Tiago Silva slams Varandas: No moral authority to talk ethics | OneFootball

Tiago Silva slams Varandas: No moral authority to talk ethics | OneFootball

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·5 marzo 2026

Tiago Silva slams Varandas: No moral authority to talk ethics

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Tiago Silva once again didn’t hold back and delivered a scathing analysis of what he calls “the Portuguese football system.”

The CMTV commentator insists that there are “coincidences that happen too often to be coincidences” and that “for two years now” he has been warning about the same thing: “The new Portuguese football system wears Lacoste.”


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In Tiago Silva’s view, a clear pattern repeats itself in tight matches: “Referees appear far too often as true lifeguards for Sporting,” either by “turning a blind eye to crucial incidents” that would leave the Alvalade club with fewer players, or by “spending long minutes inventing penalties or searching for fouls with a magnifying glass.”

The commentator recalled last season as a paradigmatic example, pointing to the match against Gil Vicente—where “a sending-off for Maxi was forgiven when Sporting was losing”—and the game in Santa Clara, where “a blatant penalty wasn’t given with the game tied,” both before the decisive match at Luz. Not to mention the Cup final, which he described as “the real cherry on top of the cake.”

Regarding yesterday’s match at Alvalade, Tiago Silva did not hide his outrage: “Several Sporting players did whatever they wanted on the pitch—chest bumps, assaults, obscene gestures, kicking the ball at teammates lying on the ground—without the referee showing any reaction.” He added what he considered the most scandalous detail: “A player who committed actions worthy of two red cards and a yellow left the field without seeing a single card.”

For Tiago Silva, “it’s no coincidence that there is a single president who systematically appears in public to defend the refereeing sector”—Frederico Varandas—and the system goes beyond the referees, relying on “strategic pawns who shape and publicly sell the narratives that matter, always under the guise of supposed impartiality.”

About the Sporting president, the commentator was particularly harsh, stating that Varandas “behaved like a true social media troll” at the end of the match, with “conduct and statements unworthy of the president of a major club.” He concluded: “Someone who tried to publicly whitewash Matheus Reis’s aggression in the Cup final, whose club denied that it was Nuno Santos who broke the glass in Aveiro, and who never condemned the headbutt to a FC Porto ball boy, has no moral authority to speak about anyone’s ethical standards.”

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.

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