Olympique Lyonnais’ Ligue 1 match at Olympique de Marseille on Sunday was postponed after the away team’s bus was stoned as it entered the Stade Velodrome, with Lyon coach Fabio Grosso and his assistant injured during the attack.
A crisis unit had been set up to decide on the playing of the fixture between the two fierce rivals in the wake of the incident.
Lyon president John Textor said Grosso was left dazed after being hit by various projectiles.
Photo: AFP
“He [Grosso] is better now. Twenty minutes ago it was difficult to have a conversation with him,” Textor told reporters. “Once the window was broken, other projectiles hit him, just above the eye. There were beer bottles, which hit him on the forehead... He’s a strong guy, but it took him a bit of time to recover.”
Textor said that the Lyon players initially wanted to go ahead with the game.
“The coach came in, with bandages and he was confused, I would say. The players wanted to play, they asked me to convey this message,” the American said. “The staff wanted to play, our coach wanted to play, even if he was a little inconsistent at that moment. The referee wanted to treat this matter as if it had taken place inside the stadium. He wanted the coach to be evaluated by a doctor. During this time, players’ opinions began to change. They saw the coach passing through the locker room and it was clear that he was not himself, that he had not recovered.”
“We took into account Lyon’s desires for the match not to take place,” referee Francois Letexier said at a news conference.
“Based on Lyon’s wishes and the protocol, the decision was taken not to start the match,” he said.
Video footage showed Grosso with a bloody face, then later with a bandage on his head as he came out of the stadium’s medical room.
A photograph on X appeared to show Grosso lying on a stretcher with a cut above his left eye.
“These images are revolting. Seeing the stoned bus like that, the bloody face of Fabio Grosso ... these are unacceptable acts which go against the very values of football and sport,” French Minister of Sports Amelie Oudea-Castera said. “I hope that the investigation will be carried out quickly, that the perpetrators are found and they are severely punished.”
“These are completely unacceptable circumstances,” Marseille president Pablo Longoria said. “My first thought is for Fabio Grosso, someone I respect and have known for a long time. I went to see him as soon as I arrived at the stadium.”
Seven-time champions Lyon have endured a disastrous start to the season and sit winless at the bottom of the table.
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