The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Families tell Taylor to leave and apologise for failure

- By Jeremy Wilson

Families of former players have urged the Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n to lead an urgent review of those living with dementia and immediatel­y implement comprehens­ive care plans.

Following publicatio­n yesterday of research showing that former footballer­s were 3½ times more likely to die from dementia, there were also renewed calls for Gordon Taylor, PFA chief executive since 1981, to step aside immediatel­y so that a replacemen­t could lead his organisati­on’s response.

Taylor is due to depart at an unspecifie­d date, but there is deep anger and frustratio­n at how long it has taken to produce comprehens­ive dementia research and the limitation­s in help for former players and their families.

“He should go now,” said Laraine Astle, the widow of Jeff Astle, who says she has never had a phone call from Taylor. Chris Sutton, whose own father, Mike, has dementia, believes that Taylor had failed his members and should apologise.

Rachel Taylor’s father, Rod, last year became the second British footballer, after Astle, to be publicly diagnosed as having chronic traumatic encephalop­athy – a type of dementia caused by head trauma. She wants financial and practical help for other families.

“The absolute immediate thing to come out is an urgent review of all the players living with dementia and then a full and comprehens­ive care plan,” she said. “Somebody needs to apologise and mean it.”

Taylor is paid several times more each year than an annual benevother­e lent fund of £565,000 to which families of players with dementia can apply for help towards care costs. Concerns over the funding of the PFA, including Taylor’s £2million annual earnings, are being reviewed by the Charity Commission.

Taylor did not appear at yesterday’s launch of the research but has always maintained that the issue has been high on the PFA’S agenda. His deputy, Bobby Barnes, said that the organisati­on was funding a further three research projects.

Barnes also highlighte­d an inconclusi­ve research project that began in 2001 and said the new study could only have been completed in recent years. He ignored an invitation to apologise on behalf of the PFA but outlined admiration for the Astle family. “It’s only with recent technologi­cal and medical research records that we have been able to provide the informatio­n to get the results,” he said.

Asked if more of the benevolent fund would now go to those players living with dementia, Barnes said: “We are going to spend and commit to spend whatever is necessary to support our membership.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom