Home Football News Champions League Theft: Barcelona Files Formal UEFA Complaint After Atlético Robbery

Champions League Theft: Barcelona Files Formal UEFA Complaint After Atlético Robbery

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By our football correspondent

Barcelona fans are absolutely fuming today, and frankly, who can blame them? The club has officially gone to war with UEFA, filing a formal complaint following what can only be described as a refereeing disaster in their 2–0 Champions League quarter-final loss to Atlético Madrid on Wednesday night.  

If you didn’t see the game, count yourself lucky—it was a masterclass in how to ruin a top-tier European fixture.

The “Ghost” Handball That Never Was

The match turned into a circus in the 54th minute. With Atlético leading 1–0, their goalkeeper Juan Musso took a goal kick, passing it short to Marc Pubill. For some reason—maybe he thought the whistle hadn’t blown?—Pubill just reached down and grabbed the ball to reset it.  

It was a blatant handball in the box. The ball was in play. It’s a penalty 101.

But Romanian referee István Kovács? He just waved it away. And VAR? They must have been out for a coffee break because they didn’t even tell him to look at the monitor. It’s the kind of “unfathomable” decision that makes you wonder what the point of all this technology is if it can’t catch a player literally picking up the ball like it’s a game of rugby.

Barca Strikes Back

The club isn’t taking this lying down. In a stinging statement released yesterday, Barcelona’s legal team demanded four things from UEFA:  

1. A formal investigation into the officiating.

2. Access to the referee’s communications (we all want to hear what was said in that VAR room).

3. Official acknowledgement of the error.

4. “Appropriate action” against the officials involved.

The statement didn’t pull any punches, either, claiming there is a “clear double standard” when it comes to how Barcelona is treated in Europe compared to other big clubs.  

Kovács Sacked for the Season?

It looks like the pressure is already working. Reports out of Nyon suggest that UEFA has seen enough. István Kovács has reportedly been “excluded” from officiating any further Champions League matches this season. While it won’t change the 2–0 scoreline heading into the second leg in Madrid next Tuesday, it’s a small victory for a club that feels it’s being systematically pushed out of the competition.  

Can They Overcome the Deficit?

Winning 2–0 in Madrid is a tall order, especially with Pau Cubarsí suspended after his first-half red card. But if there’s one thing this complaint has done, it’s lit a fire under Hansi Flick’s men. They aren’t just playing against Atlético anymore; they’re playing against what they see as a rigged system.

Expect a war at the Metropolitano next week.

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