Match of the Day will last just 20 minutes tonight with no commentary following a day of chaos for the BBC as big-name stars walked in protest with host Gary Lineker, leaving the broadcaster to cancel most of its football coverage.
The BBC was forced to apologise following the carnage that saw last minute changes to this weekend’s sporting schedule, saying it was ‘working hard to resolve the situation and hope to do so soon’.
Sportsmail understands that the BBC were even forced to consider dropping tonight’s Match of the Day programme due to not being able to secure alternative television commentary after its own commentators boycotted.
However, the Corporation quickly moved to ease fears by insisting the flagship football show will still go ahead with viewers forced to watch highlights from today’s six Premier League games without any commentary.
Sunday’s Match of the Day 2 is also in jeopardy after pundit Jermain Defoe announced he would not appear on the show.
Leicester fan Gary Lineker was at the King Power Stadium to watch his boyhood club host Chelsea. He cheered after Chelsea’s goal was disallowed following a VAR review
Gary Lineker was pictured taking selfies with fans after being taken off air by BBC bosses
Lineker took photos with two kids prior to Leicester’s match against Chelsea at the King Power Stadium this afternoon
Leicester City fans held up signs in support of Lineker in the stands before the match at the King Power Stadium
Swansea City fans also hold up a sign in support of the Match of the Day presenter Gary Lineker
Earlier today, Football Focus and Final Score were hurriedly replaced by old episodes of Bargain Hunt and The Repair Shop after hosts Alex Scott, Kelly Somers, and Jason Mohammad all refused to take to the airwaves in solidarity with the former England star.
BBC Radio 5 Live’s schedule has also been wrecked today. Chief Saturday football presenter Mark Chapman pulled out of broadcasting alongside Colin Murray, and pundit Dion Dublin, forcing the replacement of 5 Live Sport and Fighting Talk with old football podcast episodes.
To add to the turmoil, Ian Wright – who refused to appear on TV tonight – said: ‘If the BBC get rid of Gary Lineker, I’m out, I’m gone.’
Ex-director-general Greg Dyke said the corporation had blundered in ordering the ex-footballer off the show, adding: ‘I suspect this is the end of Gary Lineker as a BBC presenter’.
The BBC’s radio and TV timetables have been disrupted as a host of pundits pulled out of shows in ‘solidarity’ after Lineker was told to step back from hosting Match of Tyhe Day in a row over impartiality.
In a statement, a BBC spokesperson said: ‘The BBC will only be able to bring limited sport programming this weekend and our schedules will be updated to reflect that.
‘We are sorry for these changes which we recognise will be disappointing for BBC sport fans.
‘We are working hard to resolve the situation and hope to do so soon.’
With no need to prepare for MOTD tonight, Lineker was free to head to the King Power Stadium this afternoon for the 3pm match between Leicester and Chelsea
Jon Holmes (right), agent of Gary Lineker arrives at the stadium prior to the Premier League match between Leicester City and Chelsea at the King Power Stadium this afternoon
Gary Lineker was seen outside his London home this morning after fellow presenters and walked out of today’s BBC’s football coverage in a show of solidarity
A leaked email sent to BBC staff has also surfaced on social media showing the Director of Sport Barbara Slater apologising to her team for the continuous chaos which has unravelled at the broadcaster this afternoon.
She thanked staff for their hard work and professionalism despite many boycotting their responsibilities this afternoon in solidarity with Lineker. Slater said that the BBC ‘understood how unsettling this is for all of you’.
Amid the broadcaster’s fiasco, Ian Dennis still took to the air waves to commentate over Leeds’ clash with Brighton on Radio 5 Live at 3pm.
Opening the commentary, Dennis said: ‘It’s a very difficult time for BBC sport and for those that work in the department and we all hope that that gets resolved.
‘Personally, I have found today very difficult, but I am a BBC staff member, I am a radio commentator for BBC Radio 5 Live. And today, like every Saturday afternoon, we provide a service to you, the audience.’
Earlier, in pulling out of today’s scheduled programming, Alex Scott Tweeted that broadcasting Football Focus today ‘just doesn’t feel right.’
She wrote: ‘I made a decision last night that even though I love doing football focus and we have had an incredible week winning an SJA award that it just doesn’t feel right going ahead with the show today. Hopefully I will be back in the chair next week…’
MOTD2 host Mark Chapman pulled out of Radio 5 Live Sport, while Alex Scott boycotted Football Focus
Former Tottenham Hotspur player Jermain Defoe said he would not appear on Match Of The Day 2 on Sunday evening
Somers, who was tipped to replace Scott for the lunchtime programme, also said: ‘Just to confirm I won’t be on BBC television today.’
Adding to the chaos, Final Score host Jason Mohammad then tweeted that he would also take part in the mass walk-out. The Welsh presenter wrote: ‘As you know, Final Score is a TV show very close to my heart.
‘I have this morning informed the BBC that I will not be presenting the show this afternoon on BBC One.’
Jermain Defoe, who was due to appear on Match Of The Day 2 tomorrow night, also tweeted: ‘It’s always such a privilege to work with BBC MOTD. But tomorrow I have taken the decision to stand down from my punditry duties. @GaryLineker.’
Colin Murray have also walked out of their scheduled programming today. He said: ‘No Fighting Talk today, for obvious reasons. In the interest of transparency, this was a decision taken by the entire FT team and myself. Bob Mills was still up for it, to be fair ;).’
Football pundit Dion Dublin said ‘No 5live for me today’ as a mark of solidarity with BBC Sport colleagues amid the broadcaster’s impartiality row with Gary Lineker.
At 12pm, when 5 Live’s football coverage was due to start, the broadcast was instead replaced by old episodes of the Footballer’s Football Podcast with Ricky Haywood-Williams, Michail Antonio and Callum Wilson.
Furious sports fans, who have been deprived of a Saturday afternoon of BBC coverage, have reacted by venting on social media.
One user said: ‘BBC has just pulled Radio 5 Live Sport. This is ridiculous, hysterical, an omnishambles. Davie must resign’.
A second added: ‘So we don’t get any Radio 5 Live commentary or build up to today’s game? Sack the ‘f***** lot of em’.
Meanwhile, a third complained: ‘@BBC ur pulling all these sports shows – can I have a partial refund on my @tvlicensing’. And a fourth added: ‘Lots of focus on the TV shows, but for many people it’s Radio 5 where they listen to sport on a Saturday afternoon.
‘Usually at this time it’d be news from the grounds, team updates etc. But instead it’s prerecorded podcasts as stars & workers walk out. Catastrophe for BBC sport.’
Furious sports fans have vented on social media after being deprived of a Saturday afternoon of BBC coverage as the Corporation was forced to axe several shows
Director of Sport Barbara Slater apologised to her team for the chaos across the BBC this weekend
With fans turning to Sky Sports’ Soccer Saturday for live football updates, host Jeff Stelling left viewers in stitches as he joked about having to be on form today of all days.
The long-time host, who has shown support for Lineker, quipped: ‘I need to be right at the top of my game today because there’s a top-notch football presenter available on Saturdays now!’
Despite the turmoil across other programming, this evening’s Match Of The Day will still go ahead but without a presenter or pundits.
The BBC said the show would ‘focus on match action without studio presentation or punditry’, saying it understood the position of its presenters.
It comes as the Premier League informed clubs that players and managers would be stood down from their post-match Match of the Day and BBC TV commitments during a chaotic Friday night.
This presenter shake-up is the latest in a string of walk-outs since the BBC’s much-debated call to suspend Lineker.
Lineker’s colleagues Ian Wright and Alan Shearer were among the first to confirm they would not be appearing on this evening’s broadcast on Match Of The Day.
Arsenal legend Ian Wright said last night: ‘Everybody knows what Match of the Day means to me, but I’ve told the BBC I won’t be doing it tomorrow. Solidarity.’
Fighting Talk presenter Colin Murray said he will not appear on Radio 5Live today
Kelly Somers Tweeted that she will not be appearing on the BBC today
Final Score presenter Jason Mohammad said he has informed the BBC that he will not be presenting on BBC One this afternoon
Match of the Day has been thrown into chaos in the wake of Lineker’s suspension of duties
Alan Shearer also announced: ‘I have informed the BBC that I won’t be appearing on MOTD tomorrow night.’
Alex Scott then followed them in refusing to appear on the flagship football show. She tweeted a short meme which showed US politician Bernie Sanders saying ‘Nah! Not me.’
Jermaine Jenas – regarded as an eventual successor to Lineker – said he was not due to be on tonight but would have boycotted the show.
Former Manchester City defender Micah Richards also backed Wright and Shearer’s decision to boycott the BBC show.
‘I was not due to be working on MOTD tomorrow, but if I was, I would find myself taking the same decision that @IanWright0 & @alanshearer have,’ he tweeted.
The BBC announced their plan to host the show without pundits in the wake of this news late last night.
Regular Match of the Day commentator Steve Wilson said he and other talking heads have vowed not to participate in the next programme.
He said: ‘As commentators on MOTD, we have decided to step down from [Saturday] night’s broadcast.
‘We are comforted that football fans who want to watch their teams should still be able to do so, as management can use World Feed commentary if they wish.’
He added: ‘In the circumstances, we do not feel it would be appropriate to take part in the programme.’
The statement was shared by MOTD commentators including Steve Wilson, Conor McNamara, Robyn Rowen and Steven Wyeth.
The broadcaster has been thrown into turmoil and must contend not only with decisions over its impartiality position, but a growing void of presenting slots to fill.
But the BBC’s issue may extend beyond their own employees, with Jurgen Klopp leading a managers and players boycott of the broadcaster this weekend.
The Premier League has now let those from the 12 clubs playing on Saturday that MOTD will not request post-match interviews with managers or players.
PFA Spokesperson said on the decision: ‘We have been informed that players involved in today’s games will not be asked to participate in interviews with Match of the Day.
‘The PFA have been speaking to members who wanted to take a collective position and to be able to show their support for those who have chosen not to be part of tonight’s programme.
‘During those conversations we made clear that, as their union, we would support all members who might face consequences for choosing not to complete their broadcast commitments.
‘This is a common sense decision that ensures players won’t now be put in that position.’
Speaking on the saga to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, former direction-general Greg Dyke said the broadcaster has ‘undermined its own credibility’ by taking Gary Lineker off air.
Greg Dyke, the BBC chief between 2000 and 2004 and a former FA chairman, said the broadcaster was ‘mistaken’ in standing Lineker down.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that the precedent at the corporation is that ‘news and current affairs employees are expected to be impartial and not the rest’.
‘If you start applying the rules of news and current affairs to everybody who works for the BBC, where does it end?’, he said.
He added: ‘There is a long-established precedent in the BBC that is, that if you’re an entertainment presenter or you’re a football presenter, then you are not bound by those same (impartiality) rules.
‘The real problem of today is that the BBC has undermined its own credibility by doing this because it looks like – the perception out there – is that the BBC has bowed to Government pressure.
‘And once the BBC does that, then you’re in real problems.
‘The perception out there is going to be that Gary Lineker, a much-loved television presenter, was taken off air after Government pressure on a particular issue.’
Richard Ayre, former controller of editorial policy at the BBC, said the broadcaster’s reputation is ‘bigger and more important’ than any individual, including Lineker.
Mr Ayre told BBC Breakfast on Saturday that there will be ‘real street-to-street fighting’ between political parties in the lead-up to the general election.
‘The BBC, in this time of all times, has to tread as straight a line as it can between the parties and avoid taking sides in its own output, and the BBC believes it also has to ensure that those key people who are identified as the BBC in the public mind also walk a straight line in what they say on their private social network,’ he said.
On Lineker stepping back from presenting Match Of The Day, Mr Ayre continued: ‘It’s a sad occasion for viewers, for anybody who’s interested in football, it will be very sad if they can’t reconcile with Gary.
‘He is superlative, he is absolutely extraordinarily good, not just as a football pundit, of course, but I think, in my 50 or so years of association with the BBC, I’ve never come across such a naturally gifted television presenter.
‘He’s terrific and it will be very sad if he goes, but frankly the BBC and its reputation is bigger and more important than any individual, even Gary.’