Neymar was one of five players sent off after an injury-time brawl as Marseille beat Paris St-Germain in Ligue 1

3 years ago

Neymar was one of five players sent off after an injury-time brawl as Marseille beat Paris St-Germain in Ligue 1

As he left the pitch, the Brazilian told the fourth official he had heard a racist comment.

Florian Thauvin scored the only goal as PSG lost their opening two Ligue 1 games for the first time since 1984-85.

But a late brawl saw PSG substitutes Leandro Paredes and Layvin Kurzawa, and Marseille duo Jordan Amavi and Dario Benedetto, sent off along with Neymar.

The referee watched a VAR replay of a punch from Neymar before showing him a straight red card.

After the match Neymar tweeted that his "only regret" was not hitting Alvaro Gonzalez in the face, having struck him on the back of the head.

In the post-match press conference Marseille manager Andre Villas-Boas said: "There is no place for racism in football but I don't think that was the case... we'll have to look at it."

The game - which was watched by a crowd of about 5,000 fans at the Parc des Princes - was fractious even before that late brawl. There were 17 cards shown in total, a record for a Ligue 1 game in the 21st century.

The injury-time drama started when Marseille's Benedetto nudged Paredes in the back, with the PSG midfielder then punching him to the ground before appearing to headbutt Alvaro.

A melee broke out, with Kurzawa and Amavi punching and kicking each other.

Benedetto and Paredes were each shown second yellow cards, with Kurzawa and Amavi shown straight reds.

The VAR review showed Neymar had punched the back of the head of Alvaro, a player he had been in a running battle with, and he was shown a straight red card, having earlier been booked.

Alvaro had also been involved in a big first-half flashpoint when he suggested Angel di Maria spat at him.

Di Maria was one of seven PSG players - along with Neymar - to test positive for coronavirus before the season started, although he had since provided a negative test.