Sevilla will report Manchester United to European football governing body Uefa for not offering their fans enough tickets for the Champions League last 16 second leg at Old Trafford, the Spanish club said in a statement Wednesday.
The two clubs have been engaged in a price war over tickets which escalated when Unitedinformed their travelling supporters their first leg tickets to the Spanish match would be subsidised by charging Sevilla fans more for the second leg.
Sevilla are charging United fans between ยฃ89 and ยฃ133 to watch the game at the Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan on Feb 21, which the English club considered excessive.
In an email to ticket holders for that game, United explained they would be refunding them ยฃ35, which is the difference between the ยฃ89 ticket price and the ยฃ54 price Liverpool supporters were charged by Sevilla during the group stage of the competition.
Sevilla responded by saying they would subsidise their own supportersโ tickets to the Old Trafford match and complain to the European football governing body about their fansโ allocation of 2,995, which they say is 4.1 percent of the stadiumโs capacity.
Champions League rules dictate that home sides make 5 per cent of the seats available to visiting supporters.
โSevilla will subsidise the tickets of the fans who go to Manchester by the same amount the prices rise, so they will not pay more than the โฌ60 established (by United) in the first place,โ read Sevillaโs statement.
โOn top of that we will make Uefa aware that five percent of the stadium is not being made available (to our fans) and the unilateral price rise โ after the official request for tickets (from Sevilla) โ as well as asking them to verify that Sevilla fans do not pay a penny more than British fans for similar tickets, as per the competition regulations.โ
A Manchester United spokesman told Reuters: โWe are aware of the regulations regarding equal pricing for home and away fans and we will comply.
โWe welcome Uefaโs willingness to discuss these issues.โ