Rodrigo Bentancur banned 7 games for offensive Son Heung-Min remark

Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Rodrigo Bentancur has been handed a seven-game ban and a £100,000 fine by the English Football Association (FA) for using abusive language and bringing the game into disrepute during a Spanish-language interview on Uruguayan television in June.

The ban applies only to English club football and not European competition, meaning he can still compete against Roma and Rangers in the Europa League. He will miss Premier League clashes with Manchester City, Chelsea and Liverpool, as well as a Carabao Cup quarterfinal against Manchester United.

The charge by the FA stemmed from a clip posted on social media after Bentancur was interviewed on Uruguayan Television programme "Por La Camiseta." Host Rafa Cotelo asked Bentancur for a Spurs player's shirt, to which he replied, "Sonny's?" [ Son Heung-Min], adding: "It could be Sonny's cousin too as they all look the same."

He denied the initial FA charge, according to the statement issued on Monday, and can appeal the ruling.

The FA said: "It was further alleged that this constitutes an 'aggravated breach'... as it included a reference -- whether express or implied -- to nationality and/or race and/or ethnic origin."

In a news conference during the ongoing international break, Bentancur told reporters that he was braced for the punishment. As part of the decision, he also has to attend face-to-face education sessions which have to be completed by March 2025.

The Uruguay international  apologised on June 20 in a post on Instagram for the remark that he said was a "very bad joke." Five days later, Son, Tottenham's captain, said that he had  accepted his teammate's apology.

"He made a mistake, he knows this and has apologised. Lolo [Bentancur] would not mean to ever intentionally say something offensive. We are brothers and nothing has changed at all," Son said in a post on social media.

"We're past this, we're united, and we will be back together in preseason to fight for our club as one."

Information from Reuters contributed to this report.