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Wednesday, May 28, 2025

BBC crisis escalates as players, stars rally behind Lineker

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809 days ago
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Football broadcaster Gary Lineker arrives ahead of the English Premier League football match between Leicester City and Chelsea, at the King Power Stadium, in Leicester, England, Saturday, March 11, 2023. (Mike Egerton/PA via AP)

Football broadcaster Gary Lineker arrives ahead of the English Premier League football match between Leicester City and Chelsea, at the King Power Stadium, in Leicester, England, Saturday, March 11, 2023. (Mike Egerton/PA via AP)

The BBC scram­bled to stem an es­ca­lat­ing cri­sis Sat­ur­day over its sus­pen­sion of for­mer foot­ball star and pro­gram host Gary Linek­er for com­ments crit­i­ciz­ing the British gov­ern­ment’s new asy­lum pol­i­cy.

As a grow­ing num­ber of Pre­mier League play­ers and pre­sen­ters ral­lied to Linek­er’s sup­port, Britain’s na­tion­al broad­cast­er was forced to rip up its ra­dio and tele­vi­sion sports sched­ule and face al­le­ga­tions of po­lit­i­cal bias and sup­press­ing free speech, as well as praise from some Con­ser­v­a­tive politi­cians.

The broad­cast­er said it would air on­ly “lim­it­ed sport pro­gram­ming” over the week­end af­ter hosts of many of its pop­u­lar sports shows de­clined to ap­pear, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Linek­er. He was sus­pend­ed from “Match of the Day”, a pop­u­lar high­lights show, over a Twit­ter post that com­pared law­mak­ers’ lan­guage about mi­grants to that used in Nazi Ger­many.

In­stead of blan­ket cov­er­age on Sat­ur­day of the most pop­u­lar league in the world, the BBC had no pre­view shows on ra­dio or TV and would not be re­port­ing on the fi­nal scores of Pre­mier League games in the ear­ly evening. Lunchtime TV pro­gram “Foot­ball Fo­cus” was re­placed on Sat­ur­day with a re­run episode of an­tiques show “Bar­gain Hunt,” while ear­ly evening “Fi­nal Score” was swapped for “The Re­pair Shop.”

Foot­ball fans tun­ing for “Match of the Day” — the late-night foot­ball show that has been a British in­sti­tu­tion for 60 years — will like­ly get match cov­er­age from the same feed used by broad­cast­ers around the world in­stead of BBC’s own com­men­ta­tors and no stu­dio pun­dit­ry from some of the most high-pro­file stars in the British game.

There will not be any post-match play­er in­ter­views, ei­ther. The Pro­fes­sion­al Foot­ballers’ As­so­ci­a­tion said some play­ers want­ed to boy­cott the show as a ges­ture of sup­port, and as a re­sult “play­ers in­volved in to­day’s games will not be asked to par­tic­i­pate in in­ter­views with ‘Match of The Day.’”

The union said it was a “com­mon sense so­lu­tion” to avoid play­ers fac­ing sanc­tions for breach­ing their broad­cast com­mit­ments.

The BBC said it was “sor­ry for these changes which we rec­og­nize will be dis­ap­point­ing for BBC sport fans. We are work­ing hard to re­solve the sit­u­a­tion and hope to do so soon.”

Linek­er, 62, was a house­hold name in Britain even be­fore he be­came chief “Match of the Day” pre­sen­ter in 1999.

One of Eng­lish foot­ball’s most laud­ed play­ers, he was the lead­ing scor­er at the 1986 World Cup and fin­ished his in­ter­na­tion­al ca­reer with 48 goals in 80 match­es for Eng­land.

Af­ter re­tir­ing from a ca­reer that in­clud­ed stints with Barcelona, Tot­ten­ham, Ever­ton and Leices­ter, Linek­er has be­come one of the U.K.’s most in­flu­en­tial me­dia fig­ures and the BBC’s best-paid star, earn­ing 1.35 mil­lion pounds ($1.6 mil­lion) last year.

An en­thu­si­as­tic so­cial me­dia user with 8.7 mil­lion Twit­ter fol­low­ers, Linek­er has long irked right-of-cen­tre politi­cians and ac­tivists with his lib­er­al views, in­clud­ing crit­i­cism of Britain’s de­ci­sion to leave the Eu­ro­pean Union.

The lat­est con­tro­ver­sy be­gan with a tweet on Tues­day from Linek­er’s ac­count de­scrib­ing the gov­ern­ment’s plan to de­tain and de­port mi­grants ar­riv­ing by boat as “an im­mea­sur­ably cru­el pol­i­cy di­rect­ed at the most vul­ner­a­ble peo­ple in lan­guage that is not dis­sim­i­lar to that used by Ger­many in the 30s.”

The Con­ser­v­a­tive gov­ern­ment called Linek­er’s Nazi com­par­i­son of­fen­sive and un­ac­cept­able, and some law­mak­ers said he should be fired.

On Fri­day, the BBC said Linek­er would “step back” from “Match of the Day” un­til “we’ve got an agreed and clear po­si­tion on his use of so­cial me­dia.” Linek­er has yet to com­ment pub­licly, and on Sat­ur­day went to his home­town of Leices­ter to watch Leices­ter City play Chelsea. He was greet­ed with cheers from by­standers as he ar­rived.

The 100-year-old BBC, which is fund­ed by a li­cense fee paid by all house­holds with a tele­vi­sion, has a du­ty to be im­par­tial in its news cov­er­age, and BBC news staff are barred from ex­press­ing po­lit­i­cal opin­ions.

Linek­er, as a free­lancer who doesn’t work in news or cur­rent af­fairs, isn’t bound by the same rules, and has some­times pushed the bound­aries of what the BBC con­sid­ers ac­cept­able. Last year, the BBC found Linek­er had breached im­par­tial­i­ty rules with a tweet about the Con­ser­v­a­tives’ al­leged Russ­ian do­na­tions.

BBC neu­tral­i­ty has come un­der re­cent scruti­ny over rev­e­la­tions that its chair­man, Richard Sharp — a Con­ser­v­a­tive Par­ty donor — helped arrange a loan for then Prime Min­is­ter Boris John­son in 2021, weeks be­fore Sharp was ap­point­ed to the BBC post on the gov­ern­ment’s rec­om­men­da­tion.

For­mer BBC Di­rec­tor Gen­er­al Greg Dyke said the net­work had “un­der­mined its own cred­i­bil­i­ty” by ap­pear­ing to bow to gov­ern­ment pres­sure.

“The per­cep­tion out there is go­ing to be that Gary Linek­er, a much-loved tele­vi­sion pre­sen­ter, was tak­en off air af­ter gov­ern­ment pres­sure on a par­tic­u­lar is­sue,” Dyke told BBC ra­dio.

Keir Starmer, leader of the main op­po­si­tion Labour Par­ty, said the BBC was “cav­ing in” to po­lit­i­cal pres­sure from Con­ser­v­a­tive law­mak­ers.

“They got this one bad­ly wrong and now they’re very, very ex­posed,” he said. —LON­DON (AP)

___

Sto­ry by JILL LAW­LESS | As­so­ci­at­ed Press. AP Sports Writer Steve Dou­glas con­tributed to this sto­ry

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