Daily Mail

Unmasked: the firm involved in FA farce

- Charles Sale

THE consultant­s who prepared FA chiefs for their desperatel­y poor performanc­e in front of the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport select committee can now be revealed.

It was London firm Oakhill Communicat­ions, an independen­t public affairs and reputation management agency, whose image will not have been helped by such a high-profile fiasco.

Oakhill were formed in November 2015 by experience­d lobbyists Craig Leviton and Lee Petar. And it was the managing partners who advised the FA’s Greg Clarke, Martin Glenn, Dan Ashworth and Rachel Brace before their woeful showing in front of MPs concerning the Eni Aluko-Mark Sampson controvers­y.

The choice of Oakhill is surprising because they have little sports experience other than Leviton’s previous work for FIFA’s PR advisers Teneo and clients including Ladbrokes.

Oakhill are believed to have advised the FA quartet to show some contrition, which they failed to do until Clarke shouldered the blame a week later when addressing the FA Council.

After Clarke’s belated mea culpa, Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n chief executive Gordon Taylor said the FA should sue their advisers.

Petar said last night: ‘It’s not our policy to comment on client matters.’

ITV

SPORT have snapped up leading Sky pundit Gary Neville as an analyst for the World Cup, beating the BBC to his services. When the 42-year-old (right) is working on England games at Russia 2018, it will be intriguing to see how much he refers to the tournament debacles in 2014 and 2016, when he had considerab­le influence as an assistant to manager Roy Hodgson. DIFFICULT MCC chairman Gerald Corbett has surprising­ly been recommende­d by the nomination­s panel and endorsed by the main committee to serve a second three-year term. This despite Corbett’s bull-in-a- china- shop approach and the way he ignores recommenda­tions from the powerful working party, meaning a number of MCC members, including some on the committee, wanted his head. The decision still has to be endorsed at the AGM in May.

JOHN

REES has resigned as chairman of the British Boxing Board of Control, claiming ill-health and other work commitment­s mean he no longer has time for boxing business. His resignatio­n follows an official complaint of misconduct from inside the sport last month. Rees has not commented on the matter and BBBC general secretary Robert Smith would not say whether the allegation­s about Rees’s behaviour played any part in his departure.

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