Champions League: The foreign press deplores the lack of organization at the source of these incidents

Foreign media are asking questions about Saturday's Champions League final at the Stade de France and the reasons behind the delay of 36 minutes.

Champions League: The foreign press deplores the lack of organization at the source of these incidents

Foreign media are asking questions about Saturday's Champions League final at the Stade de France and the reasons behind the delay of 36 minutes. They are questioning the organization and the difficulty of accessing the stadium for the thousands of supporters who still have their tickets.

British media mentions that under tension, police sprayed tear gas on English supporters who were crammed behind gates.

FLASH - Many supporters who have a ticket to the final of

These incidents, according to "The Guardian", "again raise serious doubts about UEFA hosting a major event".

Liverpool club released a statement saying it was "extremely dissatisfied with the problems entering the stadium and the breaching of the security perimeter which (its supporters) were confronted with" and asked for an "investigation official into the causes of these unacceptable issues".

Daily El Mundo also pointed out a problem with the organization's location of pre-match fanzones. Ceferin, the organization that he chairs, has put the Liverpool fan zone in central Paris, west of Champs-Elysees. It is 45 minutes away by metro from Saint-Denis station. Real Madrid held its preview at a park located near the Legion of Honor stadium. It is only a 20-minute walk from the stadium. This is why there was a late and staggered influx of British fans at the stadium's entrances.

However, unlike Gerald Darmanin, the Interior Minister, and Amelie Oudea–Castera, the Sports Minister, Spanish journalists don't blame them. They recorded intrusions into Real Madrid stadium by young Saint-Denisians, who testified to the attacks on Real Madrid supporters.

And it continues... @carruselpic.twitter.com/mzbuFZ5fBH

"El Mundo" says that "an inexplicable chaos" is what he sees a year before the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. The Stade de France will host the opening ceremony and closing ceremonies. It has a capacity for 75,000 spectators.

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