
Reporter of time
Gary Linker has said he believes the BBC wants to leave the game because he was negotiating a new deal last year.
The presenter and the BBC jointly announced in November that he would resign from the Flag Football Program, although he is still hosting the World Cup and the FA Cup.
Asked by Amol Rajani by the BBC why he was choosing him to leave, he said, “Well, they might want to leave. He felt like that.
The BBC did not comment on the proposal, but it was announced when Linker was announced, describing the company’s sporting director as a “without presenter.
But the BBC said in the same statement that the equivalent of the day “is constantly growing to change vision habits.
Three new presenters – Kelly Kats, Mark Chapman and Gabi Logan – were announced in January.

“It’s time. I’ve done that for a long time, it’s bright,” Linker told Rajan.
But he asked why he wanted to leave when the rating was still high and it was a job he had still enjoyed.
“I always wanted another contract, and I was an imm-ng and imaing about whether to do more three years or not,” Linker said.
But, he continued, and the subject of several hours was complicated by the cycle of broadcasting for the games.
“In the end, I think there was a feeling that, because it was a new stage of rights, it was an opportunity to change the program,” he said.
“I think they liked that I didn’t play for another year so that they could bring new people. So it’s a little unusual for me to play the FA Cup and the World Cup, but if I’m honest, it’s a scenario that fits me completely.
Linker said he was happy that football podcasts were stored by the BBC Sound as part of a contract with the company.
BBC suspension
Linker also criticized the statements he made on social media in March 2023, criticizing the then government immigration policy.
The comments led to the BBC being stopped, prompting other sports presenters to descend the tools in solidarity, something Linker said he felt “moved.
Linker said he hadn’t regretted his attitude, but that he wouldn’t repeat it because of the “halent” that has happened to the BBC.
“I don’t regret saying it openly, because I was right – what I said was that it was accurate – so it didn’t mean that at all.
“Do I, in the waste, do that again? No, I don’t do it because of all the absurd things they had come with… It was a ridiculous reaction that was just an answer to someone who was very rude.
“But I didn’t do that again because of all the knives he had followed, and I loved the BBC, and I didn’t like the damage to the BBC… But I regret it and I think it’s wrong to do it?
The line, which the Linker called the government’s asylum policy is “extremely cruel,” said a video that claims to have used a language that “is “not different from what Germany used in the 1930s.
At that time, Interior Secretary Suella Braverman, who appeared in the video, called the criticism “attacks” and “steadle”, while Downing Street said “not liquid.
Post Linker cited the debate about the BBC’s impartial instructions on social media and how to use it for the presenters.
While employees working in the current news and current affairs are expected to remain neutral in social platforms, there have been questions about how long the laws have been extended to the BBC figures in other areas such as entertainment and sports.

Linker pointed out that the previous groups were “for people in the news and current affairs.
He admitted that they had changed later. “But it has left people like me who have always expressed their honest views about things, then suddenly changed and you have to go, ‘Oh, now I have to be neutral’. It has no meaning.
“I have always been strong on humanitarian issues and I will always be me,” he said.
“After his tweets, they were widely moved because there was never an issue until, suddenly, this point,” Linker said.
In 2023, the BBC updates its instructions on social media after a review of the fall that fell on Linker’s tweets.
The company said the presenters of the main programs, such as the Equality of the Day, “they carry special responsibility to respect the BBC’s neutrality, because of their BBC’s profile,” the company said.
“Yes, of course, I understand that, but does it make mistakes I’ve made? I don’t think. Do I do it if I know what’s going on?
Gaza Dok
Linker recently revised the headlines again when he was signed with 500 high-level numbers, and then led the BBC to ask for a documentary about Gaza for the iPlayer.
The documentary, called Gaza: How to escape in a war zone, was taken in February at Streming, after it was revealed that his 13-year-old narrator was the son of a Hamas official.
“I think you’re allowing people to think about themselves. We are big. We are allowed to see such things. It moves unbelievable,” Linker told Rajan.
“Although the 13-year-old was restored to the program, the script was not written by children, but was written by those who produced the show,” he said.
“I think the BBC is just surrendering to lobbying that they get a lot,” he said.
After the concerns were raised, the BBC shot down the program while conducting more research. The company is currently being investigated by the company.
The BBC said it had identified serious shortcomings in making the documentary. The BBC says the mistakes are “important and harmful.
gambling in sports

In the extensive interview broadcast on Tuesday, Linker also spoke about the life of football, his son’s leukemia war as an infant, and his views on gambling in sports.
Linker said the football industry should think about its responsibility when there is talk of extorting money from gambling companies.
“I know people (who) becomes addiction and can completely destroy their lives,” he said.
“There is talk of directing the logo in the shirts, but you see it everywhere on the boards around the earth.
“I think football needs a long and difficult look at itself, I really do it.
Above the performance of the presenter, Linker is also the founder of the podcasts of the goalkeeper, which makes it successful.
“I think I’m going there now,” the 64-year-old said.
“I think I’m more interested in the world of podcasts, because it’s a very nice job and it’s just that it’s so incredible.
Amol Rajan interviews: Gary Linker On the BBC iPlayer on 06:00 It will be broadcast second on Tuesday on the BBC at 19:00 on Tuesday.