The head of Argentina's soccer federation said the chaotic ending to its Olympic soccer match against Morocco on Wednesday ''makes no sense," and coach Javier Mascherano called the scene ''a scandal.''
The opening match of the men's soccer tournament was suspended for nearly two hours during added time after Morocco fans invaded the field and threw bottles in protest of a late goal by Argentina. The goal was later overturned by the video assistant referee, and Argentina lost 2-1.
''What happened on the field was a scandal. This isn't a neighborhood tournament, these are the Olympic Games,'' Mascherano said.
Paris organizers said they were trying to ''understand the causes and identify appropriate actions" after the match in Saint-Etienne. Argentina's soccer federation said it issued a formal protest Wednesday to world governing body FIFA and would do ''what is necessary'' to guarantee the safety of players.
''Having to wait almost two hours in the dressing room, after Morocco fans entering the pitch, the violence that the Argentina delegation suffered, our players having to warm up again and continue to play a match that should have been suspended by the main referee, is really something that makes no sense and that goes against the competition rules,'' Argentina Football Association president Claudio Tapia said.
The Argentina team also said its training base was robbed before the game, with a watch belonging to midfielder Thiago Almada among the items taken.
Meanwhile, Argentine President Javier Milei arrived Thursday in Paris, his office said, and is expected to meet French President Emmanuel Macron after tensions escalated between their countries over the Argentine soccer team's derogatory post-match chants about French players at Copa America.
Morocco fans rushed the field to protest Cristian Medina's goal in the 16th minute of added time at Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, which appeared to tie the game at 2. Bottles also were thrown from the crowd and, in frenzied scenes, security tackled fans on the field.