Ferguson launches astonishing attack on BBC
Ferguson will never talk to the Beeb again
Thursday, September 06, 2007
Sir Alex Ferguson has launched an astonishing attack on the BBC, saying that
the national broadcaster is "arrogant beyond belief", has an "
inability to apologise", and does not care about being sued "
because they are so huge and have insurance."
The Manchester United manager has also reiterated his stance that he will
never speak to the corporation again.
Ferguson is not the only football manager who now refuses to talk to the
BBC. Newcastle's Sam Allardyce and Portsmouth's Harry Redknapp have both
declined to be interviewed by the broadcaster since last year's Panorama
investigation into alleged malpractice in football transfers. The pair both
featured in that programme but have never been accused of any rule
infringement or faced charges for any wrongdoing.
Yet Ferguson's renewed assault – not to mentioned his and the others'
conspicuous and ongoing absence from the flagship Match of the Day – has
again highlighted the rift between the BBC and some of football's major
figures. The BBC did not respond to an invitation to reply yesterday.
Ferguson's broadside came late on Tuesday evening at the Citizens' Theatre
in Glasgow, where he was the guest of honour at an 'An Audience With...'
evening attended by family, friends and fans. For 45 minutes he captivated
the audience with a wide range of tales from a life in football, and then
spent as much time again answering questions from the floor.
He made it clear that he is still furious about a BBC documentary from 2004,
called Father and Son, which portrayed his agent son, Jason, as somebody who
exploited his father's influence and position to his own ends in the
transfer market. Ferguson jnr was never found guilty of any wrongdoing, and
Sir Alex said he would never speak to the BBC again, a promise he has kept.
"I think the BBC is the kind of company that never apologise and they never
will apologise," he said.
"They are arrogant beyond belief. I read Alastair Campbell's diaries
recently and he's written a fantastic piece explaining the arrogance and
their inability to apologise.
"They did a story about my son that was whole lot of nonsense. It all
made-up stuff and 'brown paper bags' and all that kind of carry-on. It was a
horrible attack on my son's honour and he should never have been accused of
that.
"But it is such a huge organisation that they will never apologise. They
don't even care if you sue them or whatever, because they are so huge and
have insurance. They carry on regardless and it's breathtaking."
Two of Ferguson's answers to other questions in the Q&A session
contained replies that might be interpreted as ironic in light of his view
of the BBC, and given Jason's job.
First, talking about the late, great Jock Stein, Ferguson spoke in praise of
the former Celtic manager, who, Ferguson pointed out, was responsible for
introducing the regular post-match press conference in Scotland.
Ferguson said Stein did this to counteract what he saw as a
Rangers-dominated media agenda. After introducing press conferences,
Ferguson said, Stein had the press "dancing to his tune." Ferguson not only
refuses to talk to the BBC, but never attends post-match conferences after
Premier League games, despite having a theoretical obligation to do so.
Ferguson also suggested that he feels agents are unnecessary, and implied
they demand wages for players that the players do not deserve. "I say to
young players 'You don't need an agent'.
"I say 'Speak to Gary Neville, Paul Scholes or Ryan Giggs about what you get
paid at Manchester United [when you deserve to].' Sometimes they [young
players] take my advice and sometimes they don't."
Beckham's marriage, Rooney's peace deal and the managers to watch out for
Apart from his relationship with the BBC, Sir Alex Ferguson was
forthright in his views on a number of other subjects during his Q&A in
Glasgow
Ferguson on Beckham
Ferguson said that David Beckham's marriage to his wife, Victoria, changed
his professional priorities for the worse. "He was never a problem until he
got married. He used to go into work with the academy coaches at night time,
he was a fantastic young lad.
"Getting married into that entertainment scene was a difficult thing – from
that moment his life was never going to be the same. He is such a big
celebrity, football is only a small part. The big part is his persona."
... and the contrast with Paul Scholes and his shyness with the media
"Scholes is a great little guy. He doesn't get any profile because he
doesn't want any profile. I love to wind him up by going over to him and
saying, 'Sky want to interview you now.' The blood drains from his face!
Actually, if Paul had a higher profile, I don't think he'd be the player he
is."
On Wayne Rooney's suggestion of making peace in public with Cristiano
Ronaldo after their bust-up at the 2006 World Cup, a suggestion Ferguson
rejected
"Wayne phoned me on the day of the World Cup final and said he had a great
idea. He suggested he could do a TV interview with Ronaldo and they could
show everything was fine. I thought it would look stage-managed and said no.
Instead David Gill and I flew to Portugal to meet Ronaldo. We told him we'd
had a similar experience with David Beckham [after France 98]. Ronaldo was
concerned but not afraid [about coming back]. We said we'd put extra
security on his house. He said he'd try it and see how it went. It's been no
bother."
On why Paul Gascoigne was the player he was most disappointed to have
missed out on signing
"Gascoigne was quality. I think he was the best young player to come out of
England in the last 30 years at that time."
On why selling Jaap Stam, a move that happened after Stam was critical in
his autobiography of Ferguson, was a mistake, in football terms
"At the time he had just come back from an achilles injury and we thought he
had just lost a little bit. We got the offer from Lazio, £16.5m for a
centre-back who was 29. It was an offer I couldn't refuse. But in playing
terms it was a mistake. He is still playing for Ajax at a really good level."
On the managers he rates
"[Alan] Pardew at Charlton has got something about him, he is a good young
manager. Roy Keane has got a good chance, he has something about him.
"Of the older ones, Sam Allardyce is a very influential manager. His way of
managing is very different. He is very into the sports science, he had about
16 people working behind the scenes at Bolton, analysing every aspect. He
transformed Bolton from a little team into what they've become."