Legia Warszawa plays away against Swedish Djurgarden in the last round of the league phase of the Conference League. But basically from the first whistle one could assume that it would not be the calmest evening.
The match Djurgarden – Legia Warszawa had barely started and was interrupted. “Inside Out”
Ultimately, the game was resumed after about a quarter of an hour. But what the Swedes did was widely discussed among experts and journalists. “Djurgarden's game in LK on Tele2 Arena was already a joke when Lech played there. It's a hall. Two years ago there was the Handball World Championship there. This is such a repeat offense with flares that it's unbelievable. They should be banned from playing there , or every flare from the hosts' sector is a walkover. It's a closed room, I'm not even talking about common sense, but they don't have fire safety regulations? PS Mandatory punishment for Legia. One million euros and Łazienkowska is closed for 10 matches,” commented Szymon Ratajczak.
“1. You support Djurgarden. 2. You know perfectly well that your club's stadium is being closed. 3. You read in the media: “It's closed for Legia.” 4. You look up: there is a roof. 5. You start the pitch anyway. 6. The match is interrupted. .7. Restarted after 15 minutes, although you can still see nothing. You have to have a head,” said Jakub Białek from Wesło.
The Internet mocks what happened in the match Djurgarden – Legia Warszawa. “Good luck”
There was also an ongoing “discussion” regarding what punishment the Swedes could expect. All in the context of penalties imposed on Legia in the past. “It's lucky that Djurgarden fans filled the stadium with smoke, otherwise the delegate would have noticed blocked traffic passages and the punishment would have been ready,” said Jakub Jeleński from Canal+Sport.
“I think that for interrupting the match due to flares fired by Djurgarden fans, Legia should be punished in the form of a EUR 100,000 fine and a ban from entering the next five away matches. UEFA should consider me in the context of admitting me to its structures,” echoed Kacper Wielgomas from igol .pl.
“It must be admitted that the Djurgarden fans are a bit tired… And apparently we are not doing well with that,” noted Artur Banach. “Djurgarden fans are friends of all Poles. They will try to extend the match so that we can watch Jagiellonia and calmly switch to Legia,” added Szymon Janczyk from Wesło.
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The whole confusion had a negative impact, especially on Legia Warszawa, which was losing 0-2 at the break. You can follow the text coverage of the match on Sport.pl and in the Sport.pl LIVE mobile application.