Well hasn't he played a blinder.
Not about the football, but about the politics that he has managed to drag into the game, as he thinks "It's about more than just football".
Well it may be for him but for a lot of people it really isn't.
Football has always been a release for most fans. Most of these fans back in the day were working class men who would work hard in poor conditions for five or five and a half days a week.
But Saturday afternoon was their time. Have a couple of pints and go to the match, sing, shout and go a bit mad. A release of tension, a release from the gring of the working week.
And it is still like that for most fans; a release. A day when the working week can be forgotten.
But oh no, here comes Mr Southgate and his plan to turn the national football team into a social justice project. It's anti-racism he says, not a political stand. To establish a more equal society, not a political stand.
I'm sorry, but this is manifestly rubbish. You can argue the racial aspect all day long, but in Dec 2020 Harry Kane's said "We have obviously done a lot with Black Lives Matter".
https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/foo ... 64831.html
BLM is a marxist political organisation that wishes to abolish capitalism and to defund the police; I don't think you could be much more politically controversial than that.
Similarly when Southgate talks of "A more equal society" he's not talking about politics? I think he is.
He's started off something he hasn't thought through. If I go and watch a Leeds match and the players take the knee what am I supposed to think? What are they doing here, trying to guilt trip me about my "white privilege"? Go to where I was brought up and try and find me one person there who had any sort of privilege; I'd love to see him do that.
So him and his bunch of multi-millionaire players can go on campaigning but I've turned off; and I don't think I'm the only one. Whatever the BBC's darling, Mr Southgate's intentions were, he's only made matters worse.