A California high school football player is accused of smearing a white substance similar to IcyHot in an opponent's face during the middle of a game.

During a game between Bishop Mora Salesian High School and La Canada High School on September 4, a Salesian player allegedly reached under Angel Salazar's helmet and smeared a heat-rub substance on his face.

In a video shared on Thursday that apparently shows the incident, a Salesian football player appearing to wear a #16 jersey is shown doing a rubbing motion during alleged contact with Salazar.

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During a game between Bishop Mora Salesian High School and La Canada High School on September 4, a Salesian player allegedly reached under Angel Salazar's helmet and smeared a heat-rub substance on his face (Salazar pictured after the incident)

In a video shared on Thursday that apparently shows the incident (shown above), a Salesian football player who appears to be wearing a #16 jersey is allegedly shown doing a rubbing motion during contact with Salazar

'Our player came to the sidelines and he was covered in Icy-Hot. Covered in his face,' La Canada Principal Ian McFeat told CBS Los Angeles.

Minutes following the incident, Salazar, wearing a #7 jersey, ran to the referee before going to his team's sideline as he pointed to his face which had a white substance on it.

Salesian's Rahyme Johnson allegedly had a white substance on his pants and was seen taking off his gloves and washing his hands, La Canada Online reported.

'A boy from the other team stuck his hand under [Salazar's] helmet and put some stuff on his face and in his eyes and it went all over his chest,' Salazar's mother, Leslie Bess told NBC Los Angeles.

'I saw him [Salazar] hunched over, walking to the sidelines and I knew that something malicious had just happened.'

After a 10-minute delay during the game, officials could not prove what happened but said they would be reporting Salazar and Johnson to the CIF-Southern Section - the governing body for high school athletics in most of southern California.

After a 10-minute delay, officials could not prove what happened but said they would be reporting Salazar and Johnson to the CIF-Southern Section - the governing body for high school athletics in most of southern California

'Our player came to the sidelines and he was covered in Icy-Hot. Covered in his face,' La Canada Principal Ian McFeat (pictured)

Salazar had his face and neck flushed with water by trainers on the sideline following the incident, and officials ruled no players would be ejected and that there would be no penalties. Salesian won the game 27-0.

Johnson committed as a 2017 recruit to UCLA's football team in June, according to Barstool Sports.

'It was just a cheat shot by the other team,' Salazar previously told the Los Angeles Times.

Rahyme Johnson committed as a 2017 recruit to UCLA's football team in June

'I didn't really know what was going on until the kid put his hand [inside Salazar's helmet] and rubbed IcyHot in my eyes.'

After both schools submitted information to the CIF, it was reported last week that the governing body said it would not be taking any action in the alleged incident, according to Pasadena Star News.

'There is nothing in the bylaws that allow us to go back and retroactively eject a player that wasn't ejected during the game,' CIF-Southern Section spokesman Thom Simmons said.

'The officials conducted their own on-field investigation and it wasn't conclusive.

'So basically, the only people that can remedy or put some type of sanctions together are the two schools.'

Salesian principal Alex Chacon said that following its own six-day investigation, the school did not issue any disciplinary action against the school's football program, according to Pasadena Star News.

La Canada's athletic director, Kristina Kalb, earlier said that the school had complained to Salesian officials but did not receive an apology or any indication that punitive action would be taken against any player.

On Friday it was reported that Chacon called McFeat to apologize for the September 4 incident.

Salazar and his mother decided not to press charges but are still waiting for an apology (scenes during the September 4 game after a tackle)

However La Canada, dissatisfied with CIF's stance and what they felt was a poor investigation of the incident during the game, is now fighting back. They released video and images from the incident to the media on Thursday.

'Hopefully, this will get CIF to take a look at the process because the process is flawed, as far as I'm concerned,' Kalb said.

'To introduce a substance into the game that could alter or change a student's life, that it not okay. I don't want to see this happen to any other kids ever.'