At the Southeast Asian Games, the men's football final descended into chaos as two large fights broke out and four players were dismissed.
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In Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Indonesia defeated Thailand 5-2 after extra time.
After Thailand equalized in stoppage time and again when Indonesia took a 3-2 lead in the opening minute of extra time, there was fighting between the teams' benches.
Thailand had eight players on the field when the game was over.
"The association would like to express its disappointment and apologize for the chaotic incident that occurred off the pitch," the Football Association of Thailand stated.
"There will be discipline and a commission to look into all those implicated. There won't be any defense for those engaged.
Indra Syafri, the head coach of Indonesia, expressed his remorse for the altercation between friends from Thailand and our team. But it's done now. We've already embraced and apologized to one another. Here's some football.
Ramadhan Sananta's goals in the first half had given Indonesia a 2-1 lead when their players and coaching staff began to celebrate after mistaking the referee's whistle for the start of a Thailand free-kick.
Following the free kick, Anan Yodsangwal tied the score, and in celebration, Thailand players ran over to the Indonesia bench, starting the first fight.
Security personnel had to step in when punches and kicks were thrown in a second altercation after Indonesia's Irfan Jauhar scored only seconds into extra time.
Following the second incident, members of the coaching staff were also fired, and both sides had players sent off.
Indonesia won its first gold medal at the Southeast Asian Games since 1991 thanks to goals by Fajar Rahman and Beckman Putra, while Thailand lost two more players to second-time-around dismissals.
The Asian Football Confederation (AFC) declared that it was "disappointed" by the circumstances and that it would look into them.
According to a spokeswoman, "The AFC emphasizes the value of fair play, mutual respect, and sportsmanship and takes a zero-tolerance approach to all such acts of violence."