NETBALL’S NEVILLE SLAMS SOUTHGATE’S £5m AS ‘HE DIDN’T BEAT ELITE’
ENGLAND netball coach Tracey Neville has questioned why Gareth Southgate’s pay will rise to £5m for England’s World Cup success against lesser football nations while her own players achieved far more by winning Commonwealth Games gold. In a strong critique of gender pay inequality in sport, in which she suggested her brother Phil should not be earning vastly more as women’s football manager than her, Neville pointed out that Southgate’s team had not beaten any of the world’s elite countries. The 41-year-old said: ‘We see Gareth Southgate, whose contract is going to be raised to £5million. When you look at the results of that competition, he wasn’t beating 1-6 rankings of the competition. ‘He got to the semi-finals, that was deemed as a win and obviously they improved. For us, we have to win gold in netball.’ Her team stunned favourites Australia to win Commonwealth gold in April. Neville, who represented England 71 times as a player, told a gender summit in Edinburgh that she could only secure more funding for her sport by improving on previous performances against elite sides, rather than winning against allcomers. Football was willing to spend more simply on the basis of winning games, she said. ‘Investment should be based on improvement within football, not on winning,’ she said. ‘We’ve been doing semi-finals for the last 20 years but we had to get gold to secure funding. That is a real difficult thing for me, to start with.’ Neville said she was astonished the England women’s football team goalkeeping coach — a man — earned £70,000 a year while she has never even earned £10,000 a year from sport. She said the maximum she has earned throughout her career was £742 a month but pointed out her brothers, Gary and Phil, have earned £20,000 a week. She said: ‘We are a unique sport, we are a women’s sport, we are a very successful sport now and people should pay attention to that. It is quite disappointing that you are constantly being faced with that. ‘Now, the comparable thing is of my brother being in women’s football as the head coach and me being in women’s netball. Obviously we’ve never had a discussion on wages but the goalkeeping coach for women’s football is getting £70,000 a year, which was nothing like what I was earning.’