Tottenham Hotspur have been fined £75,000 ($100,710) by the Soccer Affiliation on Thursday for crowd misconduct after the membership’s supporters have been heard making anti-gay chants throughout their Premier League match at Manchester United in September.
The membership condemned the incident on the time and stated they have been working with native police and stadium safety to establish their supporters who participated in “abhorrent homophobic chanting” at Outdated Trafford.
Spurs have been charged in November. An unbiased regulatory fee imposed an motion plan, £150,000 advantageous and a warning, after the membership admitted to the costs. The advantageous was decreased to £75,000 following an attraction.
“It was alleged that Tottenham Hotspur failed to make sure its spectators and or supporters… conduct themselves in an orderly trend and do not use phrases or in any other case behave in an improper, offensive, abusive, indecent, or insulting manner with both an specific or implied reference to sexual orientation round each the forty ninth and 79th minutes,” the FA stated.
Spurs will kick off their 2025-26 Premier League marketing campaign on Aug. 16 towards Burnley at house.