Cristiano Ronaldo Named As ‘Most Abused Player’ In Premier League

In a new report published by The Alan Turing Institute, Cristiano Ronaldo was named as the most abused player on Twitter, followed by his Manchester United colleague Harry Maguire. Between August 2021 to January 2022, Ronaldo received 12,520 abusive messages, while Maguire’s name was found in almost 9000 derogatory tweets. 

Despite being the leading goal-scorer for the club, Ronaldo has been incessantly criticized for making the team worse. A season before Ronaldo’s arrival, Manchester United scored 122 goals and finished second in the points table. But last season they netted only 70 goals across competition and failed to qualify for the Champions League.

Erik ten Hag on Cristiano Ronaldo and other Man Utd players leaving Old Trafford early vs Rayo: “I don’t certainly accept this. I think this is unacceptable. For everyone”, tells @viaplaysportnl. 🚨🔴 #MUFC

“We are a team and you have to stay until the end”, ten Hag says. pic.twitter.com/Ysm2G4e7Rp

— Fabrizio Romano (@FabrizioRomano) August 3, 2022

Maguire’s defensive lapses in the game have made him the trolls’ favorite. Often the video of his errors with squeaky audio in the background, or his distorted image in animated form goes around on the internet. Maguire’s apology post after a crushing home defeat to Manchester United alone had over 2900 abusive tweets. 

The report identified two peaks: the first on August 27, 2021 when Ronaldo joined Manchester United, and the second on November 7 when Maguire tweeted an apology after the 2-0 home loss to Manchester City. [BBC] pic.twitter.com/CabuXD8y4x

— Manuel Menacho 🇬🇧🇪🇸🇮🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇧🇪⚽️ (@ManuelMenacho0) August 2, 2022

Marcus Rashford, another United player, is third on the list. Rashford has had an underwhelming campaign last year, and his every failure on the field was ridiculed and dissected on social media. He is also ridiculed for his involvement in a social cause and is asked to stick to sports. 

The machine learning tool analyzed over 2.3 million tweets and detected abusive language towards footballers in over 2.6% of the tweets. More than 8% of these tweets attacked players on the basis of their cultural, ethnic, and sexual identities. 

Two things for Barry on my radio just now:
1. The England men’s football team didn’t lose their game because Marcus Rashford spent some of his spare time getting food to hungry children.
2. Feeding hungry children isn’t about politics, it’s about humanity.@LBC

— Blue Ferret (@Ferretgrove) July 31, 2022

Last year when England lost to Italy in the Euro Cup finals, the players of non-English origin – Bukayo Saka, Raheem Sterling, and Jadon Sancho – were singled out and trolled. 

Moreover, the report found close to 70% of the players who play in the upper tier of the EPL have been abused at least once. The list is dominated by Manchester United players, including Bruno Fernandes, Fred, Jesse Lingard, and Paul Pogba. Jack Grealish and Harry Kane were the only two players from the other clubs in the top ten.

Tottenham players had the highest percentage of abusive tweets from those analysed by @ofcom. Harry Kane was one of the 12 most abused players in the PL, with 5% of tweets directed to him being abusive. #THFC

— Jonathan Veal (@jonathandveal83) August 2, 2022

“These findings shed light on a dark side to the beautiful game. Online abuse has no place in sport, nor in wider society, and tackling it requires a team effort. Social media firms needn’t wait for new laws to make their sites and apps safer for users,” Kevin Bakhurst Bakhurst, who oversaw this research, said.

Lead Image: Cristiano Ronaldo/Twitter

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Brooks Brothers Black Friday Sale: Save up to 60% Comfortable Dress Clothes thumbnail

Brooks Brothers Black Friday Sale: Save up to 60% Comfortable Dress Clothes

Our product picks are editor-tested, expert-approved. We may earn a commission through links on our site. Why Trust Us?Brooks Brothers, your grandfather's go-to menswear brand, has been making reliable dress clothes for decades. While some of its more formal options—think: blazers, dress pants, dress shirts—run pretty pricey, Brooks Brothers' perennial clearance section is usually stocked
Read More
Seasonal emotional cycles thumbnail

Seasonal emotional cycles

Nuestras emociones están vivas, por eso cambian. De hecho, todo cambia. Y nuestras emociones se adaptan a los ciclos estacionales que nos rodean. Por eso, es habitual no sentirnos igual en verano que en invierno, aunque eso depende en gran medida de la persona y de sus gustos en cuanto a temperatura. Hoy quiero que…
Read More
AI-driven eye scans detect signs of Parkinson's disease early on thumbnail

AI-driven eye scans detect signs of Parkinson’s disease early on

Researchers at Moorfields Eye Hospital and the University College London have used artificial intelligence technology to pinpoint markers within eye scans and identify the existence of Parkinson's disease an average of seven years before clinical symptoms manifest. The research, published in Neurology and claimed to be the largest of its kind, suggests the power of
Read More
Biden sees future in ag biotech; food safety included thumbnail

Biden sees future in ag biotech; food safety included

President Joe Biden is looking in another direction to steer agriculture’s boat. The key word here is biotechnology. And President Biden is all for it. In fact, he goes so far as to say it should be used to make agriculture more productive and sustainable, create safer and healthier food, protect plants and food animals
Read More
Employee burnout poses severe cybersecurity risks, report finds thumbnail

Employee burnout poses severe cybersecurity risks, report finds

A new report from password manager vendor 1Password found that employee burnout presents a "severe, pervasive and multifaceted security risk."   Workers in virtually every industry are reporting high levels of burnout, said researchers – potentially leading employees to let their guard down around security threats.   "Burned-out employees, we discovered, are often apathetic and lax…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share