Mark Hughes Uncertainty leaves managers guilty by association

30 September 2016 17:53

Stoke manager Mark Hughes insists the individuals at the centre of the Daily Telegraph's corruption investigation must be named in order to avoid all football bosses being "guilty by association".

The newspaper has published several allegations over the last week, including claims that 10 unnamed managers have taken so-called 'bungs' in transfer deals.

Sam Allardyce saw his contract as England boss terminated by mutual consent on Tuesday after he was secretly filmed making a series of controversial comments.

Former Barnsley assistant Tommy Wright was then sacked by the Tykes on Thursday after the newspaper alleged he took a £5,000 payment from undercover reporters posing as representatives of fake investors from the Far East.

QPR manager Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink, Leeds owner Massimo Cellino and Southampton assistant Eric Black are among others to have been filmed by undercover reporters as part of the 10-month investigation. All those named so far by the newspaper deny any wrongdoing.

Stoke boss Hughes has watched on as the allegations have been published and says the "debate" over who the unnamed managers are should be brought to an end.

Asked if football is rotten, he said: "Clearly there's a worry that that's the perception that will be taken by a lot of people.

"I think if there is evidence that certain individuals have been involved in things they shouldn't have been, then I think it's important those guys are named because, if they're not, then everybody is guilty by association just by virtue of being a manager or a coach or involved in football.

"If there is any wrongdoing, then clearly those people have to be named and then everybody else is seen in the correct light. At the moment there's a lot of debate on who's involved, who isn't, so that needs to be clarified."

Hughes - who has managed QPR, Fulham, Manchester City, Blackburn and Wales in the past - claims he has never been offered a 'bung', an assertion which was echoed by Sunderland boss David Moyes.

Moyes said: "I can only say in my time, I have not come across it, I have not."

In the wake of recent allegations surrounding transfers, and third-party ownership in particular, Moyes has called for greater transparency when it comes to fees.

Moyes added: "There is a lot going on out there, there are big, big sums of money being talked about for transfers and I think it might be better that the public get to see that because at the moment, it sounds as if there is a distrust of the managers or the coaches.

"I think it's about time that, if we are disclosing things which are happening just now, I think it would be good to have transparency with the transfers as well.

"What I mean by that is, you sign a player, let's get the transfer fee - which you get - let's get what the club has had to pay to the agent, not at the end of the year through the FA in a big list, because then I think there might be a few gasps from the supporters and a few gasps from the media."

West Brom boss Tony Pulis says he has been left "disappointed" by the revelations but also expressed sympathy for Allardyce.

Pulis said: "It's happened and the sad thing for me is, on the football front, Sam has worked all his life to get the job and it's gone.

"I think everything should go to the governing bodies and they should assess and take appropriate action.

"He's worked all his life for 30 years, his ambition was to become eventually England manager. He's got the job and he's lost it.

"All the rest of it that surrounds it, that we've been reading about and seeing, it's now time for the FA and governing bodies to take that information, analyse and assess it and then act on what they think is right and wrong.

"I'm a football person and let's get back to talking football and leave all that stuff to the governing bodies. Just on the football front, me personally, I'm very disappointed."

Source: PA