Barca call for Tebas’ resignation after damning newspaper report
The president of the Spanish football league 'La Liga,' Javier Tebas, speaks as he takes part in the forum, Madrid, Spain, March 16, 2023. (AFP Photo)


The ongoing volley of attacks and accusations between Barcelona and La Liga president Javier Tebas shows no signs of abating.

The latest salvo, which erupted on Monday, saw the Catalan club vehemently demanding the immediate resignation of Teba following a report alleging that the league had furnished false evidence against Barcelona in the refereeing scandal that ensnared the club.

Tebas had already claimed the report by La Vanguardia newspaper was misleading and carried incorrect assumptions, but it was enough to reignite the vendetta between the two sides.

"It is not the first time that the president of La Liga has used the media weapons at his disposal to damage FC Barcelona," the club said in a statement. "Unlike his usual nonsense, we could never have imagined he could try to incriminate our club with false evidence."

Barcelona said the article published by La Vanguardia "is of such gravity that it should put all the clubs in La Liga on alert, given that it talks of practices which are in no way consistent with the job" of league president.

"If only for this fact, that of giving himself powers that do not belong to him, although also for reasons of dignity and respect for the presidency of La Liga, Mr. Tebas should resign from his post," the club said. "Nevertheless, aware of his obsession with persecuting FC Barcelona and showing his constant averse and manifest dislike of our club, we understand that the current La Liga president will persist in his efforts to keep damaging our club."

Tebas asked for a correction by the newspaper, saying the article "includes assertions and erroneous information" which "seriously damage my honor" and "the image" of the Spanish league.

"While the headline is grossly misleading, the Vanguardia article states that La Liga explicitly does not seek to speculate nor accuse anyone with the documentation provided," the league said.

Barcelona has claimed to be "the victim of a media campaign for events that never took place: Barça has never paid referees."

Barcelona has been under scrutiny since it became public that the club paid millions of dollars for years to a company that belonged to the vice president of the country’s refereeing committee.

The club has denied wrongdoing, saying the payments were for only technical reports, not to influence refereeing decisions.

"This harassment involves a group of media outlets and opinion writers with varying degrees of intent and with La Liga fanning the flames behind the scenes against our club, with contributions from its president who has only gone in one direction: Trying to condemn us in the public’s eyes before the facts have been judged," Barcelona said.

Tebas has called for the resignation of Barcelona president Joan Laporta if he didn’t adequately explain the club’s payments to the refereeing committee official.

Barcelona has also been at odds with the league over the registration of playmaker Gavi into the main squad amid disagreement over the club’s salary cap imposed by the league.

Tebas, over the years, has also had spats with Real Madrid president Florentino Perez and Spanish football federation president Luis Rubiales.