Leonino
·7 April 2026
Rui Santos defends Sporting and accuses Villas-Boas of crimes

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsLeonino
·7 April 2026

Sports commentator Rui Santos defended Sporting and harshly criticized André Villas-Boas, commenting on the recent climate in Portuguese football. In a forceful tone, he questioned the behavior of the blue-and-white coach, recalling the president’s complaints to Media Capital shareholder, saying that "coercion is a crime."
“André Villas-Boas has just seen Porto drop two points in the league, which is still in a good position to reach the title, but the nervousness is evident (…) It is even possible that in the handball case it may be difficult to prove, or perhaps not, since the Public Prosecutor’s Office has stepped in, that alleged toxic substances caused strange effects in the area reserved for Sporting,” he began by saying in his opinion segment on CNN Portugal.
R. Santos: "Even more serious was the fact that he revealed he went to put pressure on Media Capital’s main shareholder, Mário Ferreira"
Rui Santos does not identify with the style of the blue-and-white official: “André Villas-Boas can try to defend himself however he wants, even with the joke of making a spa available to the Lions on Sporting’s next visit to the Dragão for the Portuguese Cup. The problem is André Villas-Boas thinking all these things are trivial and even ridiculing Sporting’s president for having taken these incidents to the meeting with the minister. Even more serious was the fact that he revealed he went to put pressure on Media Capital’s main shareholder, Mário Ferreira, because he felt persecuted by the media.”
The commentator did not hold back in criticizing the behavior of the Dragons’ official: “Where was André Villas-Boas when, in a rebuilding phase, he was hearing words of praise and tolerance regarding the difficult work he was carrying out without sporting results? He was going around talking to shareholders of media groups, pressuring freedom of the press. Does he know that coercion is a crime, or does he think that this kind of pressure is part of football, which is a bubble within formal democracy?”
To conclude, Rui Santos fired off blunt questions: “Has he lost his memory regarding the persecution he was targeted with? Does he think he will erase with a rubber the right Pinto da Costa thought he had acquired to die as Porto president? Does he think stopping halfway across the bridge is a solution? The rights of civic freedom are not just for him. Doesn’t he realize that admitting to making a phone call to a major shareholder of a leading media group was a spectacular own goal, reinforcing the idea that André Villas-Boas is as undemocratic as most club presidents in Portugal, who only want to hear what their scripts dictate, or as if he seems not to care about any of that, but to have everything and everyone under control.”
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.
Langsung


Langsung


Langsung





































