FIFA Bans Benfica's Prestianni Over Homophobic Abuse of Vinicius Jr
Football's governing body has handed down its stiffest sanction yet in a growing catalogue of abuse cases targeting the Brazilian forward, casting fresh doubt on the sport's capacity to police itself.
FIFA has imposed a worldwide ban on Benfica's Enzo Prestianni after the Argentine winger admitted using homophobic language toward Real Madrid's Vinicius Jr during a Champions League match in February 2026. The sanction — among the most severe the governing body has applied to a player for discriminatory abuse — reflects a threshold moment in how football's authorities handle a problem that has long outpaced their institutional responses.
Vinicius Jr has been the repeated target of abusive language and gestures from opposition fans throughout his career at Real Madrid. The club has publicly lobbied for stronger sanctions, arguing that existing frameworks have failed to deter conduct that the Brazilian international has described as an ongoing ordeal rather than an isolated incident. Prestianni's case now becomes the benchmark against which future punishments will be measured.
The admission is significant. Players charged with discriminatory conduct have historically contested charges, forcing disciplinary panels to weigh evidence rather than accept guilt. By acknowledging the use of homophobic language, Prestianni has removed any ambiguity about what occurred and handed FIFA a clear factual basis for the sanction. Whether the ban's scope — reportedly running for multiple matches across all competitions and national teams — is proportionate is a separate question that both the player's representatives and football's legal community are already examining.
Benfica confirmed the ban and said the club was reviewing its internal procedures in light of the decision. The Portuguese side noted that Prestianni had expressed remorse and that the club would support his rehabilitation. The position is consistent with a broader shift among major European clubs, who have begun treating discriminatory incidents as institutional failures rather than purely individual ones — a recognition that silence or defensiveness from the club compounds the harm done to the target.
The structural problem persists. Football's anti-discrimination frameworks have expanded significantly over the past decade, with longer bans, stadium closures, and points deductions introduced across UEFA and national federations. Yet the behaviour they seek to prevent has not diminished in frequency, particularly targeting players of colour and those who speak out publicly about abuse. Sanctions are applied after incidents occur; the culture that produces those incidents remains largely intact. Whether FIFA's sanction on Prestianni represents genuine deterrence or simply the latest entry in a long catalogue of penalties that have failed to change behaviour is the question the game's administrators have yet to convincingly answer.
