Camila Cabello deletes tweets after mocking Real Madrid and Liverpool fans in the Champions League final


Camila Cabello deletes tweets after mocking Real Madrid and Liverpool fans in the Champions League final

Camila Cabello

Camila Cabello served as a warm-up act for the Champions League final, which UEFA believes should be more like the Super Bowl. The match against Real Madrid was postponed on Saturday, with Liverpool fans battling to get in due to poor organization outside of the stadium, while Real Madrid supporters sat and waited.

UEFA insisted on bringing Cabello out during the delay, which meant the match didn’t start until 8.36 p.m. UK time, six minutes later than the initially planned time, simply so the 25-year-old could sing her songs. Fans in the Stade de France, as well as those watching on television, were dissatisfied with her performance, and they sang over her.

YouTube video

Also Read: 5 teams who have won the most number of Europa League titles in football history

FS Video

Camilla Cabello showed her discontent via Twitter

She posted about him on Twitter. Cabello’s decision to play after all of the delays, when she could have performed while fans patiently waited for the game, was a poor one. It added salt to injury for individuals who had already been pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed by cops after standing in line for hours.

Others said that, in addition to the fans’ singing, there were boos directed towards the Cuban artist, which were most likely not personal and were more likely directed at the fact that the performance was unnecessary. PSG CEO Nasser Al-Khelaifi remarked earlier this year that the Champions League final didn’t feel as ‘important‘ as the NFL‘s showcase Super Bowl.

The European Club Association’s Chairman said that he wanted a pre-match show, which he received on Saturday, as well as the victor facing a “major team” in the first round.

With the revised structure of the tournament coming into action in 2024, Al-second Khelaifi’s recommendation might be implemented. The clubs will be placed in a single group and will play eight games, making it easier to gather ‘big’ teams and have them play in game week one.

After the group stage, there will be no intraleague protection in the knockout stages, which means two Premier League sides might meet in the last 16, and the whole competition’s route to the final will be known.

Also Read: “It’s more difficult to see my son than to defend Andy Robertson”- Real Madrid’s Federico Valverde takes a jibe at Liverpool’s Andy Roberson