Nantes goalkeeper Anthony Lopes appears to have feigned a hamstring problem during his side’s Ligue 1 triumph against Le Havre on Sunday, enabling five Muslim colleagues to end their Ramadan fast.
Video footage circulating on social media shows the 35-year-old former Portugal international collapsing to the turf in the 74th minute whilst the ball was out of play.
The incident occurred during the club’s crucial 2-0 home victory, with French football authorities notably refusing to permit official breaks for religious observance.
As medical staff attended to Lopes on the pitch, his teammates seized the opportunity to consume dates and water at the touchline.
Anthony Lopes was attended to by medical staff which forced a break in play
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The shot-stopper’s tactical manoeuvre exploited a quirk in football regulations that distinguishes between outfield players and goalkeepers.
Whilst players in other positions must leave the field when requiring medical attention to allow play to continue, this stipulation does not extend to those between the posts.
Lopes remained on the ground receiving treatment for what appeared to be a left hamstring complaint, buying precious time for his fasting colleagues.
The veteran keeper then rose deliberately slowly to his feet, affording his teammates additional moments to take on sustenance before the referee restarted proceedings.
The ball had gone out for a throw-in near the halfway line when Lopes fell unchallenged.
The break in play allowed the Muslim Nantes players to break their Ramadan fast
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France’s approach stands in stark contrast to Britain’s more accommodating stance on religious practice in professional football.
The Premier League established an agreement in 2021 permitting matches to pause for Muslim players to break their fast once the sun has set.
Germany’s Bundesliga followed suit the subsequent year, adopting identical provisions for observant players.
French football authorities, however, have declined to implement comparable measures, reflecting the nation’s broader approach to religious expression in public life, where the burqa remains prohibited.
This disparity has left players and clubs in France to devise their own solutions, as Lopes’s apparent intervention demonstrates.
Portuguese goalkeeper Anthony Lopes pretended to be injured during a Ligue 1 match so his Muslim teammates could break their fast during Ramadan.
Under the current rules of the Ligue de Football Professionnel and the French Football Federation (FFF), Ligue 1 matches are not… pic.twitter.com/F24kmHdCKu
— The New Arab (@The_NewArab) February 25, 2026
Ramadan commenced on 17th February following the sighting of the crescent moon and continues until 19th March, with observant Muslims abstaining from food and drink during daylight hours as one of the five pillars of their faith.
The victory proved essential for Nantes’s survival hopes in the French top flight.
The club currently occupies 17th position in the 18-team division, sitting level on points with Auxerre directly above them.
However, an inferior goal difference of two goals places them in the relegation zone, with the bottom two sides facing demotion at the season’s conclusion.






