Usain Bolt hits out at 'horrible' and 'unfair' racist abuse directed at England stars

Usain Bolt has hit out at the ‘horrible’ racist abuse directed at Bukayo Saka, Marcus Rashford and Jadon Sancho following England’s Euro 2020 heartbreak to Italy, claiming that he would not have made the youngsters take the decisive spot kicks.

The Three Lions trio were subjected to vile racist messages after missing their penalties at Wembley last Sunday that have been widely condemned by the football community and beyond.

And Olympic champion Bolt, an avid follower of football, has leapt to the defence of the youngsters, labelling the abuse in the wake of the Euro 2020 final as ‘horrible’ and ‘unfair’.  

‘First of all that’s horrible to know – for me it’s very tough to see these things,’ he said. 

‘As an African and a Black person, I can tell it must be rough on them and you can’t blame these guys, they don’t make the decision of who takes the penalties.’ 

Usain Bolt has slammed the 'horrible' racist abuse directed at England's young footballers

Usain Bolt has slammed the ‘horrible’ racist abuse directed at England’s young footballers

There have been questions raised as to the reasoning behind making Saka, 19, Rashford, 23 and Sancho, 21, take the penalties, and Bolt claimed he would not have chosen the trio to step up to the plate given their young age. 

‘I saw that they came on in the last minute. As a coach I would not have put somebody on at that point and give a tough kick to a 19-year-old, that is a lot of pressure. 

‘It’s football, you win some, you lose some and it’s tough for you to lose. I’ve gone through it with my team, but I won’t curse anybody or try to put them down when it comes to race or anything.’ 

Bolt added: ‘We are all going to be upset when you miss a penalty, but when it gets to race then, it’s going to be a problem.

Marcus Rashford (R), Jadon Sancho (2R) and Bukayo Saka (2L) have received vile racist abuse following the trio's missed penalties in the Euro 2020 final on Sunday

Marcus Rashford (R), Jadon Sancho (2R) and Bukayo Saka (2L) have received vile racist abuse following the trio’s missed penalties in the Euro 2020 final on Sunday

Rashford's mural in Manchester was vandalised, leading to demonstrators posting support messages throughout Monday

Rashford’s mural in Manchester was vandalised, leading to demonstrators posting support messages throughout Monday

‘It (racial abuse) was very unfair and I can’t believe this is where football is headed, I’ve loved football through my entire career, I’ve followed all these players so it’s tough to see something like that going on.

‘You can be upset at a person for missing because we are human, but if you’re going to bring race into it, then it has no place in football or just in general.’

Following the dramatic defeat to Roberto Mancini’s side, all three youngsters were subjected to disgusting racist abuse.

Rashford’s mural in Manchester was vandalised on Sunday night, and demonstrators spent Monday covering the abuse with messages of support, before taking a knee in front of it to show solidarity with the Manchester United star.

Bolt said he 'can't believe this is where football is headed' and questioned whether manager Gareth Southgate made the right call in substituting Rashford and Sancho on late

Bolt said he ‘can’t believe this is where football is headed’ and questioned whether manager Gareth Southgate made the right call in substituting Rashford and Sancho on late

Rashford shared photos from the vigil with a love heart emoji, writing: ‘Overwhelmed. Thankful. Lost for words.’

In another message posted online, he said: ‘I can take critique of my performance all day long, my penalty wasn’t good enough, it should have gone in.

‘But I will never apologise for who I am and where I came from.’

Sancho, who is on the verge of joining Rashford at Old Trafford in a £73m million switch from Borussia Dortmund, tweeted ‘hate will never win’.

The 21-year-old posted: ‘I’m not going pretend that I didn’t see the racial abuse that me and my brothers Marcus and Bukayo received after the game, but sadly it’s nothing new.

The Olympic champion also said he would not have given a 'tough kick' to 19-year-old Saka

The Olympic champion also said he would not have given a ‘tough kick’ to 19-year-old Saka

‘As a society we need to do better, and hold these people accountable. Hate will never win.’

Saka took to social media on Thursday to speak for the first time since Sunday’s game, saying: ‘I knew instantly the type of hate that I was about to receive, that is a sad reality.

‘There is no place for racism or hate of any kind in football or in any area of society and to the majority of people coming together to call out the people sending these messages, by taking action and reporting these comments to the police and by driving out the hate by being kind to one another, we will win.’ 

source: dailymail.co.uk