Daily Mail

It has survived Sky’s polish and dodgy streams but is this bastion of football broadcasti­ng at risk from Linekergat­e?

- By Ian Herbert

The Match of the Day controvers­y was unravellin­g so fast last night that the programme will not exist as we know it, this weekend.

It was last removed from screens 30 years ago because of a strike by technical staff, though this is something more visceral and elemental, a tumult which leaves the very future of the programme in question.

One by one, Gary Lineker’s colleagues removed themselves from the picture in acts of solidarity. First Ian Wright, then Alan Shearer, Alex Scott and Micah Richards — leading the BBC to announce there will be no presenters tonight.

It was a position they did not see coming when they blithely and disingenuo­usly suggested yesterday afternoon that the show’s host would be ‘stepping back’, having effectivel­y removed him.

Stepping into the breach will not be for the faint-hearted, if Lineker doesn’t make it back and that moment arrives. A number of presenters’ agents were advising their clients against doing so last night, and with a route through this minefield so hard to discern, the programme which is a bastion of broadcasti­ng is plunged into its moment of gravest jeopardy.

Lineker is not the first BBC broadcaste­r to have been reprimande­d for a lack of neutrality, though in the world we once knew, when left and right wing meant John Barnes and Steve Coppell, the chastiseme­nt was accepted and everyone moved on.

It was during the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics that Bob Wilson, commentati­ng on Daley Thompson’s medal ceremony, saw him whistling on the winner’s podium and declared: ‘I just wish he’d shown a little more respect for the national anthem.’ he was censured and nothing more was heard or said of it.

Regardless of the subject he has chosen to comment on, it was clear Lineker had oversteppe­d the mark when some of his own BBC colleagues, such as Neil henderson and Katie Razzall, made clear assessment­s that this was a transgress­ion.

Both are consummate, intelligen­t, thoughtful profession­als, with views which they keep to themselves. It is a raging dialectica­l and political storm that Lineker has positioned himself in, not just a contempora­ry debate.

It says everything about Match of the Day’s abiding status and relevance, which Lineker has contribute­d substantia­lly to, that his tweets have brought the programme into this position.

We are in a world of live football, ‘content generation’, digital goal clips and egregious dodgy streams, through which criminals thieve from our game. We have witnessed Sky Sports take football broadcasti­ng to another level and yet Match of the Day remains our football staple. Its hour or so of highlights remains much a part of the cadence of our weekend as its theme fanfare, composed in 1970 by Barry Stoller, whose brief was simply to write ‘something good’.

The programme commands this place because so many of us have measured our football lives through it, watching an unforgetta­ble game and returning home to impatientl­y wait for Match of the Day to confirm it really did happen.

Justin Fashanu for Norwich against Liverpool in 1980: ‘Oh, oh, what a goal. Oh that’s a magnificen­t goal.’ Terry McDermott for Liverpool against Tottenham, 1978. ‘ McDermott, Oh that was beautiful.’ Glenn hoddle for Tottenham against Watford, 1983. ‘he deserves those celebratio­ns.’

Others have tried to replicate what it has been delivering since 1964, but none have ever come remotely close.

ITV tried in 2001, recruiting Des Lynam and introducin­g U2’ s Beautiful Day and Andy Townsend in a tactics truck, but it was not the same. The BBC’s head of sport Peter Salmon rightly observed when Match of the Day returned three years later that it was like ‘welcoming home an old friend’.

That BBC coup paved the way for Lineker to take on the role he has held to this day and his Twitter presence has actually been a way of retaining profile for the BBC among younger audiences, for whom TV is less relevant.

It is a measure of the way that broadcasti­ng now operates, with major presenters operating as freelancer­s who can work for whom they chose, that Lineker has had plenty of alternativ­e options, long before what seems like a parting of the ways.

his multiple opportunit­ies allow him to test the corporatio­n’s patience in a way that Wilson certainly never could.

It is the programme which is damaged, perhaps irreparabl­y, not him. When it is safe to break cover, other presenters will step up, but candidates who bring top level football experience and a delivery which sustains the programme in its competitiv­e environmen­t are thin on the ground. There is a whole lot of beige out there.

Confronted with the challenge from hell, some at the BBC will yearn for easier, gentler times, when presenters did not feel the need to fill the world in on their opinions. The late John Motson, who Lineker discussed on Match of the Day just two weeks ago, was invited into Downing Street by Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair, the latter of whom told him he was ‘one of my heroes’.

Motson was then wined and dined by Blair at a Chequers dinner party, but all we heard of this from him was the story of his parting shot when he and the Prime Minister left that night.

‘You should come on Football Focus some time,’ Motson told him. They were different times.

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