The Melbourne Victory soccer club has been prevented from selling tickets to home games and fans cannot attend away matches under Football Australia's preliminary sanctions for a violent pitch invasion. (More Football News)
The Victory were pu♏t on notice after 150 spectators stormed the AAMI Park pitch in last Saturday's A-League match against Melbourne City, forcing th𓄧e match to be abandoned.
City goalkeeper Tom Glover sustained a concussion and facial lacerations when he was hit with a metal bucket wiel𝔉ded🌠 by a pitch invader. Referee Alex King, a television cameraman and two security guards were also injured.
Football Australia has not fully determined final sanctio𝔍ns, but has put Friday's temporary measures in place until Jan. 15.
During that time, Victory fans are barred from attending their away men's Monday match with Western United at AAMI Park. Only United member🌺s and fans who had bought a ticket before 11 a.m. Friday can attend, with other tickets to be refunded.
Victoria Police earlier conf𒐪irmed plans include “a high𒆙ly visible police presence” at the game.
Victory fans also cannot attend away men's games against Central Coast on New🔴 Year's Eve or Adelaide United on Jan. 14.
Football Australia chief executive James Johnson said there will be additional💯 sanctions.
“There will be a mixture of finanꦏcial and sporting measures that would be in addition to these immediate sanctions that would come into force in the next one to two weeks,” Johnson said.
“We did feel th🐭at if we had a blanket ban, not only would we be specifically targeting those individuals whose behavဣior is unacceptable, but we would also be targeting the many families in particular who are very good fans and who we welcome to football."
Victoria Police confirmed 29 persons have been arrested or charged over the pitch invasion, with 24 — including 11 men aged between 18 and 38 d𒀰ealt with on Friday — so far facing charges. A total of 36 people have so far been identified by police.
FA has also handed out banꦑs preventing the pitch invaders from attending or participating in football. Two pitch invaders on Tuesday receive🦩d life bans, while on Thursday eight more people were handed bans of between five and 20 years.
About $100,000 worth of damage was caused to AAMI Park du🦩ring the pitch invasion and about 80 flares or fireworks were set off, police say🐲.