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Home > Headlines > Football Reacts to Lamine Yamal: Solidarity, Silence, and a Telling Divide

Football Reacts to Lamine Yamal: Solidarity, Silence, and a Telling Divide

At this point, the conversation has grown into a wider debate about solidarity, identity, and whether football is truly prepared to confront discrimination when it happens in plain sight.

MWN StaffbyMWN Staff
Apr, 03, 2026
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Football Reacts to Lamine Yamal: Solidarity, Silence, and a Telling Divide

After racist and Islamophobic chants broke out,it was a heavy moment because Lamine Yamal was right there on the pitch while it was happening.

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After racist and Islamophobic chants broke out during the Spain-Egypt match, everyone was watching to see how Spanish football would react. It was a heavy moment because Lamine Yamal was right there on the pitch while it was happening. As a Spanish player who is also Muslim, facing that kind of hate while representing his own country was heavy on the player.

During the match, sections of the crowd broke into chants including “el que no bote es musulmán” (whoever doesn’t jump is Muslim), a chant often used in stadiums as a generic crowd song but in this context clearly linked to religion and perceived as offensive.

It was this atmosphere that Yamal later responded to directly on social media. In his Instagram post, Yamal explained that he understood the chant was not specifically directed at him, but still rejected it on principle: “I am Muslim, alhamdulillah… I know it wasn’t something personal against me, but as a Muslim, it is still a form of disrespect and something unacceptable…”

In the hours that followed, several teammates, club colleagues, and players from across the football world publicly showed support. But just as much attention has gone to those who stayed silent.

One of the strongest reactions came from political analyst Samir Bennis, who openly questioned the response from within Spanish football.

“What is truly striking about the anti-Islamic chants that took place during the Spain vs. Egypt match on Tuesday in Barcelona is that few Spanish players have expressed solidarity with or strong and unambiguous support for Lamine Yamal,” Bennis wrote.

He then pointed to what he sees as a lack of public backing from within the Spain camp itself.

“Only twelve out of 26 of his teammates who were on the pitch with him… have publicly expressed support or condemned the racist behavior,” he added.

Many expected a stronger collective reaction from La Roja’s dressing room.

What is truly striking about the anti-Islamic chants that took place during the Spain vs. Egypt match on Tuesday in Barcelona is that few Spanish players have expressed solidarity with or strong and unambiguous support for Lamine Yamal, arguably Spain’s most talented and…

— Samir Bennis (@SamirBennis) April 2, 2026


‘A broader pattern’

To be fair, a number of players did publicly stand by Yamal. Several names from Barcelona’s young core were quick to like the post, including Pau Cubarsí, Marc Bernal, Marc Casadó, Fermín López, Alejandro Balde and Eric García. Nico Williams, Marc Cucurella, Pedro Porro and Gavi were also among those who either supported Yamal directly or reacted to his message.

“Ironically, a greater number of Moroccan national team players… have openly stood by his side,” Bennis wrote, naming Achraf Hakimi, Yassine Bounou, Bilal El Khannouss, Abde Ezzalzouli and Soufiane Rahimi among others, as well as members of the Moroccan coaching staff.

For him, that contrast says something bigger about identity and belonging.

“Despite the fact that Lamine Yamal has chosen to represent Spain at the international level… Moroccans continue to regard him as one of their own,” Bennis pointed out.

That has reopened conversations about race, religion, and how dual-identity players are perceived in European football. What happened in Barcelona should not be dismissed as a one-off incident.

According to Bennis, it reflects “a broader pattern in a country where racism, xenophobia, and hostility toward Muslims… have become normalized.”

His sharpest point, though, was about how Yamal is valued.

“The value attributed to Lamine Yamal is largely instrumental, tied to his ability to contribute to victories and titles, rather than to his dignity as a human being.”

Meanwhile, some Spanish players, including Pedri, Ferran Torres, Marcos Llorente and Dean Huijsen, did not publicly react in the immediate aftermath.

Of course, silence does not automatically mean disagreement. Some players prefer to stay off social media, while others may choose to show support privately.

But in reality, in a moment as grave, visible and emotionally charged as this one, that silence has inevitably become part of the story.

At this point, the conversation has grown into a wider debate about solidarity, identity, and whether football is truly prepared to confront discrimination when it happens in plain sight.

Tags: lamine yamalMorocco Spain relationsracism in footballracism in spainSpain football
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