How Premier League Captains Set up NHS Initiative
The Premier
League players' initiative supporting the NHS was "not a
knee-jerk reaction" to Health Secretary Matt Hancock talking about their
wages, says Bournemouth captain Simon Francis.
Francis says
Liverpool skipper Jordan Henderson pitched the idea to his fellow Premier
League captains.
Donations to
the initiative will be anonymous and will depend on what clubs are
"comfortable with donating".
"It's
the power of everyone coming together," Francis, 35, told BBC Sport.
The
initiative - named #PlayersTogether - has been set up to "help those
fighting for us on the NHS frontline" amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Francis said
top-flight club captains had discussed the idea in group discussions on
Whatsapp and Zoom.
"Jordan
took the initiative to pitch the idea to the rest of the lads and it was a
no-brainer for us," the defender told BBC sports news correspondent
Natalie Pirks.
"It
shows so much support within the football community to show we are one.
"We
don't know when that will get up and running, so in the meantime it's a great
chance for players to show how much the NHS means to us - a cause that is close
to a lot of players' hearts."
Each club
will organise their own donations, which will be distributed across the
country, though the level of contributions has not been announced.
"It'll
come down to talks with everybody within their own clubs - what they're
comfortable with donating," Francis said.
"There's
a lot of players that play overseas and have family overseas and they may
choose to donate back to where their families are from, which is understandable
and absolutely fine.
"The
talks are due to take place with each club, Jordan has the fund set up, and
then hopefully it'll be distributed across the country."
Francis said
it was "important" that donations are anonymous, adding: "It's
not about who's put in more. We are not competing with the top teams, it's
about helping first and foremost. We don't need it coming out in the press who
has done what."
Meanwhile,
Hancock praised the "big-hearted" gesture when it was announced on
social media on Wednesday evening.
He had
previously said footballers should "do their part and take a pay
cut", which Francis described as "disappointing."
"I
don't want it to seem like it was a knee-jerk reaction to what has been said in
the media - it wasn't that at all," Francis said.
"I
spoke to Jordan in the morning of the day Matt Hancock came out and made his
comments, so it was bad timing.
"With
the problems we have across the country, for him to pick out footballers was
disappointing."
More than
150 top-flight players posted a joint statement on social media on Wednesday
confirming they were collaborating on a voluntary initiative, "separate to
any other league and club conversation".
Premier
League clubs previously said they would ask players to take a 30% pay cut in
order to protect jobs,
However, the
Professional Footballers' Association said that would hit tax contributions to
the NHS.
On Thursday,
Southampton became the first Premier League club to announce their players
will defer part of their salaries.
Francis said
the Premier League's request was "hasty" and said discussions at
Bournemouth over wage deferrals were "positive."
Last
week, Francis' manager Eddie Howe was the first Premier League boss
to take a voluntary pay cut, with Brighton's Graham Potter following suit.
West Ham
midfielder Robert Snodgrass, who is part of the initiative, tweeted that
Hancock should "do your homework on what we do and who we are as
people".
He wrote: "It's
not about us, it's about the real heroes... the NHS."
Former Stoke
and Burnley striker Jonathan Walters praised the players for establishing their
own initiative.
"They
do get paid a large wage I'm not here defending that but as soon as you cut
that wage, it's going to affect the money that's going into the tax,"
Walters told BBC Radio 5 Live Breakfast.
"This
initiative is donating directly to the charities that they want the money to go
to.
"It's
not as if they're taking a cut and it's going back to the owners."
Former
England goalkeeper Rob Green said it was a "brilliant" idea.
"Shock,
horror - footballers are nice people and do have the best interests of the
community at heart," Green joked on BBC Radio 5 Live.
"I
think it's brilliant that they've done something that works on an individual
basis and they're giving what they can give straight to the NHS."
Manchester
United captain Harry Maguire said it had been "heart-warming" to see
the nation come together "to show their appreciation to the NHS and other
critical workers".
FROM .bbc.com/sport/football
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