravely confronted his own supporters at half-time in an attempt to get them to stop their racist abuse and was subsequently praised for his courage by Rashford on social media after the game.

ALSO READ:  Wage war on racism, UEFA president tells football family

Speaking after the match, Popov said: “Of course I feel embarrassed.

“We are 11 v 11, it doesn’t matter your colour, it’s no problem, we are all the same, we are one very big family in football, everybody and only we, if we are together, can we stop these bad things.

“It was important that I spoke like this because it’s a very big problem for everybody, for our federation, for England and if they said more bad words, even one more time, then maybe they would finish the game.

“We would have such a big punishment and this is no good for Bulgarian football because if some other players want to come here, they hear what is said and how they speak bad, then this is no good for everybody. But when you start to speak to them, afterwards they understand. I think in the second half was better.”

Sporting Tribune

Recent Posts

Bayern Munich seal 35th Bundesliga title with win over Stuttgart

Bayern Munich came from behind to beat Stuttgart at the Allianz Arena and win the…

1 hour ago

Pitstop triathlon debuts with N1.5m star prize, targets future Olympians

Pitstop Lagos on Sunday launched its maiden triathlon competition with a N1.5 million star prize,…

2 hours ago

Arsenal loses ‘judgement day’ to Man City, may bottle EPL again

Erling Haaland scored a second-half winner at the Etihad, meaning Pep Guardiola’s City will top…

2 hours ago

Liverpool edge Everton as Van Dijk nets 100th-minute winner

Liverpool have scored six 90th-minute winners against Everton in the Premier League....

3 hours ago

Raducanu pulls out of Madrid Open

The Madrid Open starts on Tuesday, with Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic also having pulled…

6 hours ago

Bournemouth owners close to Exeter Chiefs takeover

It was revealed last week that an American consortium were on the verge of securing…

7 hours ago

This website uses cookies.