"Jugadores la concha de su Madre. Saluden a su gente que no les cuesta nada"
I'm not sure this chant achieved what you were aiming for...
I'm not a member of "La Familia". I'm just a fan who likes to go to the stadium when the tickets are affordable. I understand La Familia was protesting because players don't acknowledge them after the games so they decided not to play instruments or chant. And I also know that La Familia sent a letter to the heads of the team expressing their discontent about the players behavior. Ok I get it. But the whole chanting rubbed me the wrong way. Was insulting the players necessary? Was that chant timed correctly when we were having out first win in our new stadium? And most importantly, are you entitled to salutations of the players? I'm not asking to create controversy I just want to know if this is a common practice. It's definitely a nice gesture to salute the fans who bring a vibe to your game; but can you actually demand it? Ultimately players are brought to the team to win games and titles. Fans interaction is a plus, but not a must. You don't see these type of demands at Miami Heat, Miami Dolphins, Marlins, or Panthers games. Every time a game ends, most players go straight to the locker room. Some people even leave before the game ends.
From where I was standing I saw the chant caused a lot of confusion. Messi and Depaul looked confused. Casual fans looked confused and it caused weird atmosphere between the people in the supporter section and the rest of the stadium.
Ultimately. I think you can demand a team to win, but you can't demand players to have manners. Members of La Familia still get the perks of being there. Accessibility to events, cheaper tickets, opportunity to meet the players, etc. so I hope the Supporters makes peace with whoever they were insulting because creating a toxic environment doesn't benefit anyone.