
Sky Sports forced to apologise as Ashley Young's Ipswich team-mate is caught in rude act in background of interview
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
SKY SPORTS was left red in the cheeks after a rude act was caught in the background of an interview with Ashley Young.
Young was being interviewed about his recent move to Ipswich Town by Sky Sports when the camera caught more than anybody expected.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
3
Experienced full-back Ashley young was doing an interview for Sky following his move from Everton to Ipswich Town
Credit: Getty
3
Eagle-eyed viewers noticed the rude act occurring in the background of Young's interview with Sky Sports
Credit: Sky Sports News
3
Sky Sports were forced to apologise for any offence caused by the gesture
Credit: Sky Sports News
Play Dream Team now!
Play The Sun Dream Team ahead of the 2025/26 season Free to play
Over £100,000 in total prize money
Play in Mini Leagues against your mates
Submit a team for Gameweek 1 to enter £5,000 prize draw
Play via Dream Team's app or website today!
As the former England international discussed his fitness, a player in the background, donning the number two shirt, appeared to lower his shorts and expose his bum in the direction of the camera.
Things only got stranger, as another player reached over and appeared to spank the bare skin that had been exposed with his hand.
Sky Sports did not see the funny side of the matter, and issued an apology on air after spotting the rude gesture.
"Earlier this hour, we interviewed Ashley Young live on Sky Sports News.
READ MORE ON FOOTBALL
HE'S THE GUEYE Man Utd hijack Brentford bid for wonderkid days after snaring £71m Mbeumo
"We'd just like to apologise if anything you saw within that segment caused offence during our live broadcast."
Ipswich fans will hope the unusual team bonding methods will help them bounce back to the Premier League after their relegation last season
In the interview, 40-year-old Young opened up about the circumstances that saw him leave the Toffees and make the switch to the Championship club.
CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS
"It was difficult, I was disappointed not to be offered a new contract [at Everton].
"But that is behind me.
Everton and West Ham to fight it out for Douglas Luiz
"I have got to come here now and produce the goods on the pitch.
"Age is nothing but a number, and I will keep going as long as my body can take."
Hashtags

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


The Independent
9 minutes ago
- The Independent
James Milner to wear number 20 at Brighton in memory of Diogo Jota
James Milner will wear the number 20 shirt at Brighton this season in memory of the late Diogo Jota, describing his former Liverpool team-mate as a 'great friend'. The Portuguese forward died aged 28 last month in a car crash, alongside his brother Andre Silva, just weeks after helping Liverpool clinch Premier League title glory. Liverpool have retired the number 20 jersey worn by Jota in his five seasons at Anfield, three of them alongside Milner before the veteran England midfielder moved to Brighton in the summer of 2023. With Carlos Baleba opting to have 17 on his back ahead of the 2025/26 campaign and vacating 20, Milner, who has been Brighton's number six, has swooped in to pay a touching tribute to Jota. 'Once I heard Carlos was looking to change his number and 20 was available, I wanted to do it as a mark of respect and pay tribute to Diogo Jota,' Milner said on the club's X channel. 'He was an amazing player who I was fortunate to play with and a great friend as well. 'It will be a great honour to wear his number in the Premier League this year.' Milner – whose contract was extended by Brighton in June for another season, which will take him past his 40th birthday – was among a number of Jota's former team-mates who attended his funeral in July. With 638 Premier League appearances already to his name, he sits within striking distance of Gareth Barry's all-time record of 653 games.


The Guardian
10 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘It's a lonely job': Neil Warnock on management, Guardiola and his ire for Ferguson
'I was at Crystal Palace and I wanted a centre-half,' Neil Warnock says as, after 45 years as a manager, he describes how football has changed since his rise from non-league to the Premier League. 'I sent Ronnie Jepson, my assistant, to Scotland to watch a centre-half. And he came back and said he would cost us around £4m, but he was very good. So I told the people at Crystal Palace.' Warnock resists identifying Steve Parish, Palace's chairman, by name for he is deep in a story that illustrates how data analytics is not always infallible. 'He asked for 24 hours and went to the data people. The next day he said: 'We don't want to go ahead.' I asked him why and he said they don't think he's quick enough. I said: 'He might not look quick enough, but he's in second gear in Scotland. If he had to sprint, he'd sprint.'' I already know Warnock is remembering how he missed signing Virgil van Dijk and, as we're having an enjoyable knockabout, I ask if even a great player such as Franz Beckenbauer might have been dismissed by the stats men. The German sweeper had pace and tenacity, but his regal vision meant he could intercept a pass without needing to produce a crunching tackle. 'Correct,' Warnock replies. 'Beckenbauer would never have got on, would he, with the data? He'd have been playing Sunday league, Beckenbauer. 'So we didn't sign Van Dijk. He went to Southampton [for £13m]. I was with Cardiff a few years later, when we got to the Premier League, and I came up against him at Liverpool [who signed Van Dijk for £75m]. He came up and said: 'Mr Warnock, you could have signed me'. I swore and said: 'I bet you were glad that you were too slow for me.' We had a laugh together.' 'It just shows you. They can sign these great players on a computer but I was at Middlesbrough and they said they'd got a left-back for me,' Warnock goes on. 'I watched him for five minutes and said: 'He can't defend. I don't want him.' They said: 'But his stats show he's got the most tackles, the most headers.' I said: 'Are you listening? He can't defend.' Managers now are more or less coaches and they're letting the recruitment team pick the players. But the data people don't see the character of the person or other aspects of his game.' A freewheeling conversation with Warnock moves from memories of drinking pink champagne with Brian Clough to a bitter fallout with Sir Alex Ferguson. It includes recollections of eight promotions, five relegations, and a lot of pride. 'I survived 1,627 games,' Warnock says. 'When I started [at Gainsborough Town in 1980] I just wanted to survive a season. Let alone 45 years as a manager. Fucking hell. Frightening, isn't it?' Warnock's managerial career ended in March last year. He resigned after Aberdeen beat Kilmarnock 3-1 to reach the semi-finals of the Scottish Cup and, while he won't discuss the reasons for his abrupt departure from Pittodrie after eight games, Warnock didn't like off-field interference in his work. He is now a part-time consultant at Torquay United and hopes to help the club return to the Football League. But, in a sign of his diluted focus, the 76-year-old's attention is also on his upcoming tour, when he will appear at the London Palladium. Warnock sounds suitably gobsmacked in his unvarnished Sheffield accent. 'When I was a kid, my mum had multiple sclerosis and my dad worked in the steelworks. But on a Sunday night I used to sit in front of my mum in her wheelchair and she played with my hair while as a family we watched Sunday Night at the London Palladium. So when these shows were being discussed I just said: 'I'd love to do the Palladium.' I didn't suppose we could, but I'll be thinking so much of my mum and dad. 'In those days your dad never told you he loved you. It was macho. But he was a crane driver in the steelworks and after his 16-hour shifts he would come home to a wife with multiple sclerosis and three kids in a two-bedroom semi. You don't appreciate what he must have gone through until years later.' Warnock's distinctly human stories prompted Pep Guardiola to invite him into the Manchester City dressing room. Towards the end of last season Warnock spoke to a group of multimillionaire footballers, including Kevin De Bruyne and Erling Haaland, and he grins now. 'The first thing I said is: 'I bet you lot think yourselves lucky you've not got me as your manager, because you'd be kicking the ball from there to there and it wouldn't be on the ground.' They all creased up. I said a few other things that made them laugh. Afterwards Pep said he'd enjoyed it so much and that you don't get that now in football – the humour. He said: 'Everything's so methodical, so data-driven, blah-blah-blah.' He said we miss that human element.' Warnock interviewed Guardiola for Sky Sports and, despite their mutual affection, there is an amusing clash of philosophies. Guardiola cackled through much of the interview but he looked almost bewildered when Warnock said: 'We love man-marking.' After Guardiola said 'You love, huh? Why?' Warnock explained that, as his teams were technically inferior, they had to try and nullify the opposition. 'And the players,' Guardiola asked, 'they support it? They like it?' Warnock's immediate reaction – 'well, they had to' – makes Guardiola smile again. As Warnock tells me now, 'I never had a good team but I always had a good dressing room.' Warnock was old school. 'When I were manager at Palace,' he says, 'Man City brought down two buses full of staff. I thought: 'Bloody hell, I've never seen 'owt like it.' I got our kit man to chuck a bucket of cold water on the floor in their dressing room to make it scruffy as possible.' But there were occasions when Warnock was helpless. 'At Cardiff we played City [in 2018] and had a couple of shots. It was 0-0 after 30 minutes and I'm thinking: 'we're doing well here'. Then we went in at half-time 2-0 down and after Bernardo Silva scored the second I'm saying out loud on the bench: 'What a goal. That's unbelievable.' And I'm the opposition manager!' Cardiff lost 5-0 and were relegated that season when a controversial 2-1 defeat by Chelsea hastened their demise in May 2019. 'It's a lonely job, being a manager,' Warnock says. 'I felt very lonely at times and probably the loneliest was at Cardiff when Chelsea got a goal that should have been disallowed for three yards offside. I knew that would relegate us. The dressing room was desolate because the lads had given me absolutely everything. I can tell you now the linesman was Ed Smart and Craig Pawson refereeing. I can see it as if it were yesterday. I'll be looking at that on my grave. 'I told the referee and linesman: 'I wish you could come in my dressing room and see the desolation because you didn't do your jobs right.' We didn't deserve to go down that year.' Warnock was fined £20,000 for complaining about the officiating but now his attention reverts to Guardiola. 'I noticed how much he was having to bite his tongue when you looked at the goals City conceded towards the end of last season. It wasn't anything tactical. They were just bad mistakes. I knew it hurt him but he's got the bit between his teeth again now. I'm going to be interested in seeing how they go this season because they'll be a threat. Liverpool have spent all that money and Arsenal are spending as well, but Pep's signed two or three good players. He's the best manager since I've been around and I think he'll prove it again.' Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion When I ask Warnock for the top three managers he has faced, he responds with just two names. 'I'd say Pep one and Arsène Wenger two because he changed the whole concept of football. Oh my God, his intelligence.' Warnock and Wenger also had an unlikely bromance. 'He liked me and he respected me. It was said that Wenger never had any managers in his office after a game but he always invited me. On one occasion I even took my kids in and we had a picture in his office.' He frowns when I suggest it's strange Ferguson has not been added to his top three. 'I'd have to put Fergie in,' he says grudgingly. 'But I'd have Pep and Arsène before him.' Warnock once spoke warmly of Ferguson and how the Scot would write to him encouragingly after every promotion and relegation. But his attitude has hardened now. 'I don't really want to talk about him because I've not got anything good to say.' Is that because Ferguson played a weakened Manchester United side against West Ham in the final game of the season in 2007? 'Absolutely. Unforgivable, in my eyes. Same with [Liverpool's] Rafa Benítez. He played the kids at Fulham that same year.' The pain for Warnock was intensified because Sheffield United, his boyhood team, were relegated after they lost at home to Wigan and West Ham stayed up after beating United by a solitary goal scored by Carlos Tevez, whose registration was thought to be ineligible by Warnock and many others. Has he spoken to Ferguson since that disastrous day? 'No,' Warnock says with icy finality. He is happier discussing another managerial icon in Clough. 'I was at Notts County [between 1989 and 1993] and Cloughie used to walk past our little training ground to get to their 10 acres where they had a fantastic training facility. He would be with [Clough's assistant at Nottingham Forest] Alan Hill and a black labrador. Cloughie would walk across my pitch. He never walked around it and nobody said 'owt. He looked round at what we were doing, shook his head and walked on. Brilliant!' Warnock laughs before becoming more serious again. 'We drew 1-1 at their place and at one of our lunches, he said: 'You don't realise, son, but it's a remarkable job for a club like Notts County to be competing with us in the top division. It'll never happen again, what you've done.' And of course Notts County went from the old First Division to non-league football. 'I've had eight promotions and if I went back to these clubs tomorrow, I'd get a great reception. I got Cardiff in the Premier League. Look where they are now. To get Notts County in the top flight? If I had a fashionable name or I were a fashionable manager, I think I'd have got more acknowledgment. But they gave me an award this year at the Football League, for my contribution to the EFL.' Warnock sinks back in his chair and smiles: 'I thought: 'Bloody hell. It's about time!'' Neil Warnock: Are You With Me? is at Opera House, Manchester on 29 August, London Palladium on 18 September and Ashton Gate Stadium, Bristol on 28 September. Tickets at


The Review Geek
13 minutes ago
- The Review Geek
Built In Birmingham: Brady & The Blues Review
Season 1 Episode Guide No Fear Turn the Page Joys & Sorrows This will be Bananaland Keep Right On While Premier League football gets a lot of the plaudits when it comes to the moniker of 'best league in the world', few outside of the footballing sphere realize just how competitive and cutthroat the lower leagues actually are. Nowhere else is that more evident than in Prime Video's latest docuseries, Built In Birmingham: Brady & The Blues. Taking over Birmingham City FC, Tom Wagner from Knighthead Capital Management (a US-based investment firm), pumped millions into rejuvenating the football club, determined to create a culture of winning from a team seemingly content with Championship mediocrity and phantom pregnancies (the analogy makes sense in the documentary, don't worry!) Taking a leaf out of Wrexham's book, Wagner isn't the sole focus here as Tom Brady, the former NFL star, purchased a 3.3% stake of the club. You'd never know it from this docu-series though, as Tom Brady is largely placed front and center at every opportunity. When he speaks, he compares a lot of his own ups and downs with that of Birmingham City's fortunes. Along with fly on the wall footage of him arriving at training sessions, watching games from the stands (and eventually on his iPad back home later on) and random segments of him around Birmingham, we also see him discussing the club's culture. Amusingly, the two make a huge mistake early on in appointing Wayne Rooney in charge of the club, a man who has a reputation of failing at every single football club he's managed. The five episodes focus on Birmingham City's rebirth though, starting with its relegation and crash-out into League 1 (thanks Rooney) before the eventual resurgence and record-breaking year, helped of course by Wagner splashing the cash and bringing in top talent to get the team out of the dregs of League 1. It's not all smooth sailing though, and after episode 1, the documentary works its way through the season's hiccups and issues. Cameras showcase key team talks both at half-time and the full-time whistle, along with following key team members and managers as they try to navigate this new world order. There's also a rather bizarre inclusion of Peaky Blinders quotes and famous scenes (get it? Because it's a Brummie-based drama?) that don't really add much to the show other than remind us of where we are. I'm genuinely not sure why this was needed, or who it's supposed to appeal to. To be fair, Peaky Blinders is a great show but we don'tneed Tommy Shelby giving a rousing speech about mind games before Birmingham go to war with the mighty Rotherham. However, the action on the pitch is where this docu-series shines and thankfully, the commentary draws on some of the great EFL voices, including Bill Leslie and Don Goodman. There are plenty of highlights here, including Birmingham's fiery clash with Newcastle in the Cup, a particularly tense game with Wrexham away and some big (see: exaggerated for this documentary) injury blows along the way that look set to derail the Blue train. But really, after spending mountains of cash and riding a wave of good faith from the fans, Birmingham's season was nothing short of a steamroll back into the Championship. The filmmakers do seem to sense this and a lot of the drama we see here feels a lot more artificial and manufactured than it perhaps should be. Even in episode 1, where the fans and critics bemoan that Birmingham have never won anything, it's never mentioned once that the club won the League Cup in 2010 and one of those relegations from the Prem came thanks to one foolhardy last minute goal from Tottenham that sent them down during the Premier League's best relegation scrap of all time. However, even with the positives, it's hard not to forget Brady's words early in the documentary. 'It's not a vanity project,' He tells us… even though half the documentary features his NFL highlights, jetting off to the US for the Superbowl and comparing his own career to that of the Blues. As a reminder, this is a man with a 3.3% stake in the company, I'm not sure if the intention here is to try and bring American fans into the project and gain good faith like Wrexham have, but unlike Rob and Ryan's charisma and feel-good energy, what's here feels a lot more cynical and blatant. In fact, one of the commentators mentions how Wrexham VS Birmingham is akin to the glitz and glamour of Hollywood VS the suits of New York, and it's a fitting analogy. However, Brummie fans will be in their element here, seeing the club's rise back to the Championship and their hopes for a rollicking good time in the most competitive league in English football for the year ahead. Whether Birmingham can keep those feel-good vibes going (and the cash splashing) for years to come is anyone's guess but the club does seem to be going in the right direction. Built in Birmingham is a decent enough stop-gap before the football league starts up properly later this month, but it's nowhere near as good as it could have been.