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Raphinha brands Barcelona’s Champions League exit ‘a robbery’

Barcelona finished both legs of their quarter-final tie with Atletico Madrid with 10 men as they exited the Champions League

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Raphinha launched a scathing attack towards the Champions League officialsopen image in gallery

Raphinha launched a scathing attack towards the Champions League officials (Reuters)

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Barcelona forward Raphinha launched a scathing attack on ​the refereeing in their Champions League quarter-final tie as his side were knocked out 3-2 on aggregate by Atletico Madrid, having finished both legs with 10 men.

The Brazilian, sidelined through injury for ⁠both matches, accused referees Clement Turpin, who officiated the second game, and Istvan Kovacs, from the first, of "robbing" his team.

"As far as I'm concerned, it was a robbery, not just this match but the other one (the first leg) as well," Raphinha told reporters after ⁠Barca's 2-1 win on the night was ​not ⁠enough.

"I think the refereeing is going really badly; the decisions he (Turpin) makes are unbelievable ... I really want to understand why they're so afraid ⁠that Barcelona will come and win."

Barcelona were knocked out of the Champions League by Atletico Madridopen image in gallery

Barcelona were knocked out of the Champions League by Atletico Madrid (Reuters)

Broadcast images showed Raphinha repeatedly making a ​grabbing motion ⁠with his hands after the ‌final whistle, a gesture commonly associated with "stealing".

"It was tough, especially when you realise you have to work three times as hard to win the match," Raphinha ‌added.

"I think this tie was quite misleading, in ‌my view. I think everyone can make mistakes; everyone is human. But when the mistakes keep repeating themselves in exactly the same way, I think that's something we need to pay attention ⁠to."

Uefa has been contacted for comment by Reuters.

In last week's first leg, Kovacs sent off Pau Cubarsi in the 42nd minute after a VAR review for hauling down Giuliano Simeone as he raced clear on goal, upgrading an initial yellow card.

Atletico scored from the resulting free kick, Julian Alvarez curling into the top right corner beyond Joan Garcia.

On Tuesday, Turpin followed a similar course as Barca defender Garcia ‌was dismissed after a VAR review for holding Alexander Sorloth from ​behind while he ran through on goal.

Barcelona had lodged a formal ‌complaint, rejected by Uefa, over an ⁠incident early in the second half of the first leg.

They had ⁠appealed for a penalty after Atletico keeper Juan Musso appeared to put the ball back in play ‌from a goal kick ​before Marc Pubill handled inside the ‌six-yard box to retake it.

Kovacs waved play ​on and VAR did not intervene, prompting angry reactions from the Barcelona bench.

Reuters

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