Soccer

Real Madrid's Vinicius Junior calls out haters of dancing goal celebrations as racist

Real Madrid forward Vinicius Junior called out the haters of his goal celebrations as racist and insisted he will keep on dancing.

'I am not going to stop' says star forward

Vinicius Junior of Real Madrid CF called out the haters of his goal celebrations as racist, and insists he will keep dancing. (Angel Martinez/Getty Images)

Real Madrid forward Vinicius Junior called out the haters of his goal celebrations as racist and insisted he will keep on dancing.

Spanish sports talk shows have been discussing the appropriateness of his celebrations, and a commentator on television said he should stop "doing the monkey."

Real Madrid criticized the comment on Friday, and Vinicius issued a video statement on Saturday in which the Brazilian eloquently explained that dancing forms part of his cultural expression, and cited other soccer players, both Black and white, who also have danced after scoring.

"I will repeat it for you, racist: I am not going to stop dancing," Vinicius said.

"I was victim of xenophobia and racism in a single declaration, but none of this began yesterday," Vinicius said over freeze frames of social media posts using racist language to insult him.

The controversy also comes in the buildup to Sunday's always hotly contested Spanish capital derby in which Real Madrid visits Atletico Madrid. This week, Atletico captain Koke Resurreccion, when asked what would happen if Vinicius danced after scoring, responded "There will be trouble."

Koke appeared to make the comment in jest, but it has been widely commented on. Brazil star Neymar chimed in on social media by tweeting, "Dance Vini Jr."

They are dances to celebrate the cultural diversity of the world. Accept them. Respect them.— Vinicius Junior on the goal celebrations of various players

In his video, Vinicius listed players, including Atletico's Antoine Griezmann, who is white, over images of them dancing to celebrate goals.

"For weeks my dancing has been criminalized, dances that are not mine, but rather of Ronaldinho, Neymar, Paqueta, Pogba, Matheus Cunha, Griezmann and João Félix," he said. "They are dances of Brazilian artists, of Latino singers and reggaeton artists, and Black Americans. They are dances to celebrate the cultural diversity of the world. Accept them. Respect them. I won't stop."

The 22-year-old Vinicius emerged as one of the Spanish league's best players last year, becoming a perfect attack partner for Karim Benzema. He helped Madrid win the Spanish league and the European Cup, including scoring the goal to beat Liverpool 1-0 in the Champions League final.

He has scored five times already this season.

Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti said he was sure his player was focused on playing, despite the noise.

"The player's response was very good. I don't think there's anything wrong with him," Ancelotti said. "He's playing with the joy and quality that he possesses. I don't give him any advice because I'm not his dad or his brother. I'm his coach."

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