Frankfurt say UEFA rejected request to move Napoli game after fan ban
UEFA has turned down Eintracht Frankfurt's bid to relocate their Champions League clash with Napoli to a neutral venue after the German side's fans were banned from attending by local authorities, the Bundesliga club said on Friday.
The group-stage game will proceed as scheduled on November 4 without Frankfurt supporters after the Prefect of Naples issued an order prohibiting Napoli from selling approximately 2,500 tickets to travelling fans.
Frankfurt had submitted a request to UEFA, European soccer's governing body, to either move the game to a neutral venue or hold it behind closed doors, citing "safety and organisational deficiencies" at Napoli's stadium.
"The entirely different approaches from participating countries and national associations to high-risk matches... has now become a real problem for European fan culture and the integrity of European club competitions," the club's board member Philipp Reschke said in a statement.
"It's unacceptable that in most places, away fans are welcomed as a matter of course despite major challenges, while in others... away supporters are simply excluded by authorities in spite of identical circumstances and risks."
Frankfurt's complaints highlight a broader trend, with the club noting there have been 15 cases of official away fan bans in UEFA competitions since their supporters were first prohibited from Naples in 2023.
UEFA LOOKING INTO ADJUSTING REGULATIONS
The club added that UEFA had told them it is looking at changing the regulations in light of the rising number of bans, with Reschke saying the lack of away fans results in an "atmospheric and competitive disadvantage" on the pitch.
"UEFA regulations do not yet provide clubs who are unilaterally affected by official bans on away