Chelsea cruised into the next round of the FA Cup after a 4-0 win at Hull City but chants from sections of the home crowd overshadowed the encounter.
21:49, 13 Feb 2026Updated 21:58, 13 Feb 2026
Hull City confirmed arrests were made during their FA Cup fourth round tie.
View 2 Images
Hull City confirmed arrests were made during their FA Cup fourth round tie.(Image: Getty Images)
Hull City have announced that arrests had been made during their FA Cup defeat against Chelsea over discriminatory chanting.
The Championship club issued warnings over their PA system to stop chants during the first-half, while messages were displayed on the screens within the stadium, after "Chelsea rent boy" was directed towards the Premier League side.
Supporters at the MKM Stadium were reminded that discriminatory chanting is a criminal offence and CCTV was being monitored inside the ground.
READ MORE: Alan Shearer stunned by Liam Delap after Chelsea goal line controversy - 'Goodness me'
OPINION
Bobby Vincent
During the second-half, further announcements were made informing supporters that action had been taken, including arrests.
In a statement published in 2023, Chelsea welcomed the decision from the Crown Prosecution Service that considered the term "rent boy" as a homophobic slur and hate crime.
"Chelsea Football Club welcomes the FA’s decision to class the homophobic chant directed at our supporters as a breach of FA rules which could lead to disciplinary action being taken," the statement began.
*FOLLOW OUR CHELSEA FB PAGE!Latest Blues news, analysis and much more via our dedicated Facebook page*
"This follows the decision of the Crown Prosecution Service to class this hugely offensive chant as a hate crime.
"The ‘Rent Boy’ chant is intolerable and has no place in football or anywhere else. That opposition clubs can now face disciplinary action if their supporters engage in this discriminatory and offensive behaviour is a step in the right direction. Everyone who chooses to participate in this chant must know their actions have consequences.
"Alongside our No To Hate campaign, we will continue to work with the FA, the CPS, opposition clubs, and our own LGBTQI+ supporter group Chelsea Pride in the pursuit of positive change. There is plenty more work to be done, but we won’t rest until football is a game where everyone feels welcome.
"Supporters are reminded they can report hate, whether experienced in the stadium or online, directly to us. Click here for more information and to report abuse."
Warnings were issued throughout the FA Cup contest between Hull and Chelsea.
View 2 Images
Warnings were issued throughout the FA Cup contest between Hull and Chelsea.(Image: Getty Images)
Hull had issued a reminder to fans on Thursday that "chanting of a homophobic, racist or discriminatory nature is entirely unacceptable and will not be tolerated".
They warned supporters that anyone found engaging in such behaviour would face serious consequences, including immediate ejection from the stadium, a banning order and criminal prosecution.
Article continues below
After Pedro Neto's goal separated the two sides in the first-half, the Portuguese forward added two goals in the second to complete his hat-trick while Estevao got in on the act.
Ensure our latest sport headlines always appear at the top of your Google Search by making us a Preferred Source.
Click here to activateor add us as Preferred Source in your Google search settings