Former Tottenham and Ipswich defender Mauricio Taricco has been kicked out of his coaching role at South Korean club Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors after sparking a racism row. The 52-year-old was involved in a heated exchange with referee Kim Woo-seong during a game against Daejeon Hana, where he kept complaining about a non-award for a penalty despite the video assistant referee intervening to point to the spot.
Taricco made a hand gesture that the K League's disciplinary committee deemed to be a racist insult. The fine was 20 million Korean won (ยฃ10,300) and Taricco has been stripped of his coaching role after the committee upheld its decision. He will leave the club at the end of the season.
In a bizarre incident, in 2017, Colombian player Edwin Cardona made a similar gesture during a match against South Korea but was fined just five matches. It emerged that the player had apologised and claimed it was not meant to be racist, yet he still faced punishment for it.
Jeonbuk has since said they will launch an appeal, claiming Taricco's behaviour was misunderstood. However, the K League rejected this appeal on Monday, saying there were no issues with the disciplinary committee's actions and no new facts that would change its decision.
The South Korean football community remains divided over the issue, while many are questioning why officials are quick to demand punishment for players but slow to hold referees accountable.
Taricco made a hand gesture that the K League's disciplinary committee deemed to be a racist insult. The fine was 20 million Korean won (ยฃ10,300) and Taricco has been stripped of his coaching role after the committee upheld its decision. He will leave the club at the end of the season.
In a bizarre incident, in 2017, Colombian player Edwin Cardona made a similar gesture during a match against South Korea but was fined just five matches. It emerged that the player had apologised and claimed it was not meant to be racist, yet he still faced punishment for it.
Jeonbuk has since said they will launch an appeal, claiming Taricco's behaviour was misunderstood. However, the K League rejected this appeal on Monday, saying there were no issues with the disciplinary committee's actions and no new facts that would change its decision.
The South Korean football community remains divided over the issue, while many are questioning why officials are quick to demand punishment for players but slow to hold referees accountable.