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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
PA Media and Guardian sport

Report highlights ‘multiple failures’ in handling of Champions League final

Liverpool fans are stopped by police outside the Stade de France before the Champions League final in May
Liverpool fans are stopped by police outside the Stade de France before the Champions League final in May. Photograph: Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters

A French government report into the problems at the Champions League final has highlighted “multiple failures” in the management of the crowd in Paris.

The 30-page report, handed to the prime minister’s office on Friday, focused on systemic failures and “the presence of malevolent individuals” in the vicinity of the stadium. Large numbers of Liverpool fans have reported being attacked and having possessions stolen outside the Stade de France.

The report read: “The dysfunction was the result of, despite careful preparation, multiple failures in the guiding and the management of the crowd, in the insufficient communications between the RATP [transport operator] and the PC [public order body], in the lack of suitable routes to the ground, in the lack of coordination and failed dialogue between all parties when it came to recognising the warning signs in terms of the presence of malevolent individuals who assembled in large numbers near the stadium to commit delinquent acts.”

The report set out five recommended steps to avoid similar incidents. Paris is due to host the Rugby World Cup final next year and the Olympics in 2024.

Billy Hogan, the Liverpool chief executive, has said the club are not yet
satisfied that Uefa's review into the chaos surrounding the Champions
League final will be 'thorough, independent and transparent' despite
holding talks with its chair, Dr Tiago Brandão Rodrigues.

Liverpool and Real Madrid, who have also demanded answers to the problems their supporters faced at Stade de France, held a first round of talks with the Portuguese MP on Thursday. 

Rodrigues, who has connections to Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin, was appointed by European football's governing body within 48 hours of the dangerous events in Paris. Despite the discussions and repeated questions to Uefa over the past two weeks, Liverpool are yet to be convinced about the review's independence.

'We're in the very early stages, I would say, in understanding the
structure of that independent review,' said Hogan. 'We did have an initial call with Dr Rodrigues yesterday, with Uefa and Real Madrid also on the call, so there's a number of outstanding details that we need to understand, and that's what ourselves and Real Madrid will be working on with Uefa and Dr Rodrigues in the days ahead.

I keep saying this, but we just need to be satisfied that this is going to
be a thorough, independent and transparent investigation,' Hogan added. 'And I would imagine all of those questions that we have will have to be answered over the course of the coming days and weeks.' Andy Hunter

The recommendations include: setting up a dedicated government body to oversee major sporting events, a flexible system of crowd control and optimising the management of routes to major events, a more secure ticket system and a modernised traffic system around the Stade de France.

Kick-off for the Champions League final was twice pushed back because of problems getting fans into the stadium. The report reveals that 2,700 Liverpool fans with valid tickets did not make it into the stadium. They will have the cost of their tickets reimbursed.

The Paris police chief, Didier Lallement, who has blamed ticketless Liverpool fans for chaotic and worrying scenes that saw supporters corralled and teargassed outside the stadium, conceded on Thursday that his operation had been a failure.

He also admitted he had no evidence for his claim that 30,000 to 40,000 Liverpool fans without tickets or with forged tickets had descended on the stadium, although he said whether there were “40,000, 30,000 or 20,000, it didn’t change the fact that there were tens of thousands of people who could not fit in”.

The version of events outlined by the French interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, and police has been challenged by Liverpool fans and reporters who attended the game.

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