Scudamore position under pressure

18 May 2014 16:31

Richard Scudamore's position as chief executive of the Premier League remains under acute pressure as the league's audit and remuneration committee prepares to meet on Monday.

Scudamore has been under fire for the past week following the publication of sexist emails sent from his Premier League account.

The Premier League was on Sunday forced to defend its working environment after the woman who blew the whistle on Scudamore said she was "humiliated, belittled and disgusted" when reading the messages.

Rani Abraham, who worked as a temporary personal assistant for Scudamore, told the Sunday Mirror: "This is not the sort of thing that goes on in offices these days."

A Premier League statement said: "We do not recognise this characterisation of the working environment at the Premier League, nor do we believe that it can be supported by the facts.

"The chief executive has already apologised for any offence caused and a proper review of all the evidence is now under way within the Premier League's established and rigorous procedures.

"This process is not yet concluded and it is therefore not possible to offer comments in detail at this stage. However, we will make a further statement in due course.

"The Premier League continues to be fully committed to treating all staff fairly and on merit, regardless of gender."

The emails referred to women in derogatory terms, contained sexual innuendos, and made jokes about "female irrationality".

The Football Association's independent board member Heather Rabbatts, who will chair a meeting of its inclusion advisory board to discuss the case on Tuesday, has also issued a statement saying Scudamore should consider his position in light of "growing evidence of a closed culture of sexism" at the Premier League.

Abraham said she felt she had a duty to speak out about the contents of emails between her boss and his lawyer friend.

"Mr Scudamore has a huge amount of influence and is paid a vast sum of money and has behaved wrongly," she said.

"Having witnessed that I felt I had a duty to speak out. If I didn't then I'd somehow be condoning his behaviour - just like the other people who saw those messages.

"Despite what some people have said since the Sunday Mirror printed the story last week, this is not the sort of thing that goes on in offices these days.

"And for those people who've attacked me for saying they were just 'jokes' I wonder how they would feel if their wife or girlfriend or daughter had to read messages like that.

"And how would they feel if those messages were written about their wife or girlfriend or daughter?"

Since the story broke a week ago, a number of England women internationals have expressed their outrage at the emails, and FA chairman Greg Dyke called them "totally inappropriate".

Moya Dodd, a former player and now vice-president of the Asian Football Confederation, told Five Live's Sportsweek programme the emails were part of a wider problem in football.

"I was surprised and disappointed to hear of the existence of those emails and that disappointment is shared by many women in the football world," she said.

"If we spent our energy getting outraged every time somebody sent a sexist email we'd all be exhausted.

"There is a level of outrage, but also a level of resignation that this can exist unchallenged in the world.

"It's something that inhibits the development of women in football.

"We've heard of casual racism and I think there's a lot of casual sexism in the game."

Sponsor Barclays has expressed also its disappointment to the league, which has raised the stakes ahead of Monday's meeting of the league's audit and remuneration committee, chaired by Chelsea chairman Bruce Buck.

Buck is a friend and shooting partner of Scudamore's, but the committee only has the power to make a recommendation and consists of four members, the others being Manchester United director David Gill, Stoke chairman Peter Coates and Premier League referees' chairman John Williams.

Source: PA