Serie A may be suspended after fan death

Serie A could be suspended following the ugly scenes that marred Inter Milan’s fixture against Napoli, according to Italian Football Federation (FIGC) president Gabriele Gravina.

One fan died outside the San Siro after a collision with a vehicle and four others were injured in separate incidents, while Napoli defender Kalidou Koulibaly was racially abused during the game.

“Suspend the championship? I do not know; the news is still too fresh. It’s something we’ll consider,” said Gravina.

“Now we need to take a moment and coordinate ourselves: we have a problem of public order and as such it must be managed, as well as the fact of playing or not.

“What happened is very bad. The referee will write what it is, if he has made some mistakes he will be evaluated too.

“I’m not a psychologist, but it’s clear that some of the players were very nervous at San Siro.”

Deputy Italian Prime Minister Matteo Salvini wrote on Twitter: “In 2018 you cannot die for a football match.

“At the beginning of the year I will convene the leaders of supporters of Serie A and B clubs… so that the stadiums and the surrounding area will once again become a place of fun and not of violence.”

Napoli’s Kalidou Koulibaly reacts as he is shown a red card. The defender suffered alleged racist abuse throughout the match.

An Inter fan died after being struck by a vehicle during clashes with Napoli supporters outside the San Siro before the game between, police said Thursday.

Milan police chief Marcello Cardona said that the 35-year-old supporter died in hospital.

Three people had been arrested in connection with the clashes but it was not known who was driving the vehicle which hit the fan.

Napoli head coach Carlo Ancelotti wanted the game at Inter suspended because of the abuse Senegal international Koulibaly was subjected to.

With nine minutes left, Koulibaly was dismissed for sarcastically applauding the referee after a caution, and substitute Lautaro Martinez went on to score a late goal that handed Inter a 1-0 win.

“It’s a shame because twice we asked for the match to be suspended for the racist chanting towards Koulibaly,” Ancelotti told the club’s official website.

“It shook him – he’s a good-mannered player and he was bombarded by the stadium. Despite our requests and the chanting, the game wasn’t suspended. I think it should have been. Next time we’ll stop playing ourselves.

“It was impossible for him to be calm – he cares a lot about the issue of racism and he commits a lot of time to the matter, including in society. What happened is unacceptable – not just for us but for Italian football as a whole.”

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