This Thursday morning, the Munich police identified Alphonso Davies, player and star of Bayern Munich, driving drunk in his Lamborghini Urus valued at 216,000 euros. Information that the German media Bild has made public and where they also comment that it happened at 2:15 in the morning after several gestures that showed that it raised suspicions.
Once he was told to stop by the German authorities and during the intervention, the agents detected the smell of alcohol on the footballer, so they ended up subjecting him to a breathalyzer test in which he tested positive for 0.6 grams per liter of alcohol. expired air. Automatically, the player was urged to stop driving so that the car could be taken by a friend of the footballer who was in a position to do so.
A fine and a month of license suspension
In the German media itself they have spoken with a criminal lawyer who is an expert in cases like this, Dr. Gennaro Festa, where he assures that what was committed by the footballer is not a crime but rather an infraction given that the criminal sanction would be from of 0.8 grams. For this reason, Davies would be facing a fine of 500 euros and a one-month license suspension, a driving license that was not revoked at the time.
News that came to light at midday on Friday and about which his club, Bayern Munich, has not commented so far. A position that has also been maintained by the German police who claim that they must preserve the privacy of the person involved and avoid making public comments on the matter.
Of course, despite everything that happened late at night, Davies went to the Bayern Munich sports city and trained normally this Friday. A training session where he arrived with the car of the club’s official sponsor and was in good spirits before the key match against Dortmund, which will take place this Saturday at the Allianz Arena. An event that seems not to affect his availability to be in the German soccer classic, where the Canadian is expected to appear in the starting eleven of the current Bundesliga leader.