Sunday, 24 January 2016

Five players sent off in River Plate v Boca Juniors ‘friendly’

Five players were sent off and Carlos Tevez gave away a penalty that handed River Plate a 1-0 win over Boca Juniors in a far from amicable seaside ‘friendly’ between Argentina’s biggest rivals on Saturday.

Argentina striker Tevez blocked a free-kick with his arm in the 17th minute and Leonardo Pisculichi converted the penalty in the traditional off-season clash at the Atlantic resort of Mar de Plata. “In four days, five sent off, in two matches, we must grow [up],” Tevez told reporters.

hampions Boca, who had three players dismissed on Saturday, also had two shown the red card in a 4-2 defeat by Racing Club in Mar del Plata in midweek.

Argentina full-back Jonathan Silva, signed by Boca from Sporting of Portugal, was sent off 10 minutes into his debut for a lunge on Gabriel Mercado which forced the River defender out of the game with an injured ankle. Boca were down to eight men against River’s 11 by the 78th minute after two more defenders were sent off, Gino Peruzzi for a foul and Daniel Diaz for insulting referee Patricio Loustau.

River then had centre-back Jonathan Maidana dismissed for head butting Tevez during an argument that sparked a melee among rival players and Pisculichi was also sent off for his involvement. “Neither of us behaved well,” Tevez said referring to himself and Maidana. “You regret it afterwards because it generates violence outside [the pitch].”

Loustau blew his whistle for 40 fouls and booked nine other players during the friendly.

Four River Plate players were taken to hospital after they were sprayed with what appeared to be tear gas by fans of their bitter rivals Boca Juniors on Thursday, causing their Copa Libertadores derby to be abandoned at half-time.

The last 16 second leg tie between the Buenos Aires clubs at Boca’s Bombonera stadium was deadlocked at 0-0 when the incident occurred in the tunnel as the players came out for the second half.

Television pictures showed Leonardo Ponzio and Leonel Vangioni rubbing their eyes and other players pouring water over their faces to wash away the substance.

They, along with their team-mates Matías Kranevitter and Ramiro Funes Mori, were later taken to hospital for treatment for what Argentinian radio described as burns.

Officials from Conmebol, the South American football confederation, called the match off about an hour after the incident and the River players were escorted from the pitch under an umbrella of riot shields.

The River manager, Marcelo Gallardo, whose side were 1-0 up after the first leg, called the incident deplorable and shameful.

The Boca president, Daniel Angelici said he had spoken to his opposite number and apologised for the incident but maintained the team should not be punished for the actions of fans.

“We will accept the responsibility that we have but I don’t think the players are responsible,” he said. “We will do all we can to help the police and we hope to find those responsible as soon as possible.”

Angelici denied the notorious barras bravas, or hooligan firms, were responsible and said it was not possible to stop fans bringing weapons into the ground.

“An aerosol is small, I don’t know how it works, but it is very powerful, it can fit in your pocket and when there are almost 50,000 people it can get by security,” he said. “This is society’s problem, not football’s problem. These people are sick.”

Conmebol officials at the game said a disciplinary committee would meet on Friday and decide whether to replay the match, complete it at a neutral venue or award the tie to River Plate. Boca were among the favourites to take the title for the seventh time after winning all six of their group games.

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