jose mourinho and vinicius junior during heated champions league match between benfica and real madrid
Football has once again been pulled into the global conversation on racism — and this time, the spotlight falls on a tense Champions League clash involving Vinicius Junior, Jose Mourinho, and Rio Ferdinand.
The fallout from Benfica vs Real Madrid has ignited debate across the football world, with Ferdinand stepping in to defend Mourinho’s character after controversial comments about Vinicius Jr’s on-field celebrations and the hostile crowd reaction that followed.
The controversy began when Vinicius accused Benfica youngster Gianluca Prestianni of racially abusing him during the heated Champions League playoff encounter.
Post-match, Mourinho suggested Vinicius’ exuberant goal celebration may have contributed to crowd hostility — a remark widely interpreted as victim-blaming and quickly condemned by fans and pundits.
Speaking on his podcast, Ferdinand acknowledged Mourinho handled the situation poorly — but strongly rejected claims of racism:
“Jose Mourinho has done enough for black footballers from all over the world, who look at him like a father figure, to suggest that the guy hasn’t got a racist bone in his body.”
The Manchester United legend argued that Mourinho’s long track record of mentoring Black players across Europe should weigh heavily against the narrative forming around the incident.
Mourinho also defended Benfica’s culture by referencing club icon Eusebio, one of football’s greatest Black legends, stating the club is “the last thing” from racist.
However, his additional claim — that incidents “always” happen when Vinicius plays — intensified criticism, with many seeing it as dismissive of repeated racism faced by the Real Madrid star across European stadiums.
UEFA has since issued Prestianni a provisional one-match ban pending investigation, while Benfica have announced plans to appeal and reiterated their anti-racism stance.
This episode again highlights football’s ongoing struggle with racism, player protection, and accountability narratives. Ferdinand’s intervention reframes the debate around intent versus impact — defending Mourinho’s character while acknowledging flawed handling.
For the sport’s global audience and brands alike, the message is clear: football’s biggest stages remain arenas not just for talent — but for social responsibility.
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