September 24, 2024

Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville has responded to Leicester City's promotion back to the Premier League.

Gary Neville attacks Premier League after threat of barring Nottingham Forest

Gary Neville has accused the Premier League of acting like ‘bullies’ and says the organisation is ‘entitled’ and ‘selfish’ amid the ongoing debate over the potential introduction of an independent football regulator

Gary Neville has accused the Premier League of behaving like ‘bullies’ in the face of a Football Governance Bill, which would see the establishment of an independent football regulator, under the new Labour government.

Backing for the creation of an independent regulator began after the European Super League farce of 2021. The recently-ousted Conservative government introduced plans, and since taking power Labour have pushed ahead with the idea, stating football clubs will be ‘protected’ as a result by ‘ensuring their financial sustainability’. If passed through parliament, the bill would grant a regulator backstop powers to intervene in football when necessary.

Gary Neville hits back in spat with anti-vaxxer ex-footballer Rickie  Lambert after he accused him of backing 'corrupt government's plan' for an  independent football regulator | Daily Mail Online

Neville continues to be a staunch supporter and believes its introduction would safeguard the interests of English football fans throughout the pyramid, reports our sister title the Manchester Evening News . On the other hand, the Premier League has been hesitant as the organisation’s CEO Richard Masters has warned it would be a ‘risk’.

So now the Sky Sports pundit, in comments made to PA at the Labour Party Conference, has chastised the Premier League for this hesitancy. He remarked: “We have a Premier League that’s entitled, they feel entitled. I’m not going to use the word greedy, but I just have.

“They are selfish and I can’t understand that way of thinking. It’s almost like they’re the big brother that sit there and distribute scraps of food to the little brothers round the table.

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“It’s not what you do when you’re in a family. Their mindset is such of a bully. Their mindset is such that they think they can influence the regulator once the regulator’s introduced and they can get a better deal potentially the other side of the regulator. And what they’re applying is their soft power and their influence to try and create scare stories and scaremongering, like we had a couple of weeks ago.”

Amidst the independent regulator’s possible approval, there have been suggestions that clubs like Nottingham Forest or Neville’s former Manchester United would be barred from competing in future UEFA competition because of the organisation’s policy against state interference. Talking at the same event, Labour’s Culture, Media and Sport Secretary, Lisa Nandy, labelled this idea ‘ridiculous’.

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Nandy also reassured that the government will not adopt a ‘heavy-handed’ approach, emphasising a desire to address the lack of sustainability in parts of the football pyramid.

The Premier League has hit back at Neville’s accusations of acting like a ‘bully’, stating they are in ongoing discussions with the new government regarding the football regulator. They have suggested that ‘light-touch, targeted and proportionate legislation can be made to work’, referencing CEO Masters’ remarks from the previous season’s end.

He had warned: “My overriding concern is that the bill will reduce our competitiveness and weaken the incredible appeal of the English game. Our competition is the most watched and commercially

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successful football league in the world. Thanks to that success, Premier League clubs are able to give away £1.6bn every three years – 16 percent of our total revenues – to the wider game, helping to make it the envy of the world.

“It is a risk that regulation will undermine the Premier League’s global success, thereby wounding the goose that provides English football’s golden egg.”

 

 

 

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