Matuidi urges action as racism outrage intensifies

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Atletico de Madrid's Saul Niguez (L) and Juventus' Blaise Matuidi compete during the UEFA Champions League match in Madrid, Spain, Feb. 20, 2019. Atletico de Madrid won 2-0. (Xinhua/Guo Qiuda)

Blaise Matuidi echoed the disillusionment of other black soccer players when he said on Sunday that the events of the week suggested "this is not a world I want my children to see".

Matuidi was one of the three Juventus players abused with monkey noises during a victory at Cagliari last Tuesday.

Teenage teammate Moise Kean attracted the headlines for facing the home fans as he celebrated the winning goal, but it was the second straight year that Matuidi has been subjected to such abuse in Cagliari. Alex Sandro was also a target.

"It's sad," the World Cup winner told Canal+ in France. "It happened to me last year in this stadium and we cannot tolerate it.

"You can tell me: 'Maybe it's not racist, they just want to unsettle you'," Matuidi said. "No. These are things you do not say and must be punished."

The events in Cagliari brought a damning reaction.

Italy coach Roberto Mancini called for tough measures in Serie A after the "unacceptable" abuse in Cagliari.

"We can no longer accept this, we need to act and hard. Racist behavior must be stigmatized."

On Friday, Danny Rose, of England and Tottenham, said the way soccer fights racism is "a farce".

"I've had enough," Rose said. "At the minute, how I program myself is that I just think: 'I've got five or six more years left in football and I just can't wait to see the back of it.'

"Seeing how things are done in the game at the minute ... it's just-whatever, isn't it? I just want to get out of it."

Others, like Yaya Toure and Raheem Sterling reacted to suggestions, from Cagliari officials and also even Juventus defender Leonardo Bonnucci and manager Massimiliano Allegri, that Kean was to blame for not turning the other cheek and when he celebrated in front of home fans.

"I was shocked when I saw that happen and then the manager saying Kean shouldn't have done that," said former Cote d'Ivoire captain Toure.

England and Manchester City's Sterling tweeted: "All you can do now is laugh."

Kean defended his actions as "the best way to respond to racism".

Matuidi said that, like Kean, he was upset.

"I could not calm down. I did not want to ignore it. You have to fight it," he said. "We can't allow this anymore. We must have the courage."

"These are stupid people," he said. "They should never be allowed to come to the stadium again."

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