Slavia Prague star handed lengthy ban for ‘racist behaviour’ towards Glen Kamara
Slavia Prague defender Ondrej Kudela has been banned for 10 matches by UEFA after being found guilty of racist behaviour towards Rangers player Glen Kamara.
The Finn was incensed after Kudela whispered into his ear during a Europa League tie at Ibrox on March 18.
Kudela had been handed a provisional one-match ban over a lesser charge of insulting Kamara, and that ban is included within the overall 10-match sanction.
Kamara has also been banned for three matches after being found guilty of assaulting Kudela in the tunnel after the game.
Kamara claimed Kudela called him a “f****** monkey”, something Kudela denied.
Kamara’s account was supported by Rangers team-mate Bongani Zungu and UEFA’s control, ethics and disciplinary body (CEDB) has now found Kudela guilty of using racist language.
The body’s full written reasons will be published at a later stage, and both sanctions are open to appeal.
As it stands, Kudela will miss the remainder of Slavia’s Europa League campaign – they play the second leg of their quarter-final tie against Arsenal on Thursday night – plus at least five matches at Euro 2020, including the Czech Republic’s group games against Scotland and England.
'Glen Kamara feels like he's been victimised'
Glen Kamara's lawyer, Aamer Anwar, told Sky Sports News the Rangers player wants stronger action to be taken against Ondrej Kudela.
Slavia are due to hold a press conference on Wednesday evening to preview the Arsenal tie.
Kudela had covered his mouth before talking to Kamara, something former Holland international Clarence Seedorf said earlier on Wednesday should be sanctioned.
Seedorf suggests action to tackle racism
“I have seen stuff with players speaking and covering their mouth during matches,” the Netherlands legend said in an online event hosted by the Council of Europe.
“There were some racist situations in the last weeks or months where the players among themselves had hate speeches.
“Those things can be very easily attacked by implementing some rules. For me it should be abandoned to be able to speak like that when you approach an adversary.
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“When we’re talking about sport it has to be completely transparent, so why would I cover my mouth if I need to talk with my adversary?
“If I want to [cover my mouth to] talk to my coach or a team-mate, all fine, but when I approach the referee or another player in any sport, you are not allowed to cover your mouth, it has to be a sanction, a yellow card.”
Rangers, who beat Hibernian 2-1 on Sunday, return to action on Sunday to face Celtic in the Scottish Cup.