
EmailPrintBayern Munich coach Vincent Kompany said Benfica boss Jos Mourinho made a "huge mistake" in his postmatch comments following alleged racist abuse of Real Madrid forward Vincius Jnior.Brazil international Vincius reported an instance of alleged racial abuse to referee Francois Letexier after scoring in Tuesday's Champions League playoff tie against Benfica, with the Spanish club later pointing to winger Gianluca Prestianni as the subject of the complaint.Prestianni denied making racist comments in a post on Instagram, while his club spoke of a "defamation campaign" against him.Letexier activated anti-racism protocols, suspending play for 10 minutes, with UEFA initiating an investigation into the incident.Mourinho was criticized for his postmatch comment that "something happens, always" in matches where Vincius plays.Former Manchester City defender and Burnley boss Kompany addressed the issue at a news conference Friday morning ahead of Bayern's Bundesliga match against Eintracht Frankfurt, issuing an impassioned defense of Vincius and stressing that his reaction "cannot be faked.""For me, even worse, is what happens after the game," said Kompany, who recalled his own experiences of racism as a young player, which included Real Betis fans "doing monkey chants" at him and former Anderlecht teammate Cheick Tiote."After the game, you have the leader of an organization, Jos Mourinho, who basically attacks the character of Vincius Jr., by bringing in the type of celebration to discredit what Vinicius is doing in this moment."For me, in terms of leadership, it is a huge mistake," Kompany said. "It is something we should not accept. I am very clear on that."The one thing you can't do is dismiss a person and attack the character of a person who's complaining about something he experienced and something that must be very painful to that person. There is something that needs to happen."Kompany added: "I know 100 people who have worked with Jos Mourinho. I have never heard a person say anything bad about Jose."I understand he is fighting for his team and his club. You cannot be a bad person and have all the ex-players you have had talk so positively about you."I don't need to judge him as a person," he said, "but I know what I have heard, and I understand maybe what he has done, but he has made a mistake."The Brazilian Football Confederation has, meanwhile, written to UEFA and FIFA stressing the need to "identify and punish" anyone guilty of racially abusing Vinicius.- Seedorf on Mourinho's Vincius reaction: Mistake to justify racial abuse- Real Madrid give UEFA 'all available evidence' for Vincius Jr. probe- Brazil calls for punishments in Vincius Jnior racism investigationIt has been reported that the UEFA probe, headed up by an ethics and disciplinary investigator, could take up to three weeks to conclude.That means Vincius and Prestianni could come face to face again in the second leg of the play-off at the Santiago Bernabu on Wednesday, with the case still unresolved.Now Vincius' national federation, led by president Samir Xaud, has come forward to lobby the European and global governing bodies.A statement read: "The Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) asked FIFA and UEFA for rigour in punishing those involved in the new case of racism committed against Vincius Jr."The CBF reinforced that it expects FIFA to monitor the case and that UEFA adopts all necessary measures to identify and punish those guilty of racial insults."