logo
‘It wasn't meant to end this way': Lineker signs off from Match of the Day

‘It wasn't meant to end this way': Lineker signs off from Match of the Day

Yahoo25-05-2025

Gary Lineker bade farewell to Match of the Day and his career at the BBC on Sunday night in the only appropriate manner: with a montage.
There were deep breaths, noises off, the checking of notes. There were tears and celebrations. There was Bobby Robson and Johan Cruyff. There were tributes from colleagues, peers, friends and family and an invitation to 'go gallivanting' from Gazza.
Advertisement
'You don't believe it but you will be missed,' said Pep Guardiola.
The 64-year-old largely held it together as he was taken down memory lane and ushered towards the exit door of the BBC's top sports programme after 26 years of hosting. Only a sniffle betrayed his deeper feelings as he signed off for the last time. 'Rather like my football career, everyone else did the hard work and I got the plaudits', he said. 'It's been utterly joyous.'
Lineker has often described the opportunity to be a custodian of a programme he himself had grown up watching as 'a privilege'. In truth, the former England captain's stint as presenter dwarfs that of every other host. From David Coleman to Des Lynam, the host of Match of the Day has also been the face of the BBC's sports programming and Lineker continued that tradition, but only his presence has been consistent across an entire generation.
After an initial stint as a pundit, Lineker's presenting debut came on 7 August 1999. He introduced himself with a Lynam-esque moment of fourth-wall breaking. 'Hey, tell you what, football's back,' he said, before adding: 'Any good? Did I get the job?'
Advertisement
His first match was Chelsea at home to promoted Sunderland, a thrashing led by Gianfranco Zola; his punditry panel Alan Hansen and Trevor Brooking.
Twenty-six years later and Lineker saw out his last 90 minutes of action and analysis in the company of Alan Shearer and Micah Richards. Both men are bigger, louder and snappier than their predecessors. They also work with Lineker all week long as part of The Rest Is Football, the hit podcast produced by Lineker's Goalhanger studio. There, their personalities are given looser rein and banter gushes freely. The more mannered versions of the trio on MOTD can seem a little awkward by comparison.
Over the years Lineker found a distinctive voice as a broadcaster, conveying his enthusiasm for the game while adopting an avuncular approach to the athletes he was watching. He also indulged his fondness for wordplay and made many deprecating references to the achievements of his career.
His boyish looks endured for decades, his ageing betrayed only by his whitening hair. In 2015 he agreed to present MOTD in 'just my undies' if the team he had once played for and always supported, Leicester City, won the Premier League. The Foxes duly pulled off the miracle and Lineker half-honoured his commitment: the white bloomers were more shorts than pants.
Advertisement
At that point in his career it was as close to controversy as Lineker had come. The player who never received a yellow card had become the good guy host, even-handed in his observations and gentle in his humour. But his pants pledge came via a post on Twitter and Lineker's social media activity was to change the perception the public had of him.
He used Twitter to articulate his personal political views. His support for refugees brought attacks from the press and strangers into his home. Two years ago, criticism of the previous government's language on asylum led to debates over impartiality and a brief suspension, only for Lineker's pundit peers to walk out in solidarity.
Scrutiny of Lineker's activity away from the studio has only grown since, at the same time as his independence from the BBC has deepened. The decision that Lineker would begin to step away from his BBC responsibilities was made last autumn, with the promise of a last dance at the men's World Cup next summer. Lineker's decision two weeks ago to repost content relating to the Gaza conflict that contained an antisemitic symbol then put an end to plans for an extended farewell.
'It wasn't meant to end this way,' was how Lineker opened his final show, but there was to be no confessional. Of course it was a set up for a joke. 'With the title race over, the Champions League was all we had left to talk about,' said Lineker as Richards grimaced keenly, but the camera didn't linger.
Advertisement
As ever with a show that is edited with military precision, the match action had to be cued up. 'We'll take it in table order,' Lineker said. The show rolled on.
There were little chuckles at the prospect of free pints at Shearer's Bar at St James' Park and a recital of law 12 relating to the control of the ball in a goalkeeper's hand. The Chelsea defender Levi Colwill was compared to a 'prime Lineker in the box' by Richards and giggles were had over unrevealed remarks relating to Sunderland made by Shearer in the green room.
There was a graphic that got the West Ham manager wrong and Lineker momentarily confused Brighton and Bournemouth. It was all as familiar and as comforting as a warm bath. Then, finally, the plug was pulled.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Spain draws Sweden in semifinals of Women's Nations League. Germany gets France
Spain draws Sweden in semifinals of Women's Nations League. Germany gets France

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Spain draws Sweden in semifinals of Women's Nations League. Germany gets France

Germany's Giulia Gwinn, left, controls the ball as the Netherlands' Romée Leuchter challenges during a UEFA Women's Nations League soccer match against the Netherlands, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Bremen, Germany. (Carmen Jaspersen/dpa via AP) Germany's Lea Schüller, third from right, celebrates her goal with teammates during a UEFA Women's Nations League soccer match against the Netherlands, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Bremen, Germany. (Carmen Jaspersen/dpa via AP) Spain's Claudia Pina celebrates after scoring her side's second goal during the women's Nations League soccer match between Spain and England at the RCD Espanyol Stadium, in Barcelona, Spain, Tuesday, June 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Joan Monfort) Spain's players celebrate after Claudia Pina scored her side's second goal against England during the women's Nations League soccer match at the RCD Espanyol Stadium in Barcelona, Spain, Tuesday, June 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Joan Monfort) Spain's players celebrate after Claudia Pina scored her side's second goal against England during the women's Nations League soccer match at the RCD Espanyol Stadium in Barcelona, Spain, Tuesday, June 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Joan Monfort) Germany's Giulia Gwinn, left, controls the ball as the Netherlands' Romée Leuchter challenges during a UEFA Women's Nations League soccer match against the Netherlands, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Bremen, Germany. (Carmen Jaspersen/dpa via AP) Germany's Lea Schüller, third from right, celebrates her goal with teammates during a UEFA Women's Nations League soccer match against the Netherlands, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Bremen, Germany. (Carmen Jaspersen/dpa via AP) Spain's Claudia Pina celebrates after scoring her side's second goal during the women's Nations League soccer match between Spain and England at the RCD Espanyol Stadium, in Barcelona, Spain, Tuesday, June 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Joan Monfort) Spain's players celebrate after Claudia Pina scored her side's second goal against England during the women's Nations League soccer match at the RCD Espanyol Stadium in Barcelona, Spain, Tuesday, June 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Joan Monfort) NYON, Switzerland (AP) — World champion Spain will continue its defense of the UEFA Women's Nations League title against Sweden in the semifinals after the draw was made on Friday. Spain will host the first leg on Oct. 24 and the return is four days later in Sweden. Advertisement Germany hosts France first in the other semifinal played on the same dates. France was beaten by Spain 2-0 in Seville in the inaugural final last year. The 2025 final is scheduled over two legs, on Nov. 28 and Dec. 2. All four teams advanced to the finals stage by finishing atop groups that started in February and finished this week — effectively as warmups for the Women's European Championship. Only France won six straight games. First, all four head to the 16-team Euro 2025 that starts on July 2 in Switzerland. Germany and Sweden are in the same Euros group. France is in a tough group with the past two European champions, England and the Netherlands. Spain, the 2023 Women's World Cup winner, starts its Euro 2025 campaign against Portugal on July 3 in Bern. ___ AP soccer:

Prince William Makes Subtle Dig at Estrangement from Prince Harry
Prince William Makes Subtle Dig at Estrangement from Prince Harry

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Prince William Makes Subtle Dig at Estrangement from Prince Harry

Royal brothers Prince William and Prince Harry show no signs of reconciling any time soon, and on a recent engagement this week, the Prince of Wales hinted at his family drama while speaking with soldiers of the Army Air Corps in Wattisham, Suffolk. He asked a group of soldiers, 'Is the pace of life good at the moment?' and one replied it was 'a mixed bag.' William then joked, per the Daily Mail, 'Families okay? See you enough? Some of them might not want to see you that much. It's a mixed bag sometimes.' The comment was quickly interpreted as a clear dig at his brother Harry, who recently revealed in a BBC interview that he would 'love reconciliation' with his family. 'Life is precious,' the Duke of Sussex said. 'I don't now how much longer my father has. He won't speak to me because of this security stuff. But it would be nice to reconcile.' In his memoir Spare, Harry detailed their strained relationship, alleging his brother physically assaulted him, among other shocking revelations. In the book, Harry calls William both his "beloved brother" and his "archnemesis." He also writes that their father King Charles reportedly tried to mediate between his sons, telling them at Prince Philip's funeral, 'Please, boys, don't make my final years a misery.' The last time Prince William and Prince Harry publicly interacted was in September 2022 shortly after Queen Elizabeth's death, when the brothers—along with their wives Kate Middleton and Meghan Markle—reunited to view tributes to the late queen outside Windsor Castle. You Might Also Like 12 Weekend Getaway Spas For Every Type of Occasion 13 Beauty Tools to Up Your At-Home Facial Game

French Open: Carlos Alcaraz reaches final after Lorenzo Musetti retires with injury in fourth set
French Open: Carlos Alcaraz reaches final after Lorenzo Musetti retires with injury in fourth set

Associated Press

timean hour ago

  • Associated Press

French Open: Carlos Alcaraz reaches final after Lorenzo Musetti retires with injury in fourth set

PARIS (AP) — Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz reached the French Open final on Friday after Lorenzo Musetti retired from their semifinal early in the fourth set. Alcaraz was leading 4-6, 7-6 (3), 6-0, 2-0 when the eighth-seeded Italian had to stop playing on Court Philippe-Chatrier. Musetti had treatment on the inside of his left thigh after the end of the third set. Alcaraz, who is seeded second, goes for his second French Open title and fifth major overall against either top-ranked Jannik Sinner or 24-time Grand Slam winner Novak Djokovic in the final. They were playing their semifinal later Friday. ___ AP tennis:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store