Chelsea's Frank Lampard has called on Uefa to take action against Besiktas after being subjected to a barrage of missiles during the Champions League clash in the AufSchalke Arena.
The Chelsea bench use umbrella's for protection
Chelsea ran a gauntlet of hate from more than 51,000 hostile Turkish fans in the final Group G fixture, but came through to win the group after goals from Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink and substitute Wayne Bridge.
The start of the second half was delayed by eight minutes and the players taken back into the tunnel as fans behind Carlo Cudicini's goal threw toilet rolls onto the pitch, and other missiles were hurled at Claudio Ranieri's men.
"The night is soured when things like that happen," said Lampard. "Things were thrown on to the pitch and it was lucky that nobody was hurt. We had bundles of coins coming at us, even in the warm-up.
"I am sure Uefa have got legislation to deal with this and it is about time they did something about it."
Uefa switched this game from Istanbul in the interests of safety following recent terrorist attacks there and John Terry compared the experience to playing for England in Turkey in their final Euro 2004 qualifier in October.
"It was pretty similar to Turkey but this was one of the most hostile crowds I have ever played in front of," said Terry.
"It is not good for football and they should definitely do something about it. It seems to be part of their football and it is not nice but thankfully nobody got hurt.
The Chelsea bench use umbrella's for protection
Chelsea ran a gauntlet of hate from more than 51,000 hostile Turkish fans in the final Group G fixture, but came through to win the group after goals from Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink and substitute Wayne Bridge.
The start of the second half was delayed by eight minutes and the players taken back into the tunnel as fans behind Carlo Cudicini's goal threw toilet rolls onto the pitch, and other missiles were hurled at Claudio Ranieri's men.
"The night is soured when things like that happen," said Lampard. "Things were thrown on to the pitch and it was lucky that nobody was hurt. We had bundles of coins coming at us, even in the warm-up.
"I am sure Uefa have got legislation to deal with this and it is about time they did something about it."
Uefa switched this game from Istanbul in the interests of safety following recent terrorist attacks there and John Terry compared the experience to playing for England in Turkey in their final Euro 2004 qualifier in October.
"It was pretty similar to Turkey but this was one of the most hostile crowds I have ever played in front of," said Terry.
"It is not good for football and they should definitely do something about it. It seems to be part of their football and it is not nice but thankfully nobody got hurt.