The boss of Turkish football club Trabzonspor locked four match officials in a stadium overnight for failing to award his team a penalty, only to release them under escort from special forces after a phone call from President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
The enraged club president, Ibrahim Hacıosmanoğlu, ordered Çağatay Şahan and his assistant referees to be detained after Trabzonspor were denied a penalty in the final minutes of the top-flight match against Gaziantepspor, which ended 2-2.
Angry supporters gathered outside the stadium and the referees were locked in until the early hours of Thursday, when there was a personal intervention from Erdoğan, for whom Hacıosmanoğlu said he had a “bond of love and respect”.
“I told stadium security not to let the referees leave until the morning, until I arrived, but a very important person called me and asked me not to cause embarrassment in Turkey and around the world. He promised the [penalty] incident would be investigated,” Hacıosmanoğlu said in a television interview with Doğan news agency, referring to Erdoğan.
Presidency sources were not available for comment, reports Reuters.
The referees were released at 4am, four hours after being locked in, and escorted to safety by special forces.
Hacıosmanoğlu landed in further hot water after his outburst over the incident included a vow not to “live like a woman”. “If we’re going to die, we’ll die like men; we won’t live like women. No one has the power to make us live like women,” he said. “To live like a woman” quickly became a top trending topic on Twitter.
“I guess what he understands about manhood is only threats and contempt. He doesn’t have neither the honour nor virtue to live like a woman. He could not even be the fingernail of a woman,” tweeted Aylin Nazliaka, a legislator for the main opposition Republican People’s party.