Police Must Get to Bottom of False Stories About Crystal Palace Fans

 Smoke from flares drifts over the pitch at Brighton v Crystal Palace – but initial reports that away fans had arrived with knives and knuckle-dusters have since been withdrawn. Photograph: Mike Hewitt/Getty Images
Smoke from flares drifts over the pitch at Brighton v Crystal Palace – but initial reports that away fans had arrived with knives and knuckle-dusters have since been withdrawn. Photograph: Mike Hewitt/Getty Images
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Police Must Get to Bottom of False Stories About Crystal Palace Fans

 Smoke from flares drifts over the pitch at Brighton v Crystal Palace – but initial reports that away fans had arrived with knives and knuckle-dusters have since been withdrawn. Photograph: Mike Hewitt/Getty Images
Smoke from flares drifts over the pitch at Brighton v Crystal Palace – but initial reports that away fans had arrived with knives and knuckle-dusters have since been withdrawn. Photograph: Mike Hewitt/Getty Images

There is an old episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm in which Larry David is sitting in traffic when the lights change to green and the car in front does not move. The only issue is that it happens to be a police car and, in those circumstances, what is the etiquette? Who beeps a police car? Larry, is the answer. “No one’s above the beep,” he explains when the police officer gets out of his car.

OK, it is not to be taken too seriously (Larry is also wearing a wig and a false moustache after a fatwa for planning to make a Broadway musical, coincidentally named Fatwa!, about Salman Rushdie). Yet it is easy to sympathise and, ultimately, beeping doesn’t do Larry any good. Officer Jenkins doesn’t take kindly to being asked if he was daydreaming and is not prepared to accept Larry’s get-out clause that, driving a new car, he wasn’t attuned to the subtleties of the horn and had meant it to be a pip rather than a beep. Larry gets a ticket. He takes it to an appeal and the judge accepts the officer was on “important police business”. The case is dismissed and Larry is reminded it doesn’t always make sense to take on the police.

Sometimes, though, it is too important to let go and, back in the real world, that was certainly some victory for Crystal Palace’s supporters, in the face of some wildly inaccurate allegations, when Sussex police performed their volte-face and issued an apology for their cock‑and‑bull story about what happened at their game at Brighton.

This one is about something more serious than whether a police officer might have been daydreaming at traffic lights, too, bearing in mind the official version of events for the previous week and a half was that Palace’s away fans had armed themselves with knives and knuckle‑dusters.

It turned out – well, whaddya know? – there were actually no weapons found and the whole thing was made up. Yet we still cannot be sure by whom. Press statements from the police don’t tend to include those details and a few hours before the public confession from Sussex HQ it also became clear that the officer who had spread this misinformation to the media was going off-radar. “Please excuse some Twitter silence while I’m off and abroad for a few days. Keep safe,” Ch Insp Simon Nelson wrote on his social-media account. His 50th birthday, apparently.

Fair enough. One imagines he has found it difficult to switch off, though, after the events of the past few days and it is certainly fair to say that a high‑ranking officer with his experience probably ought to realise he needs to be absolutely sure of the facts before sharing these non-facts with the world’s media and talking about it as “a return to the dark days of football”.

Ch Insp Nelson was certainly a lot more talkative after the game and – suitably proud, it appeared, of the publicity that his comments generated – he also took to Twitter to post one of the many newspaper articles where he was quoted. Every newspaper carried the story, all of them concentrating on the knives and knuckle‑dusters angle. It was on television, the radio, the news wires – and genuinely shocking bearing in mind the damage these weapons can inflict. He was “extremely grateful”, he let us know the following day, for so many kind messages about the bravery of his officers.

And, despite everything, that still stands. A mate of mine used to be in the Metropolitan police football unit and it was dangerous work. Palace were never the worst offenders but it would be naive not to think they have some old faces who, if you know your hooligan films, see these category-A fixtures as a chance to re-enact the role of Yeti, of the South London Buccaneers. Or, indeed, that there might be a few younger ones who think a Stone Island badge and a nice pair of trainers qualifies them for bravery points.

Two stewards needed hospital treatment and there are clips of fans storming one of the turnstiles to force their way in. Flares were set off during the match and there were other incidents at the railway station. Brighton have a few headbangers themselves. It clearly wasn’t a pleasant night for the police.

Yet it becomes a lot more sinister when there are stories of people taking knives and knuckle‑dusters to the stadium. That’s a very different level of violence – unprecedented, almost certainly, inside our shiny grounds in the Premier League era – and there are still a number of unanswered questions for Sussex police about the precise sequence of events that led to the original 543-word statement on 29 November, as opposed to the 87-word correction accepting the original release was untrue.

Shortly before the apology was issued, Ch Insp Nelson stated on Thursday that the Palace fans should take it up with Brighton because “it was their staff who found those items in the away end”. That assertion, his police force admitted a few hours later, was also untrue and, to give him his due, he did reappear with an apology of his own the following day: “The information regarding discarded weapons and pyros in the away end of the stadium was passed to us and believed to be true – this was clearly not the case.”

So, how about being transparent and letting everyone know what did actually go wrong? Who set the ball rolling? Did a senior police officer release that information as fact without bothering to check it out?

These are important questions when one takes into account the potential damage to the reputation of Palace, the club’s supporters and also football fans in general, not to mention the heightened tensions now the sides have been brought together again in the FA Cup third round. That tie has been scheduled, with almost zero common sense, for a 7.45pm kick-off and is not going to be a great deal of fun for the officers on the frontline.

I also doubt very much that we would even have had a follow-up statement, let alone an apology, from the police had it not been for the diligence of the Five Year Plan fanzine, whose editorial team immediately suspected that something didn’t ring true.

A freedom-of-information request has gone in via the fanzine’s online editor, Robert Sutherland, and the police might have to understand why some supporters are wondering whether it was all a bit convenient that the headlines were manipulated that way on a night when Ch Insp Nelson and his colleagues might otherwise have faced some awkward questions about their handling of the game.

on’t overlook the fact that a significant number of Palace fans, having paid for their tickets and travel, didn’t even get in, held outside the ground by several lines of police before being escorted to the railway station without seeing a single minute of football. Yet there has been very little about that in the media over the last couple of weeks. The story changed dramatically once it was alleged that Palace fans were tooled-up and dangerous.

A return to the dark days of football? Well, yes, if we are reminiscing about the times when it was all the rage to spread misinformation about football fans and not be held accountable.

Mourinho’s touch of Drogba amnesia
José Mourinho’s accusations of diving from Manchester City players strikes me as a bit rich bearing in mind he has previously managed Didier Drogba, Arjen Robben, Pepe and an extensive list of some of the sport’s other great thespians.

Mourinho presumably had Raheem Sterling in mind – or, more likely, Michael Oliver, the referee of Sunday’s derby – when he noted how “a little bit of wind and they fall”. Yet it hasn’t been a common allegation this season, bar some extraordinary sour grapes from Arsène Wenger, and let’s not forget it needed only the mildest of breezes to knock down Drogba in his Chelsea days, often with the effect of a man who had just been shot with an imaginary Taser.

In fairness to Mourinho, he is far from the only manager in the history of Manchester’s football enmity to lapse into this hypocrisy and my mind goes back to the days when Roberto Mancini was in charge at the place Sir Alex Ferguson used to call the Temple of Doom. The most regular complaint from Old Trafford at that time was the number of penalties the team in blue were awarded. “Twenty-one in the last year, isn’t it?” Ferguson wanted to know. “If we were to get that number of penalty kicks there would be an inquiry in the House of Commons. There would be a protest.”

Mancini’s press conference was next and what a great response it was, too. City’s manager leant forward in his chair, put his hands together and stooped his head in the manner of someone diving off the top board. “But I remember very well last year,” he said. “[Ashley] Young, when he went swimming … I think it was four or five times in the last 10 games and he [Ferguson] didn’t say nothing.”

That is the beauty of holding your press conference straight after the other guy: you always get the chance to have the final word. These days it is all choreographed between the two clubs so the questions are asked at exactly the same time, thereby eliminating the potential for one manager to respond to the comments of the other. It was much more fun the other way – and I still wouldn’t bet against Mourinho going back to the old system.

Sullivan does his bit for team spirit
A penny for José Fonte’s thoughts after reading David Sullivan’s interview in the Guardian and learning the West Ham co-owner wished he had listened to his teenage children when it came to some of Slaven Bilic’s signings. Sullivan had just explained that he regretted not sacking the Croat in the summer and went on to identify some of the mistakes that had been made in the transfer market. “The manager said he wanted Fonte from Southampton and [Robert] Snodgrass from Hull. My kids begged me not to sign them.”

At least Snodgrass (left), on loan at Aston Villa, does not have to worry too much about such a resounding vote of confidence. Not until he returns to West Ham at the end of the season, anyway. Fonte, however, is still there, recovering from an injury and brilliantly motivated, one assumes, by such generous words from the man at the top. It all feels rather typical of Sullivan, unfortunately – and just another reason why so many West Ham fans wish it could be another way.

The Guardian Sport



PSG’s Mental Strength Hailed as they Come from Behind to Win at Monaco

Soccer Football - UEFA Champions League - Play Off - First Leg - AS Monaco v Paris St Germain - Stade Louis II, Monaco - February 17, 2026 Paris St Germain coach Luis Enrique reacts REUTERS/Manon Cruz
Soccer Football - UEFA Champions League - Play Off - First Leg - AS Monaco v Paris St Germain - Stade Louis II, Monaco - February 17, 2026 Paris St Germain coach Luis Enrique reacts REUTERS/Manon Cruz
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PSG’s Mental Strength Hailed as they Come from Behind to Win at Monaco

Soccer Football - UEFA Champions League - Play Off - First Leg - AS Monaco v Paris St Germain - Stade Louis II, Monaco - February 17, 2026 Paris St Germain coach Luis Enrique reacts REUTERS/Manon Cruz
Soccer Football - UEFA Champions League - Play Off - First Leg - AS Monaco v Paris St Germain - Stade Louis II, Monaco - February 17, 2026 Paris St Germain coach Luis Enrique reacts REUTERS/Manon Cruz

Paris Saint-Germain coach Luis ‌Enrique hailed the mental strength of his side in coming from two goals down to win 3-2 away at Monaco in the Champions League on Tuesday, but warned the knockout round tie was far from finished.

The first leg clash between the two Ligue 1 clubs saw Folarin Balogun score twice for the hosts in the opening 18 minutes before Vitinha had his penalty saved to compound matters.

But after Desire Doue came on for injured Ousmane Dembele, the ‌match turned ‌and defending champions PSG went on to ‌secure ⁠a one-goal advantage ⁠for the return leg.

"Normally, when a team starts a match like that, the most likely outcome is a loss,” Reuters quoted Luis Enrique as saying.

“It was catastrophic. It's impossible to start a match like that. The first two times they overcame our pressure and entered our half, they scored. They ⁠made some very good plays.

“After that, it's difficult ‌to have confidence, but we ‌showed our mental strength. Plus, we missed a penalty, so ‌it was a chance to regain confidence. In the ‌last six times we've played here, this is only the second time we've won, which shows how difficult it is.”

The 20-year-old Doue scored twice and provided a third for Achraf Hakimi, just ‌days after he had turned in a poor performance against Stade Rennais last Friday ⁠and was ⁠dropped for the Monaco clash.

“I'm happy for him because this past week, everyone criticized and tore Doue apart, but he was sensational, he showed his character. He helped the team at the best possible time.”

Dembele’s injury would be assessed, the coach added. “He took a knock in the first 15 minutes, then he couldn't run.”

The return leg at the Parc des Princes will be next Wednesday. “Considering how the match started, I'm happy with the result. But the match in Paris will be difficult, it will be a different story,” Luis Enrique warned.


Mbappe Calls for Prestianni Ban over Alleged Racist Slur at Vinicius

TOPSHOT - Real Madrid's French forward #10 Kylian Mbappe talks with SL Benfica's Portuguese head coach Jose Mourinho during the UEFA Champions League knockout round play-off first leg football match between SL Benfica and Real Madrid CF at Estadio da Luz in Lisbon on February 17, 2026. (Photo by PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP)
TOPSHOT - Real Madrid's French forward #10 Kylian Mbappe talks with SL Benfica's Portuguese head coach Jose Mourinho during the UEFA Champions League knockout round play-off first leg football match between SL Benfica and Real Madrid CF at Estadio da Luz in Lisbon on February 17, 2026. (Photo by PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP)
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Mbappe Calls for Prestianni Ban over Alleged Racist Slur at Vinicius

TOPSHOT - Real Madrid's French forward #10 Kylian Mbappe talks with SL Benfica's Portuguese head coach Jose Mourinho during the UEFA Champions League knockout round play-off first leg football match between SL Benfica and Real Madrid CF at Estadio da Luz in Lisbon on February 17, 2026. (Photo by PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP)
TOPSHOT - Real Madrid's French forward #10 Kylian Mbappe talks with SL Benfica's Portuguese head coach Jose Mourinho during the UEFA Champions League knockout round play-off first leg football match between SL Benfica and Real Madrid CF at Estadio da Luz in Lisbon on February 17, 2026. (Photo by PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP)

Real Madrid forward Kylian Mbappe said Benfica's Gianluca Prestianni should be banned from the Champions League after the Argentine was accused of directing a racist slur at Vinicius Jr during the Spanish side's 1-0 playoff first-leg win on Tuesday.

Denying the accusation, Prestianni said the Brazilian misheard him.

The incident occurred shortly after Vinicius had curled Real into the lead five minutes into the second half in Lisbon.

Television footage showed the Argentine winger covering his mouth with his shirt before making a comment that Vinicius and nearby teammates interpreted as a racial ‌slur against ‌the 25-year-old, with referee Francois Letexier halting the match for ‌11 ⁠minutes after activating ⁠FIFA's anti-racism protocols.

The footage appeared to show an outraged Mbappe calling Prestianni "a bloody racist" to his face, Reuters reported.

The atmosphere grew hostile after play resumed, with Vinicius and Mbappe loudly booed by the home crowd whenever they touched the ball. Despite the rising tensions, the players were able to close out the game without further interruptions.

"I want to clarify that at no time did I direct racist insults to Vini Jr, ⁠who regrettably misunderstood what he thought he heard," Prestianni wrote ‌on his Instagram account.

"I was never racist with ‌anyone and I regret the threats I received from Real Madrid players."

Mbappe told reporters he ‌heard Prestianni direct the same racist remark at Vinicius several times, an allegation ‌also levelled by Real's French midfielder Aurelien Tchouamen.

Mbappe said he had been prepared to leave the pitch but was persuaded by Vinicius to continue playing.

"We cannot accept that there is a player in Europe's top football competition who behaves like this. This guy (Prestianni) doesn't ‌deserve to play in the Champions League anymore," Mbappe told reporters.

"We have to set an example for all the children ⁠watching us at ⁠home. What happened today is the kind of thing we cannot accept because the world is watching us.

When asked whether Prestianni had apologized, Mbappe laughed.

"Of course not," he said.

Vinicius later posted a statement on social media voicing his frustration.

"Racists are, above all, cowards. They need to cover their mouth with their shirt to show how weak they are. But they have the protection of others who, theoretically, have an obligation to punish them. Nothing that happened today is new in my life or my family's life," Vinicius wrote.

The Brazilian has faced repeated racist abuse in Spain, with 18 legal complaints filed against racist behavior targeting Vinicius since 2022.

Real Madrid and Benfica will meet again for the second leg next Wednesday at the Bernabeu.


Second Season of ‘Kings League–Middle East' to Kick off in March in Riyadh 

The second season of the Kings League-Middle East will kick off in Riyadh on March 27. (Kings League-Middle East on X)
The second season of the Kings League-Middle East will kick off in Riyadh on March 27. (Kings League-Middle East on X)
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Second Season of ‘Kings League–Middle East' to Kick off in March in Riyadh 

The second season of the Kings League-Middle East will kick off in Riyadh on March 27. (Kings League-Middle East on X)
The second season of the Kings League-Middle East will kick off in Riyadh on March 27. (Kings League-Middle East on X)

The Kings League-Middle East announced that its second season will kick off in Riyadh on March 27.

The season will feature 10 teams, compared to eight in the inaugural edition, under a format that combines sporting competition with digital engagement and includes the participation of several content creators from across the region.

The Kings League-Middle East is organized in partnership with SURJ Sports Investments, a subsidiary of the Public Investment Fund (PIF), as part of efforts to support the development of innovative sports models that integrate football with digital entertainment.

Seven teams will return for the second season: DR7, ABO FC, FWZ, Red Zone, Turbo, Ultra Chmicha, and 3BS. Three additional teams are set to be announced before the start of the competition.

Matches of the second season will be held at Cool Arena in Riyadh under a single round-robin format, with the top-ranked teams advancing to the knockout stages, culminating in the final match.

The inaugural edition recorded strong attendance and wide digital engagement, with approximately a million viewers following the live broadcasts on television and digital platforms.