Spanish soccer acknowledges it has a racism problem after abuse against Vinicius Junior
Valencia said it banned one of its fans for life and was looking to identify others
One after another, the racial insults kept coming.
The "monkey" chants outside one stadium, the offensive gestures during a game, the effigy hung off a highway bridge.
One by one, Vinicius Junior showed them on a video on Instagram on Monday, making sure they were there for everybody to see.
"When will it be enough?" was the message with the video. "Racism is a crime. Not to punish is to be an accomplice."
The president of Spain's soccer federation acknowledged they have a racism problem after yet another case of abuse against the Real Madrid forward. Madrid has asked authorities to investigate the latest incident as a hate crime.
"We have a problem of behaviour, of education, of racism," Spanish soccer federation president Luis Rubiales said Monday. "And as long as there is one fan or one group of fans making insults based on someone's sexual orientation or skin color or belief, then we have a serious problem. A serious problem that stains an entire team, an entire fan base and an entire country."
Valencia said it banned one of its fans for life and was looking to identify others who may have insulted Vinicius at Mestalla Stadium.
"From the moment that the unfortunate events occurred, the club has analyzed all the available footage, working alongside the authorities as rapidly as possible to clarify what happened in order to be able to act quickly and forcefully," Valencia said in a statement, adding it is working with police to identify more culprits.
Real Madrid asked authorities to investigate the abusive behaviour, saying the club believed the incident to be a hate crime.
"Real Madrid strongly condemns the events that took place yesterday [Sunday] against our player," the club said. "These events represent a direct attack on the social and democratic model of coexistence of our State based on the rule of law."
The <a href="https://twitter.com/realmadrid?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@RealMadrid</a> president had a meeting with <a href="https://twitter.com/vinijr?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@ViniJr</a> expressing his support and affection, informing him of all the steps that are being taken in his defence and confirming that the club will go to any length in the face of such a disgusting hateful incident.<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/RealMadrid?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#RealMadrid</a> <a href="https://t.co/Tjvs0aB5El">pic.twitter.com/Tjvs0aB5El</a>
—@realmadriden
The club later released another statement calling for "immediate and decisive action by all those with responsibility and competence to tackle the evils of racism, xenophobia and hatred." It criticized Rubiales for the federation's lack of action and failure to impose FIFA's protocols to stop matches in cases of racism.
"The image of our football is seriously damaged and marred in the eyes of the whole world," Madrid said.
The Spanish league has made nine similar formal complaints for racist abuse against Vinicius over the last two seasons, but most of the cases have been shelved by prosecutors. Another complaint was expected to be made after an investigation into what happened in Valencia was completed.
Fans have been fined and banned from stadiums for their abuse, but so far only a Mallorca fan may end up going on trial for allegedly racially insulting the Brazilian during a game. The first trial against a fan accused of racial abuse in Spanish professional soccer is expected to happen at some point this year in a case involving Athletic Bilbao forward Inaki Williams, who was insulted by an Espanyol supporter in a match in 2020.
Barcelona coach Xavi said there is a need to educate and punish people, and called for harsher action by soccer officials in cases of racism during matches.
"It's time to put an end to this," Xavi said. "If there's an insult, out, we stop playing, it's over. I think it's the message to the president of the league and the federation. We have to put an end to this. It's the right time."
Vinicius, who is Black and has been subjected to repeated racist abuse since he arrived from Brazil five years ago, said after the match that the Spanish league "now belongs to racists" and that Spain "is seen as a racist country."
The Spanish government and soccer officials condemned the insults against Vinicius but were quick to point out they didn't agree with the player's generalization about Spain or its people being racist.
'Full solidarity to Vinicius'
In the soccer world, Vinicius received nearly unconditional support.
"Full solidarity to Vinicius," FIFA president Gianni Infantino said. "There is no place for racism in football or in society and FIFA stands by all players who have found themselves in such a situation. Events during the match between Valencia and Real Madrid show that this needs to be the case."
Vinicius isn't the only player in Spain, or in European soccer, to face racist abuse. But the Brazilian has been the focus of much of the hate in recent years, particularly this season after he started dancing in his goal celebrations. In January, an effigy of the player was hung off a highway bridge in Madrid.
Former players also quickly sided with the Brazil forward.
"Another case of racism against Vinicius in the Spanish league," said former Brazil striker Ronaldo, who spent five seasons playing for Real Madrid in the 2000s. "Until when? As long as there is impunity, there will be racism."
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and several of his cabinet ministers backed Vinicius and were critical of Spanish soccer.
"It is not fair that a poor boy who is winning in his life, becoming one of the best in the world, certainly the best at Real Madrid, is insulted in every stadium he goes to," Lula said.
Spanish league president criticizes Vinicius
Spanish league president Javier Tebas criticized Vinicius for attacking the league, saying the player didn't show up for talks on the subject of racism that he had requested himself.
The league claims it only has authority to denounce cases, and that it's up to local authorities to take action against the perpetrators and the soccer federation to punish clubs and referees. But FIFA, the sport's governing body, updated its own disciplinary code in 2013 — with options for point deductions and mandatory relegation for teams in the most serious cases — and asked competition organizers worldwide to follow.
Vinicius wasn't happy with Tebas' stance.
"Instead of criticizing racists, the league president shows up on social media to attack me," Vinicius said. "Although you may say otherwise or pretend not to notice, the image of your championship is shaken. Omitting yourself only makes you equal to the racists. I'm not your friend to talk about racism with you. I want actions and punishment."