Bristol Rovers manager Joey Barton pushed over a rival manager after his team was defeated, causing him serious injuries to his face, a jury was told yesterday.
Barton, 38, went on trial on Monday accused of assaulting then Barnsley manager Daniel Stendel in the tunnel at the South Yorkshire side's Oakwell Stadium, in April 2019, after the defendant's Fleetwood Town side lost 4-2.
Barton left Fleetwood in January and was made Bristol Rovers boss on February 22.
Prosecutor Ian Goldsack described tensions between the two sides when they met earlier in the season at Fleetwood - including a handshake between Barton and Mr Stendel that the German manager "took to be an intimidatory gesture" - and these continued into the match in Barnsley seven months later.
Mr Goldsack told a jury of six men and six women at Sheffield Crown Court that Barton confronted Mr Stendel during the match in April and, after the final whistle, the defendant was "still very worked up and used some foul language towards him, which Mr Stendel did not fully understand, but realised he was being insulted".
Mr Goldsack said that the defendant ran past a number of people after the match and entered the tunnel behind Mr Stendel.
He said: "Mr Stendel felt a push from behind and fell forward, hitting his face against that tunnel structure.
"He was knocked to the ground and when he looked up he saw the defendant passing him.
"He believed him to be responsible for what happened."
The prosecutor said: "Mr Barton did not stop, did not make any apology and did nothing to acknowledge what had taken place."
The jury was shown video footage which showed Barton running into the tunnel after Mr Stendel and the structure then shaking.
Further footage showed a bloodied Mr Stendel being helped back to the changing room.
Mr Goldsack showed the jury photographs of injuries sustained by Daniel Stendel, saying the most serious were to his mouth, including an upper right incisor tooth being moved out of the bone, with some associated nerve damage.
The prosecutor said: "Football is a sport which can arouse great passion.
"Clearly there was some history to this fixture, with some degree of antagonism on the previous occasion.
"And Mr Barton's mood was perhaps not helped by that previous defeat; by having a player sent off just after it looked as though Fleetwood might get back in the game; by Barnsley extending its lead with a third goal, prompting provocative celebrations by (Barnsley first team coach) Christopher Stern; and by the defeat that came with the final whistle."
Mr Goldsack said: "Perhaps his anger hadn't subsided from their exchange moments before at the pitchside. Perhaps the temptation was too great.
"But the prosecution say you can be sure it was Mr Barton whose actions were responsible for Mr Stendel's loss of balance, going forwards, suffering the injuries that you have seen, and that he is guilty of unlawful assault as set out in your indictment."
Mr Goldsack said there had been "some fraying of tempers" when the two sides met earlier in the season.
After that September 2018 match, Barton gripped Mr Stendel's hand during the customary post-match handshake "very forcefully and firmly and for a prolonged period in what Mr Stendel took to be an intimidatory gesture", the prosecutor said.
When the teams met at Oakwell in April, Fleetwood had a player sent off in the second half after trailing Barnsley 2-0 at half-time.
Mr Goldsack said Mr Stern "celebrated rather exuberantly" when his team scored a third, and directed these celebrations towards the Fleetwood bench "causing upset".
He said Barton approached Mr Stendel's technical area and the German manager, whose English is limited, believed the defendant was telling him "not to celebrate his goals so much".
Mr Goldsack told the jury: "Mr Barton seemed angry and confrontational."
He said the only other eye-witness to the tunnel incident was Barnsley's first team performance analyst intern, Nathan Kirby, who saw how Barton "pushed against (Mr Stendel) from behind, whilst continuing to jog forwards".
The prosecutor said Mr Kirby described it as "a deliberate act, done with enough force to knock someone off-balance, which, of course, is precisely what happened."
He told the jury that, after his arrest, Barton provided a prepared statement in which he accepted using "industrial language" on the touchline but denied barging into or assaulting Mr Stendel in the tunnel.
Barton, who is now Bristol Rovers manager, denies one count of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
The jury has been told that Mr Stendel will give evidence by video link from Germany on Tuesday.
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