<p> Malaga suggested more than luck may have been against them in Tuesday's last-gasp defeat at Borussia Dortmund that cruelly denied the Champions League debutants a place in the semifinals. <br /><br /></p>.<p>The Qatar-owned club were leading the quarterfinal, second leg 2-1 as the game went into stoppage time before Dortmund, who were held to a 0-0 draw in last week's first leg in Spain, first equalised and then grabbed a 93rd-minute winner. <br /><br />Television replays showed several players from the Bundesliga side in offside positions in the build-up to the third goal and normally restrained Malaga coach Manuel Pellegrini slammed the match officials. <br /><br />"On this occasion we could not, or they did not want us to, get through," Pellegrini told a news conference. "After we went 2-1 ahead there was no refereeing," the Chilean added. <br /><br />"They forced us back with elbows and shoves. There were two sendings off that were not given, a double offside in the third goal which should not have counted.” <br /><br />The club's director general, Vicente Casado, told reporters on Wednesday before flying back to Spain with the squad that Malaga would file a written complaint with soccer's European governing body UEFA about the refereeing. <br /><br />Winger Joaquin, who put Malaga ahead in the 25th minute, and club owner Sheikh Abdullah Al Thani, a member of the Qatar royal family, were more outspoken. In a series of tweets on his official Twitter feed soon after the final whistle, Al Thani blamed the defeat on "racism" and called on governing body UEFA to launch an inquiry. <br /><br />Joaquin suggested UEFA president Michel Platini may have had something to do with the defeat. Platini is deeply unpopular in Malaga after UEFA slapped a ban on the club from competing in continental competition from next season due to delays in payments to creditors. <br /><br />"We suspect Platini and all the rest of them who are involved," Joaquin told Spanish radio.</p>
<p> Malaga suggested more than luck may have been against them in Tuesday's last-gasp defeat at Borussia Dortmund that cruelly denied the Champions League debutants a place in the semifinals. <br /><br /></p>.<p>The Qatar-owned club were leading the quarterfinal, second leg 2-1 as the game went into stoppage time before Dortmund, who were held to a 0-0 draw in last week's first leg in Spain, first equalised and then grabbed a 93rd-minute winner. <br /><br />Television replays showed several players from the Bundesliga side in offside positions in the build-up to the third goal and normally restrained Malaga coach Manuel Pellegrini slammed the match officials. <br /><br />"On this occasion we could not, or they did not want us to, get through," Pellegrini told a news conference. "After we went 2-1 ahead there was no refereeing," the Chilean added. <br /><br />"They forced us back with elbows and shoves. There were two sendings off that were not given, a double offside in the third goal which should not have counted.” <br /><br />The club's director general, Vicente Casado, told reporters on Wednesday before flying back to Spain with the squad that Malaga would file a written complaint with soccer's European governing body UEFA about the refereeing. <br /><br />Winger Joaquin, who put Malaga ahead in the 25th minute, and club owner Sheikh Abdullah Al Thani, a member of the Qatar royal family, were more outspoken. In a series of tweets on his official Twitter feed soon after the final whistle, Al Thani blamed the defeat on "racism" and called on governing body UEFA to launch an inquiry. <br /><br />Joaquin suggested UEFA president Michel Platini may have had something to do with the defeat. Platini is deeply unpopular in Malaga after UEFA slapped a ban on the club from competing in continental competition from next season due to delays in payments to creditors. <br /><br />"We suspect Platini and all the rest of them who are involved," Joaquin told Spanish radio.</p>