Mon, May 28, 2012, 2:36 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Mexican football clubs ban major sports tabloid

Mexican football clubs ban access for major sports tabloid, but 2 teams don't join in

MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Nearly all of Mexico's first-division football clubs and the Mexico Football Federation have agreed to ban access to one of the country's most important sports newspapers.

An announcement posted on the website of the Mexican federation Saturday said the football clubs acted in solidarity with the Chivas team of Guadalajara, whose owner has often denounced coverage by the tabloid Record.

A Chivas statement accused the paper of "a campaign of hate and abuses." It said all 18 clubs agreed to ban the paper's representatives from their stadiums and other facilities.

But two of the league's top clubs distanced themselves from the announcement. Cruz Azul said it was not yet enforcing the ban, and later in the day the UNAM Pumas team announced it would not go along with the ban at all.

Chivas and Record have had a running battles about coverage. The dispute has intensified recently with poor play by Chivas, which failed to win any of its first six games in the current tournament.

Chivas spokeswoman Eugenia Valdez told The Associated Press that the club had no comment.

Alejandro Gomez, sports director of Grupo Editorial Notimusa, which publishes Record, told the AP he did not plan legal action to overturn the decision, but said the newspaper would continue to cover football.

"This is dangerous," Gomez said. "Today it was us, but tomorrow any club that is unhappy with coverage of its team can ask for the same thing and the rest will have to go along. It's a shame because Mexican football needs to improve and polish its image instead of taking measures like this."

In a column published Saturday, Gomez called the action "simple, retrograde and inefficient" and denied publishing personal material about Fuentes or other football league officials.

Cruz Azul, a team based in Mexico City, said it would allow the Record access this weekend.

"Since we have not received an official notice yet, we're going to continue as things were," said Manuel Velazquez, spokesman for the club Cruz Azul.

The Pumas team, a Mexico City club associated with Mexico's biggest university, the National Autonomous University of Mexico, known as UNAM, said it would not hinder Record journalists.

"The professional football team of the UNAM has never contemplated the possibility of restricting in any manner the exercise of the freedom of expression," the team said in a statement.

Chivas is one of Mexico's most popular clubs and Record has blamed the team's recent abysmal play on owner Jorge Vergara and his wife Angelica Fuentes, who serves as executive president of the team. It has suggested they have failed to invest in player talent. Vergara said the coverage had prompted death threats against him.

Vergara owns the Omnilife company, which sells health supplements throughout the Americas and in Spain.

Four of the teams in the league are owned by large media corporations that cover sports. Televisa controls Club America and San Luis. Grupo Azteca or its subsidiaries have majority control of Morelia and Jaguares. Televisa also owns Aztec Stadium, home to Club America and Mexico's national team.

 

11 comments

  • gblive123  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  3 months ago
    From an international perspecitve, the Mexico Football Federation and their first division "football" teams are a joke. Most second league NASL soccer teams in the U.S. beat the Mexican first division teams when they scrimmage.

    Banning the leading sports newspaper because a team does not like the coverage when they lose is not going to improve the image of Mexican football.
  • OL SCRUFFY TOLD YA SO  •  3 months ago
    It's soccer..#$%$
  • Muffdiver  •  Irvine, California  •  3 months ago
    You got absolutely nothing to write about unless teams start playing with heads in methico!!!
  • almostperfectunion  •  3 months ago
    What about improving and polishing the image of the whole stinky country?
  • Martin  •  3 months ago
    I take advantage of the price g0ld today and with the use of secret code videos of Gold trading academy the more it easy for me to trade and earn.
  • kevin  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    who gives a rats bum about Mexican soccer . They are irrelevant . Let the animals running the drug war take over all the teams. They have the money, and if the players don't perform well, they can threaten them and their children. Now that would be fun . . .
  • Magneto  •  3 months ago
    Before they start cleaning up their mexican football and sports reporting,why don't they first start cleaning up their useless country,which has now become the armpit of all latin america
  • vote2012  •  3 months ago
    We dont give a chiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit about de stinking Mexican football. Cee
  • 2012PREZ_com  •  3 months ago
    Kicking a ball around while carrying two is so important in this world you'd think it would be front page news everyday.
  • Magron  •  De Witt, New York  •  3 months ago
    Soccer. LOL. yeah..these days we have the kids playing it ALL through school and STILL nobody wants to watch it.
    Nearly as exciting as marathon coverage... heh
    yawn.
  • Dave  •  3 months ago
    Who watches it anyway.
 
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