Southgate rejects talk of racial divide

England Under-21 head coach Gareth Southgate finds accusations of a racial divide within football a 'little bit difficult to stomach'.

England Under-21 Gareth Southgate

England Under-21 head coach Gareth Southgate (AAP) Source: EPA

A picture taken at the recent Toulon tournament showed the country's Under-20 squad split across two tables, with one fully inhabited by black players and another white.

There are a few other photos included in the Daily Mail article, with the headline asking: 'What do these photos tell us about race in Britain today?'

The article claims the players seemed to subconsciously divide themselves into black and white and Southgate was asked about the report ahead of England Under-21's European championship qualifier against Sweden.

"I think the article was talking about a social issue, rather than a specific team issue," the former defender said in Olomouc.

"It is quite clear to me in my experiences with England junior teams that there is no issue. It was a picture that was unrepresentative of what goes on in our development teams.

"I think anyone who has seen this group of players and staff mix over the last two years, or if they have been around the hotel or the training ground for the last couple of weeks alone, will see the realities of the situation."

Southgate oversees the coaches with responsibility for the Under-20's through to the Under-16's in addition to his role with the Under-21's, whose winger Nathan Redmond regularly nodded in agreement with his manager when the subject was broached in the pre-match press conference.

Asked if it was unfair to portray the Football Association in this light or whether the FA reflects what happens in society, Southgate said: "Well, I'm looking out at the room and not seeing a very multi-cultural room.

"I think football can improve. I grew up in a dressing room when I first started playing football with Chris Powell and John Salako, who were my team-mates at youth-team level. I am still very close friends with those guys.

"Mark (Bright) and Ian (Wright) were in the first team - I don't know anything different.

"For me, sport crosses religion, race, everything else. I am well aware of the problems in society and I am well aware that we can all do better, but I find the accusation of a split within teams and in football a little bit difficult to stomach, really."


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3 min read
Published 21 June 2015 3:54am
Updated 21 June 2015 10:55am
By Simon Peach
Source: PA Sport

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