Last updated on .From the section European Football

Romelu Lukaku (left) and Chris Smalling are former Manchester United team-mates

Roma have said the 'Black Friday' headline used by Italian newspaper Corriere dello Sport is "terrible".

The headline accompanied pictures of Roma defender Chris Smalling and Inter Milan striker Romelu Lukaku prior to Friday's match between their two sides.

"The intention of the newspaper article was actually positive," said Roma chief strategy officer Paul Rogers.

"But this headline has totally overshadowed the anti-racist message contained within the story."

In a social media post, Inter said: external-link "Football is passion, culture and brotherhood. We are and always will be opposed to any form of discrimination."

Serie A club AC Milan said "it is totally unacceptable to see such casual ignorance on racism", while Lukaku's agent Federico Pastorello, who is Italian, said he was "really ashamed to read" such a headline.

"Being an agent, we are trying to protect our clients from this huge problem [racism] because it's not only a newspaper but it's a problem you can breathe in the stadium, in social media, on the street," he told Sky Sports. external-link

"For sure he [Lukaku] is not happy about that but he's strong enough to face it."

Corriere dello Sport defended the "innocent" headline in a comment piece on its website. external-link

"White, blacks, yellows. To negate every difference is the typical massive error of 'the racism of the anti-racisms'," said the editorial.

"The mental rabble of those casual moralists. 'Black Friday', for those who want and can understand it, it was only a way to celebrate diversity.

"If you don't understand, it is because you can't or you don't want to understand."

Inter are the Serie A leaders on 37 points, while Roma are fifth on 28 points.

The article accompanying the headline called former Manchester United team-mates Lukaku and Smalling "the idols of Inter and Roma fans" and that their confrontation would be the "battle inside tomorrow's big game".

It added: "They [Lukaku and Smalling] have learned how to respect each other. They have taken strong stances against racism."

Rogers said: "Unfortunately, as we've seen on social media, more people will see that ill-judged headline on the front page than read the actual article and it creates new issues at a time when we are all trying to tackle the issue of racism in Italian football."

This is the latest controversy during a season in which Serie A has had to deal a number of incidents of racism.

Only last week, all 20 Serie A clubs have made a united pledge to combat Italian football's "serious problem" with racism because there is no more "time to waste".

In November, Brescia's Mario Balotelli called fans who shouted racist abuse at him "small minded" and "imbeciles".

Lukaku said the abuse he suffered in September, when Cagliari fans made monkey noises after the Belgian scored a penalty against their team, showed the game was "going backwards".

The Sardinian club were later cleared of racist chanting, leading the head of anti-discriminatory body Fare to say that Italian football authorities and their disciplinary systems to combat racism were "not fit for purpose".