Football rivalry gone too far: Argentinian club Newell’s sanctions 9-year-olds over rival player photo

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FILE PHOTO: An-18-meter long Argentina shirt featuring soccer star Lionel Messi's surname is displayed at the Monumento a la Bandera (The National Flag Memorial), in Rosario, Argentina, December 16, 2022. REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian/File Photo

An-18-meter long Argentina shirt featuring Lionel Messi's surname is displayed at the Monumento a la Bandera.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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A simple photo between nine-year-old kids and a professional player has spiralled into controversy in Argentina, after Newell’s Old Boys sanctioned their players for posing with Rosario Central’s Ignacio Malcorra – a move seen as a shocking escalation of the city’s fierce football rivalry.

Newell’s, the Rosario club that once nurtured a young Lionel Messi, suspended the academy players from training and revoked their scholarships for three months after discovering their photo with Malcorra, who has been playing for bitter rivals Rosario Central since 2022.

The decision, which club officials framed as a “protective measure” following reported fan threats, has drawn strong criticism from both the public and prominent figures, while Malcorra himself also expressed his dismay at the row.

“I feel sad for them. Children are innocent and don’t know much about what they’re doing,” Malcorra said on June 6, recounting the chance encounter at a youth tournament three months ago. “They just wanted to take a photo with a top-flight player, like any child would.”

As the photo went viral on social media only recently, club officials said earlier this week that the matter had been dealt with internally, while some ultra-supporters had reportedly demanded that the children be expelled.

Argentina head coach Lionel Scaloni also condemned the sanctions.

“If you dream of playing in the First Division one day, it doesn’t matter who you play with,” he told reporters before their World Cup qualifying match against Chile on June 5, which they won 1-0.

“We should value that these kids wanted to take a picture with a first-division player.

“If we want to eradicate violence, we must do the exact opposite – tell them to take the picture and, if their dream is to one day play in the first division, it doesn’t matter with which team.”

National Security Minister Patricia Bullrich on June 6 called the sanctions “disgraceful” on social media, suggesting the club had bowed to pressure from hardline supporters.

The football rivalry, also known as the Rosario derby, reflects the deep footballing identity of the industrial port of Rosario.

Newell’s said the affected children “continue to be members of the club” and that directors would meet their parents next week “to continue listening to them, supporting them, and taking appropriate action”. REUTERS, AFP

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