
Match Of The Day fans sad to see Gary Lineker go amid exit
He said fronting the show had been an 'absolute privilege' and 'utterly joyous'.
The player-turned-pundit's early departure from the broadcaster follows a social media row after the 64-year-old shared a post about Zionism, which featured a depiction of a rat, historically an antisemitic insult.
He presented his final episode alongside fellow pundits, Alan Shearer and Micah Richards, with whom he also hosts podcast The Rest Is Football, which is produced by his company Goalhanger Podcasts.
Gary Lineker says goodbye to #MOTD after 25 years. pic.twitter.com/u1DORcO6Po — Match of the Day (@BBCMOTD) May 25, 2025
In his final message, Lineker said: 'Rather like my football career, everyone else did all the hard work and I got the plaudits. It's been an absolute privilege to host Match Of The Day for a quarter of a century.
'It's been utterly joyous.'
Who will present Match Of The Day after Gary Lineker exit?
Gabby Logan, Kelly Cates and Mark Chapman will replace the Leicester-born star and share the presenting role on MOTD from the next Premier League season and Lineker wished the trio 'all the very best when they sit in this chair. The programme is in the best of hands.'
Lineker is the BBC's highest-paid presenter and issued an unreserved apology as it was confirmed he would leave his presenting role at the BBC early and will no longer front the corporation's coverage of the 2026 World Cup or the FA Cup next season.
He ended his on-air thank you saying: 'And my final thank you goes to all of you. Thank you for watching, thank you for all your love and support over the years. It has been so special, and I am sorry that your team was always on last. Time to say goodbye. Goodbye.'
Gary Lineker tearful as he said goodbye to Match Of The Day
The former Barcelona, Tottenham and Everton striker wiped away tears after being played a video montage which featured messages from pundits past and present including Richards, Shearer and Scottish pundit Alan Hansen, former footballer Danny Murphy and former MOTD pundit, Ian Wright.
In the video montage, Shearer said: 'Gary, you've been a great friend. You are a great friend. You've been amazing to me, and you've been unbelievable to Match Of The Day. So whatever you choose to do on Saturdays, good luck, and we'll miss you.'
There were also words from Liverpool captain Virgil Van Dijk, Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola and former Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri and former team-mates Alan Smith, Paul Gascoigne and Peter Shilton, as well as Lineker's sons George, Harry, Tobias and Angus.
They also showed a clip of Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli singing Nessun Dorma at Leicester's title celebrations in 2016, with old footage showing Lineker emotional as he watched the performance.
Bocelli was among the people leaving a farewell message for Lineker before he was shown playing out the show.
Match Of The Day fans share support for Gary Lineker
Taking to X, fans of MOTD shared their support for Lineker amid his exit with one saying: "Gary Lineker was the face of football for me growing up.
"As a kid being allowed to stay up late to watch Liverpool highlights on Match of the Day was a highlight of the week.
"Thank you for 25 years to one of the best to ever do it."
Another shared: "Gary Lineker is a good man. I hope he prospers and has good health for the rest of his days".
This person said: "Growing up and watching MOTD every weekend a massive part of that was Gary Lineker.
"It won't (be) the same without him #MOTD".
Near the end of the episode Lineker quipped: 'It had to be Leicester last', following him appearing on Match Of The Day in just his underpants in August 2016, having stuck to a promise to appear half-naked if Leicester won the Premier League.
He wore white and blue Leicester shorts for the first 30 minutes of the show then appeared back on screen fully dressed.
Leicester is Lineker's boyhood club and he scored 94 goals in 194 matches for the Foxes.
Recommended reading:
During the episode, Liverpool head coach Arne Slot also featured, telling Lineker: 'Thank you for being such a great presenter of a BBC show that I have watched many times when I lived in Holland, and now still. It's great what you did.'
The programme was preceded with a montage of Lineker's on-field footballing highlights and an archive clip of him as a presenter saying 'the end of an era' before the regular opening credits and theme tune played.
When did Gary Lineker start presenting Match Of The Day?
Lineker has presented Match Of The Day since 1999 and has also fronted the BBC's coverage of other major sporting events, including the 2012 London Olympics.
He opened the final episode saying: 'It wasn't meant to end this way… but with the title race over and the relegation places confirmed, the Champions League was all we had left to talk about.'
Match Of The Day is one of the BBC's top-performing programmes and the corporation retains the rights to continue showing Premier League highlights until the end of the 2028-29 season.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
19 minutes ago
- BBC News
DJ keeps injured woman's passion for spin alive
"I'm just doing what I used to do, just in a different way."When an accident left Sue Frost paralysed from the chest down and unable to get on a bike, it looked like her days of leading online spin classes might be with the help of a DJ and producer, the 60-year-old has found a new way to keep her passion Gribby, from Nottingham, is sharing his skills with Sue so she can pump out top tunes while instructing at future spin sessions. Sue, from Lincoln, told the BBC she has had a passion for spin for about 15 years and ended up teaching 11 classes a week after her instructor stepped down - before she broke her neck falling down the stairs at her home three-and-a-half years ago."It's changed my life completely," she said."I've gone from a very active life with my spin classes, cycling and working full-time to doing basically nothing, but just trying to reintroduce things that I was doing before in a different format."She had resigned herself to giving up spin before meeting Paul through SoundLincs, a community music charity based in Lincolnshire, and he then introduced her to the world of DJing. "I wanted to help Sue because I believe that no matter your situation, there's always a way to try and do things," Paul said. "It's just a matter of trying to find them."The 49-year-old, who hosts DJ workshops, told the BBC within the first two hours of meeting Sue, they had come up with the idea of her DJing spin classes."It would actually be something good for Sue to focus on, give her something to do away from spin classes as well," he said."Finding music, creating playlists, practising DJing and just being in a happy place."Paul said after a bit of research they found some decks that fit on Sue's lap, which then connects to an iPad and from that to a speaker. Sue said: "It's something I've never thought about doing before with DJ decks, I honestly thought I was a bit too old for that."But Paul's showing me that you can do anything. If music isn't your life, it can become your life."It was my life before, I've always enjoyed my music, but now I'm just moving on to a different way of doing things."She said she plans on practicing more on her decks before getting people together for an online class."I'm doing what I used to do, but in a different way. I can't get on a spin bike anymore, but that doesn't really matter - I can still teach online," she added: "It's just really inspiring to see, because originally I think Sue just wanted to have a go to see what was going to happen."I think she's always wanted to have a go at DJing and then I think it just spiralled into a whole new area which Sue and I didn't even think we could do,."But I think there's always a way, you've just got to find it."


BBC News
39 minutes ago
- BBC News
Surprise letters for Bladon's postman of more than 40 years
The BBC has surprised a postman who has retired after more than four decades with messages from Hogg said he "loved" being the postman in Bladon, Oxfordshire, for 41 years - but that he was looking forward to having a lie Radio Oxford's Adam Ball surprised him with messages from village residents, who said they would "miss [Mr Hogg] something terrible".The villagers also threw a surprise "thank you" party for Mr Hogg at The White House, their local community pub. Mr Hogg said his job was about more than just delivering mail, adding: " I would always try and look out for the vulnerable residents as sometimes I think I was their only contact with the outside world."He also said he always carried dog treats for the canines he encountered on his journalist: Chris Wood You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
Here is the real reason River City is being axed by BBC bosses
The letter's subject was BBC Scotland cancelling River City, an act I had previously described as cultural vandalism. My correspondent had a cooler disposition and a better way with words. Summing up how the soap had been brought low in recent years, she wrote: 'Its viewing figures were adversely affected by stop/start production runs, erratic scheduling and a general lack of promotion.' Spot on. And then came this: 'I began watching River City out of loyalty to my city, but came to the view that it makes an important contribution to the culture of central Scotland.' BBC Scotland HQ at Pacific Quay Watching out of loyalty to my city. How wonderful, how generous, how Scottish is that? Of the thousands of words written and spoken about River City, all the BBC statements, the petition to save the show, the debate in the Scottish Parliament, not one sentence hits home as hard as that contribution. Watching out of loyalty to my city. There writes someone who 'gets' what River City means, and why it is not just another programme that can be binned by BBC Scotland because its face no longer fits. But what do you know, no one is listening. Not to my correspondent, not to those who have signed the petition, not to MSPs, or ministers. It seems the main arguments in favour of keeping River City - that it provides jobs and training for working-class Scots who might otherwise never get a start in TV, as well as being a pretty decent drama beloved by its audience - are not enough for BBC Scotland to change its mind. We know this because the executive who made the decision appeared before Holyrood's culture committee at the end of May and said so. Hayley Valentine, director of BBC Scotland, told MSPs that River City, with its 200,000 viewers in Scotland compared to Shetland's 700,000 'did not pass the value for money test'. But the money saved by axing River City would help to fund three new short-run dramas, she confirmed. Though these will 'absolutely cost more to make', the BBC would 'expect' them to deliver much bigger audiences than River City and 'really hope' they will. Expectations and hope. In other words, BBC Scotland is taking a punt. Making all those people redundant on a gamble. Having said that axing River City was a creative decision, it really does come down to money. As for River City being a way into TV, Ms Valentine said opportunities would still be offered across a wide range of other programmes. So that's okay then. Nothing more to see here, folks. Except it is not okay. It is very far from okay. Cancelling River City has always been about more than the end of one programme. It's about BBC Scotland fighting Scotland's corner within the corporation, and making sure the BBC represents and is reflective of all those who pay for it. Read more On the former, was London asked for more money to fund the short-run dramas? Was there ever a chance of building on the UK-wide iPlayer audience for River City by running a promotion campaign? Where are the figures showing potential job and training opportunities lost versus those created? Was there any analysis or was this simply a case of executives thinking they knew best? I understand BBC Scotland's ambition. It wants another Baby Reindeer. It wants the next Adolescence. But it doesn't have the money of a Netflix or an Apple+, which makes it all the more important to ensure that it is making decisions for the right reasons. When it comes to River City, I'm not sure it is. Just as to govern is to choose, running the BBC is all about choice. Who is out and who is in, who gets the money and who doesn't. BBC Scotland decided, ultimately, that River City was expendable. It has made the arguments about viewing figures and opportunities offered elsewhere, but I think there is another factor at work here. For my money - £174.50 licence fee - River City was vulnerable because it was a Scottish working-class soap made by working-class casts and crews. No one thought there would be the backlash there has been. It wasn't like cancelling Question Time with its well-connected panellists and audiences (now there's an idea). The class ceiling exists in the media in general - heck, in society as a whole. It's not just BBC Scotland. Indeed, BBC Scotland has done more than most to widen access and should be commended for it. Now and then, a youngster will appear who doesn't sound like your typical BBC sort. They thrive on the attention and encouragement, but then at some point they hit that class ceiling. They don't get invited into the room where it happens, so they can't shape the corporation's future, and the story of inequality rumbles on. Representation matters. As the old saying goes, if you can see it, you can be it. For many working-class Scots, River City was 'their' soap, and therefore 'their' way into TV. Doors opened that had too often been closed, and if it could happen for the guy down the road, it could happen for you. You cannot put a price on that kind of positive PR. The same goes for viewer loyalty. Fans of River City have had their patience tested to a degree that would not have happened with any other show. Yet they've kept faith with the programme. Even now, they trust executives will repay that faith and cancel the cancellation, but will they? Back to you, BBC Scotland. Alison Rowat is a senior politics and features writer on The Herald. Contact