FA demands answers over Old Trafford bust-up

Football
By AFP/Mirror | Dec 11, 2017
Man United Coach Jose Mourinho and Man City Coach Pep Guardiola in a past match [PHOTO: COURTESY]

The Football Association demanded answers from Manchester United and Manchester City on Monday following reports of ugly scenes that reportedly left City assistant coach Mikel Arteta bloodied after a fracas.

The Guardian newspaper said Arteta was left with blood streaming down his face after a bust-up involving up to 20 players and members of staff from the two clubs after Sunday's Manchester derby, which City won 2-1.

Referee Michael Oliver did not witness the scenes so the FA has not received a report on the matter from him but it has given the clubs until Wednesday to reply to a request for observations following the incident.

United manager Jose Mourinho and City goalkeeper Ederson are reported to have had a confrontation after the game, while it is claimed Mourinho had milk and water thrown at him from the away dressing room.

The home side are understood to have taken exception to City's post-match celebrations.

The Guardian reported that Arteta's eyebrow was split open during the melee in a narrow corridor outside City's dressing room and said there were unconfirmed reports that another member of Guardiola's backroom staff needed medical treatment.

The corridor leading to the dressing rooms apparently became congested as players and staff made their way through it after the game, and tensions spilled over into pushing and shoving, with Arteta understood to have suffered a cut to the head.

Mourinho did not make any reference to what had happened during his post-match media work, according to the report.

Arteta was being assessed in the City dressing room after being caught in the crossfire, the report said.

The victory, courtesy of set-piece goals from David Silva and Nicolas Otamendi propelled City 11 points clear of United at the top of the Premier League table, further enhancing their status as red-hot favourites for the title.

Mourinho had accused City's players of diving and committing "tactical fouls" prior to the game and afterwards he made an unconvincing claim his side should have been awarded a late penalty when Ander Herrera was booked for diving.

But City manager Pep Guardiola said: "We won because we were better. In all departments, we were better."

The incident at Old Trafford brought to mind the famous "Battle of the Buffet" that erupted after United beat Arsenal in October 2004, when Arsenal midfielder Cesc Fabregas threw pizza at United manager Alex Ferguson

 

Share this story
Adak wants media to report doping issues with precision
Although the subject is scientifically complex, legally sensitive, and reputationally explosive, the anti-doping body feels journalists have a key role to play.
Liverpool boss Slot says Salah victim of 'his own standards'
Salah may be experiencing the worst goal drought of his Premier League career but Liverpool boss Arne Slot believes the Egypt striker is paying the price for his own high standards.
Real Madrid face Man City, PSG draw Chelsea in Champions League last 16
Real Madrid and Manchester City will face off in a Champions League knockout tie for the fifth season running after being drawn to play each other in the last 16
Arsenal face Chelsea title test, troubled Spurs in spotlight
Premier League leaders Arsenal face a title test from London rivals Chelsea on Sunday. Manchester City can keep the pressure on Arsenal with a win at Leeds
Sacking Amorim could cost Manchester United Sh2.8 billion
Man United's decision to sack Ruben Amorim as their manager could end up costing the Premier League giants almost £16 million ($22 million)
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS