BBC apologise over changes to weekend’s sporting schedule amid Gary Lineker row | Sportscene to run amended format similar to Match of the Day-
Alex Scott and other pundits have pulled out of presenting the Football Focus programme, in solidarity with Gary Lineker, with Sportscene also impacted.
Pundits have also pulled out of presenting the Final Score programme with the show also cancelled.
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Hide AdJason Mohammad said he will not be presenting the BBC’s Final Score programme on Saturday.
Pundit Glenn Murray also said he had pulled out of appearing on Football Focus and Final Score on Saturday.
Sports reporter Marc Webber tweeted: “As Final Score reporters, we have decided to stand down from our duties today in solidarity with Gary Lineker. As a result, no Final Score will be broadcast today.
BBC has pulled its Radio 5 Live Sports coverage, saying there had been a change of schedule.
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Hide AdFormer England footballers and MOTD regulars including Alan Shearer and Ian Wright announced on Friday that they would be boycotting the show in solidarity with Lineker.
We’ll have live updates and the latest news regarding football programming on the BBC.
RECAP: Football Focus dropped as Alex Scott pulls out in support of Gary Lineker | Final Score cancelled | BBC 5Live coverage pulled
The UK’s immigration proposal
While Gary Lineker will feature in all the headlines -it is important to remember what this is all about
The UK’s current immigration plans , if enacted, will mean that anyone who arrives on a small boat will have their asylum claim deemed “inadmissible” – the Home Office won’t even consider someone’s claim even if they have came from a country where they are in danger, or a war-torn nation.
Said people will be removed either to their own country or a “safe third country”
The UNHCR says that the bill, in its current form, “compels the home secretary to deny access to the UK asylum system to those who arrive irregularly” and branded the legislation, if passed, as an “asylum ban”
Former England footballer Ian Wright has said on his podcast that he is “out” and “gone” if the BBC “get rid” of Gary Lineker.
In an episode of Wrighty’s House, aired on Friday before Lineker was told to step back from presenting Match Of The Day (MOTD), Wright called the tweet row “the perfect distraction” for the Government.
In the Friday episode of Wrighty’s House, the podcast’s host said: “I’ll tell you something. If they do – the BBC get rid of Gary Lineker – I’m out, I’m gone. I’m not staying there. On his own platform he should be able to say what he wants to say.”
Explaining the row, Wright said: “He wrote a tweet criticising the Government about everything that’s happening, the human rights issues and everything here and it’s the perfect distraction for this Government, man.
“Gary’s tweet was the headline news, bro.”
He went on: “They need Gary Lineker to distract everybody because for me it is a human issue, it’s not political.
“They’ve got no empathy. The most vulnerable ones are always the ones that suffer, they’re the ones that suffer and it starts with words.
Bristol Rovers have confirmed that they will not be talking to the BBC today in solidarity with Gary Lineker.
Writing on Twitter, the League One team said it “won’t be talking to the BBC before or after today’s game. ‘#WeStandWithGary”
BREAKING: Jason Mohammad said he will not be presenting the BBC’s Final Score programme on Saturday.
He tweeted: “As you know, Final Score is a TV show very close to my heart.
“However – I have this morning informed the BBC that I will not be presenting the show this afternoon on BBC One.”
Will players still talk to the BBC?
A spokesman for the Professional Footballers’ Association said: “We have been informed that players involved in today’s games will not be asked to participate in interviews with Match Of The Day.
“The PFA have been speaking to members who wanted to take a collective position and to be able to show their support for those who have chosen not to be part of tonight’s programme.
“During those conversations we made clear that, as their union, we would support all members who might face consequences for choosing not to complete their broadcast commitments.
“This is a common sense decision that ensures players won’t now be put in that position.”
BBC TV listings
The BBC TV listings are now showing Bargain Hunt at midday, when Football Focus had previously been listed.
Final Score remains listed - however Jason Mohammad said he will not be presenting the show.
The Daily Mail’s Mike Keegan has tweeted reports that the BBC’s 5 Live sports coverage may also be pulled... One to watch?
Gary Lineker did not answer questions from reporters when he left his home in Barnes, south-west London, on Saturday morning.
He was asked “how do you think this has been handled?”, “is this the end of your BBC career?”, “have you had any discussions with the BBC overnight?” and “do you expect to resign?”, but did not respond.
BBC pundits boycotting Match of the Day and other BBC shows to support Gary Lineker
- Ian Wright - posted on Twitter: “Everybody knows what Match of the Day means to me, but I’ve told the BBC I won’t be doing it tomorrow. Solidarity.”
- Alan Shearer - posted on Twitter: “I have informed the BBC that I won’t be appearing on MOTD tomorrow night.”
- Alex Scott - posted a GIF of Bernie Sanders on Twitter saying: “Nah! Not me”.
- Micah Richards - former Manchester City and Aston Villa footballer posted on Twitter: “I was not due to be working on MOTD tomorrow, but if I was, I would find myself taking the same decision that @IanWright0 & @alanshearer have.”
- Jermaine Jenas - former Queens Park Rangers and Nottingham Forest footballer tweeted: “Been on air with the one show. I wasn’t down to be doing match of the day tomorrow, but if I was I would have said no and stood with my fellow pundits and @GaryLineker.”
- Mark Chapman
- Glenn Murray - former Bouremouth and Brighton and Hove Albion footballer walked out of BBC’s Football Focus alongside Alex Scott.
- Anita Asante - former Chelsea and England Women’s footballer joined Alex Scott by stepping aside from BBC’s Football Focus.
- Jason Mohammad - the host of BBC’s Final Score tweeted: “As you know, Final Score is a TV show very close to my heart. However - I have this morning informed the BBC that I will not be presenting the show this afternoon on BBC One.”
BREAKING: Final Score reporters ‘stand down from duties today’
Sports reporter Marc Webber tweeted: “As Final Score reporters, we have decided to stand down from our duties today in solidarity with Gary Lineker. As a result, no Final Score will be broadcast today.
“We all love the BBC and are proud to work for such a great broadcaster.
“More importantly, we consider it an absolute honour to keep people up to date on football on a Saturday at 3pm. A lot of work had already gone into today’s show. Many of us are freelancers -only paid per game. We have made a salary sacrifice today.
“But I can’t stand by and see a colleague unsupported like this for a personal opinion which did not break BBC Editorial Guidelines. Please also be kind to other BBC Sport colleagues who will still be working because they will not have the luxury of choice we have.”
Lets go back to Gary Lineker opening the BBC coverage of World Cup with a monologue on Qatar human rights abuses. Source: BBC
Dion Dublin, who was scheduled to be on for BBC 5Live, has pulled out of today’s coverage.
He tweeted”In Solidarity with my BBC Sport colleagues NO 5live for me today!”
The BBC has “undermined its own credibility” by taking Gary Lineker off air, a former director-general of the corporation has said as the fallout from an impartiality row continues.
Greg Dyke, the BBC director-general between 2000 and 2004 and a former FA chairman, said the broadcaster was “mistaken” in standing Lineker down.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that the precedent at the corporation is that “news and current affairs employees are expected to be impartial and not the rest”.
“If you start applying the rules of news and current affairs to everybody who works for the BBC, where does it end?”, he said.
He added: “There is a long-established precedent in the BBC that is, that if you’re an entertainment presenter or you’re a football presenter, then you are not bound by those same (impartiality) rules.
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