
Premier League to investigate after Antoine Semenyo reports racist abuse
PA Sport understands police officers went into the referee's room at half-time, while an anti-discrimination message was read out to the Anfield crowd.
Tonight's match between Liverpool Football Club and AFC Bournemouth was temporarily paused during the first half after a report of discriminatory abuse from the crowd, directed at Bournemouth's Antoine Semenyo. This is in line with the Premier League's on-field…
— Premier League Match Centre (@PLMatchCentre) August 15, 2025
A Premier League statement read: 'Tonight's match between Liverpool Football Club and AFC Bournemouth was temporarily paused during the first half after a report of discriminatory abuse from the crowd, directed at Bournemouth's Antoine Semenyo.
'This is in line with the Premier League's on-field anti-discrimination protocol.
'The incident at Anfield will now be fully investigated. We offer our full support to the player and both clubs.
'Racism has no place in our game, or anywhere in society. We will continue to work with stakeholders and authorities to ensure our stadiums are an inclusive and welcoming environment for all.'
Merseyside Police said a 47-year-old man was removed from the ground and an investigation was under way after his identity was confirmed.
Chief Inspector Kev Chatterton, the match commander for the game, said: 'Merseyside Police will not tolerate hate crime of any form.
'We take incidents like this very seriously, and in cases like this we will be proactively seeking football banning orders, with the club, against those responsible.'
Sky Sports co-commentator Gary Neville said: 'It overshadows what should be an amazing night. First game of the Premier League season, a beautiful day, 62,000 fans in the stadium and that boy (Semenyo) basically has been racially abused and has had to go over to a referee to complain about it.
'I can't even begin to think what would be going through someone's mind, however it's happened and it'll keep on happening and it's a sorry state.'
Fellow co-commentator Jamie Carragher added: 'A shocking incident rightly reported to the referee.'
The incident comes two days after Tottenham's Mathys Tel received racist abuse online after missing a penalty in his side's UEFA Super Cup win against Paris St Germain.
The Football Association said it was 'concerned' about the allegation of racism towards Semenyo and that it would ensure 'appropriate action' would be taken.
pic.twitter.com/VuUKe0Su4g
— FA Spokesperson (@FAspokesperson) August 15, 2025
A statement from the FA read: 'We are very concerned about the allegation of discrimination from an area of the crowd, which was reported to the match officials during the Premier League fixture between Liverpool and Bournemouth.
'Incidents of this nature have no place in our game and we will work closely with the match officials, the clubs and the relevant authorities to establish the facts and ensure the appropriate action is taken.'
After the incident, Semenyo scored twice in the second half to help bring Bournemouth back from two goals down at Anfield before Liverpool went on to eventually win the contest 4-2.
Cherries' Adam Smith told Sky Sports News afterwards: 'It shouldn't be happening. I don't know how Ant's played on to be honest and come up with those goals. It's totally unacceptable.
'Something needs to be done. Taking the knee isn't having an effect. We're supporting him and hopefully he'll be OK.
'I wanted him to react because that's what I would have done, but this shows what type of man he is…to come up with those goals showed the type of guy he is.
'To be fair the Liverpool players were very supportive as well towards Antoine and the rest of the team. It was handled in the right way but…so angry.
'I don't know what else we can do. No one's getting it. I don't know what to say anymore. I just feel for Ant…shocking.'
Liverpool issued a statement which read: 'Liverpool Football Club is aware of an allegation of racist abuse made during our Premier League game against AFC Bournemouth.
'We condemn racism and discrimination in all forms, it has no place in society or football.
'The club is unable to comment further as tonight's alleged incident is the subject of an ongoing police investigation, which we will support fully.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
2 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Man Utd receive new Matheus Cunha penalty verdict as ex-Premier League ref weighs in
After Matheus Cunha was denied a penalty when he got tangled up with William Saliba, one ex-Premier League referee has offered his thoughts Former Premier League referee Dermot Gallagher believes Manchester United were correctly denied a penalty in their 1-0 loss to Arsenal on Sunday afternoon. Matheus Cunha tumbled inside the box following contact with William Saliba during the closing moments of the Premier League clash. Having latched onto Matthijs de Ligt's delivery in the area, the summer recruit failed to make proper contact with the ball. Saliba appeared to catch Cunha's left foot, but referee Simon Hooper chose not to punish the defender. Television replays revealed the Gunners ace did make contact with the £62.5million signing from Wolves, sparking anger the infringement went unnoticed. During Monday morning's discussion of the incident alongside former Premier League forward Jay Bothroyd on Sky Sports programme Ref Watch, the ex-official backed Hooper's choice not to grant United a spot-kick. "I wasn't convinced it was a penalty, but I will say that if it is going to be a penalty, it's one for the referee to give, not one for VAR," Gallagher explained on Sky Sports News. Bothroyd then questioned why, highlighting the prospect of such a challenge being penalised elsewhere on the pitch, asking: "How's that not a penalty? That's a guaranteed penalty. If that happens on the half-way line, that's a free-kick. Is it a free-kick on the halfway line?" Gallagher responded: "It wasn't on the halfway line. I don't play that game," prompting Bothroyd to instantly reply: "Why not? A free-kick on the halfway line should be the same as in the box." After Gallagher responded: "I agree on that. No, not a foul," Bothroyd snapped back: "That's definitely a foul. He's come through the back of him. The ball was there, he came through the back of him and hit the foot that he planted. It's a penalty." Despite Bothroyd's insistence, Gallagher ended the discussion by stating: "You judge what happens and at that point, I don't think it's a foul. I wouldn't give a foul [anywhere else on the pitch]." Ex-Premier League official Keith Hackett also agreed with Hooper's original decision. Hackett told Football Insider: "There is no doubt that the defender made contact with Cunha. "The problem here is that the player is already falling down backwards and was searching for a penalty kick. The referee is spot on. VAR isn't going to get involved because it's not a clear and obvious error. "Players often exaggerate their fall when a foul has taken place, and that exaggeration often makes the referee not give it. Saliba has made a genuine attempt for the ball, and Cunha is already on his way down. He's not even facing the goal – why? There are lots of questions to be asked here." United travel to Fulham in their next Premier League game on August 31st. The Cottagers drew 1-1 away to Brighton on the weekend, with Rodrigo Muniz cancelling out Matt O'Riley's penalty in the 96th minute for the west Londoners.


BBC News
3 minutes ago
- BBC News
Transfer window set to break all records
With two weeks to go until the Premier League summer transfer window closes, clubs are well on course to spend a record amount on new from Transfermarkt, external shows that Premier League clubs have already spent £2.26bn on players since the window opened at the start of is an increase of 12.7% on the £1.97bn spent during the summer of current record stands at £2.36bn during the 2023 summer transfer window. With more deals to come and the future of several players unclear as the 1 September deadline nears, it seems certain a new record will be BBC Sport takes a deeper look at the spending and how it compares with other leagues in Europe. Premier League spending bigger than Europe's big leagues combined As always, Premier League clubs are spending more than their foreign top-flight clubs have exceeded the transfer investments of Serie A, Bundesliga, Ligue 1 and La Liga teams in the Premier League have spent £1bn more than they have raised in sales. The only other top European league to have a minus net spend is La Liga, where Spanish clubs have spent £35m more than they have brought is perhaps unsurprising that the Premier League is driving the sales for the bigger three biggest Premier League signings so far this summer in terms of fees paid have been for players from Bundesliga clubs - Florian Wirtz (Bayer Leverkusen to Liverpool) - £100m rising to £116m with add ons; Hugo Ekitike (Eintracht Frankfurt to Liverpool) - £69m rising to £79m with add-ons; Benjamin Sesko (RB Leipzig to Manchester United) - £66.3m rising to £73.7m with Serie A is the top-spending league outside the Premier clubs have spent £783m - but that is still less than the net spend of the Premier League, never mind the total spend. Six clubs break transfer record This has been an unusual transfer window - in that there have been two first opened between Sunday, 1 June and Tuesday, 10 June, because of an exceptional registration period relating to the Fifa Club World Cup.A total of £400m was spent before the traditional transfer window opened, with Manchester City paying about £108m to sign Rayan Cherki, Rayan Ait-Nouri and Tijjani then reopened on Monday, 16 June and will close again on Monday, 1 clubs have broken their transfer records this completed a deal of up to £42.5m to sign Burkina Faso forward Dango Ouattara from Bournemouth, who spent £34.6m on French centre-back Bafode promoted Burnley and Sunderland have paid £25m and £26m respectively for French midfielder Lesley Ugochukwu and Senegal midfielder Habib Diarra, whose deal could rise to £30m with Forest have broken their transfer record twice this summer, first for Switzerland winger Dan Ndoye from Bologna, then winger Omari Hutchison from Ipswich for £ June, Liverpool signed Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen for a guaranteed £100m and a further £16m in add-ons. Should those add-ons be achieved, Wirtz's move to Anfield would become a British transfer record to beat the £107m Chelsea paid Benfica for Argentina midfielder Enzo Fernandez in the current 20 Premier League clubs, 16 have broken their transfer record in the past four years, with four - Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City and Arsenal - having transfer records of £100m or the other end of the scale, Burnley's record transfer fee paid is £ spending about £200m on players this summer, Manchester United's record signing remains Paul Pogba from Juventus for £91m in 2016, around the same time Crystal Palace paid Liverpool £27m for Christian Benteke, which also remains a record for the Eagles. How does spending compare to Europe's top clubs? For the past two seasons, all three teams promoted to the Premier League - Burnley, Sheffield United, Luton Town, Leicester City, Ipswich Town and Southampton - have been relegated straight is harder than ever which perhaps explains why Sunderland have been busy recruiting players like former Arsenal midfielder Granit to Transfermarkt, the Black Cats are now top of the table in terms of clubs promoted to the Premier League with highest spends., external Next are Nottingham Forest, who invested heavily after promotion in La Liga, Serie A, the Bundesliga and Ligue 1, only Atletico Madrid and Real Madrid have spent more than the £140m-plus Sunderland have paid for Atletico Madrid are the biggest spenders outside the Premier League having shelled out £153m, with neighbours Real Madrid a close second on £ figures, however, are well down on the reported £289.5m Liverpool have invested in their squad since being crowned Premier League is more than three times the amount Paris St-Germain (£90m) have spent since winning the Champions in Europe, Juventus have spent £103m, Bayer Leverkusen £100m, RB Leipzig £98m and AC Milan £ have spent just £22.5m so far. The biggest signing outside the Premier League is Luis Diaz from Liverpool to Bayern Munich in a £65.5m deal, including add-ons. And how big could it become? With the clock ticking towards the deadline, the future of Newcastle forward - and Liverpool target - Alexander Isak, who is valued at £150m by his club, remains Premier League spending smash the £2.5bn barrier?Liverpool are keen on Crystal Palace defender Marc Guehi, while Eagles forward Eberechi Eze is wanted by forward Yoane Wissa and Manchester United striker Alejandro Garnacho could also be on the move, along with Chelsea's Nicolas Jackson and Christopher will Premier League spending stand after the window closes?Let us know your thoughts - comment below.


Daily Mail
4 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Leeds vs Everton - Premier League: Live score, team news and updates as the Whites make their return to the top flight with a home clash against the Toffees
What a weekend it's been, eh? One of the main reasons I love the Premier League returning is because we get four days of back-to-back footie, from Friday through Monday. It's pure bliss. We've had three of those days pass us now, and well, it's fair to say it's been a mixed bag. We started with a bang at Anfield, but then it was a bit up and down in terms of entertainment after that, to be honest. Nevertheless, the top flight has still been as frantic as ever. Now, last but not least, we finish the opening weekend at Elland Road as Leeds United mark their return to the Premier League against Everton. If I know one thing about tonight, it's that the atmosphere is going to be electric. When the Leeds players emerge from that tunnel, the noise may be loud enough to register on the Richter scale. OK, that's dramatic, but it's going to be hella loud. I, for one, can not wait for it to get started... let's hope we end this weekend like we started it, with a bang! Right then, shall we get cracking?