Gordon Taylor PFA exit backed by former chairman Clarke Carlisle
The Professional Footballers Association is not fit for purpose under Gordon Taylor and MUST be reformed to reflect the needs of modern footballers, according to Clarke Carlisle.The former PFA chairman, who has battled with depression and mental health issues since his retirement as a player, told talkSPORT the unions resources are not directed to modern issues, and it is still being run by people of the previous era in the sport.It has been confirmed that Taylor will step down from his role as PFA chief executive, a position he has held for 38 years, after an independent review into the union has been completed.Gordon Taylor pictured outside the PFA’s Manchester offices in 19912
Gordon Taylor pictured outside the PFA’s Manchester offices in 1991
The 74-year-old announced in November 2018 there would be a review into the organisation following criticism, including from current chairman Ben Purkiss, over his running of the union, where its funding goes and his reported 2.2million salary.A PFA statement on Wednesday explained “a formal independent recruitment process will start for a new CEO of the PFA” after that review is concluded.Carlisle joined talkSPORT ahead of the announcement on Wednesday, and he said the time is right to finally make a change and reform the PFA for the modern age of football.The guys who run the PFA are still of the previous era, he told talkSPORT host Jim White.Gordon Taylor has done a wonderful job that hes been recompensed for fantastically. But the union itself in the modern era needs to reflect transparency, the organisational structure has to be fit for purpose and all of its resources need to go into the needs of its members and not the needs of the community.You talk about what the PFA does in the modern era, I believe that its way off the mark. Its nowhere near being fit for purpose.Where it puts the majority of its funds does not commensurate with where the need is for the funds.Yes they did put research into head injuries, but what they put in was less than eight per cent of the chief execs salary. That cant be right!The Mental health support systems theyve put in, is it commensurate with the need? I can tell you from working at the forefront of it that its nowhere near fit for purpose.Former Burnley and QPR defender Clarke Carlisle was PFA chairman from 2010 – 20132
Former Burnley and QPR defender Clarke Carlisle was PFA chairman from 2010 – 2013
The BAME issue, talking about equality, anti-discrimination and inclusion, yes they were there at the inception of Kick It Out, but lets talk about were the issue is NOW and what the union does NOW, and its nowhere near where it should be for an organisation of such resources.Representation internally has been fantastic with Garth Crooks, Bobby Barnes, Chris Powell, Brendon Batson but is that exactly what football news and what the players need? No!Were talking about issues going on within academies where players feel like theyre being bullied and are not being supported, so is the focus and are the targets there? No they are not, and they need to be.Listen back to Clarke Carlisle and his views on the PFA above


Gordon Taylor will not be standing by the door ready to leave if he is forced out of his job as chief executive of the PFA, according to one of his former colleagues. Taylor has come under threat this week after 37 years at the top of the footballers' union with chairman Ben Purkiss calling for an independent review into how the organisation is
Clarke Carlisle calls for Gordon Taylor to quit PFA despite


GORDON TAYLOR'S biggest PFA ally has called for him to go. Ex-chairman Clarke Carlisle accused Taylor of a lack of "transparent governance" — despite admitting he would not be alive without the union's help.
Clarke Carlisle's struggle may help others seek treatment


Gordon Taylor PFA exit backed by former chairman Clarke Carlisle. Former Burnley and QPR defender Clarke Carlisle was PFA chairman from 2010 - 2013 "The BAME issue, talking about equality
~ Gordon Taylor PFA exit backed by former chairman Clarke


Gordon Taylor's resignation was today welcomed by former PFA chairman Clarke Carlisle, who worked alongside the chief executive for a number of years. Taylor has been in his role for nearly 40 years but confirmed at today's annual general meeting that he would be stepping down.
Gordon Taylor will never step aside as PFA boss, claims


Clarke Carlisle calls for Gordon Taylor to quit PFA despite admitting he'd be dead without his help Ex-chairman accused under-fire Taylor of a lack of "transparent governance" and is now backing
Clarke Carlisle calls for Gordon Taylor to quit PFA despite

Gordon Taylor PFA exit backed by former chairman Clarke Carlisle


Gordon Taylor PFA exit backed by former chairman Clarke Carlisle admin March 27, 2019 The Professional Footballers' Association is 'not fit for purpose' under Gordon Taylor and MUST be reformed to reflect the needs of modern footballers, according to…
Gordon Taylor 'had to go' to allow PFA to modernise - Clarke


GORDON TAYLOR'S biggest PFA ally has called for him to go. Ex-chairman Clarke Carlisle accused Taylor of a lack of "transparent governance" — despite admitting he would not be alive
Clarke Carlisle calls for Gordon Taylor to quit PFA despite


Clarke James Carlisle (born 14 October 1979) is an English former professional footballer who played as a defender and was chairman of the Professional Footballers' Association. Born in Preston, he began playing football at a young age, taking inspiration from his father who played semi-professionally.


Feb 05, 2015 · The PFA's Gordon Taylor hopes publicity surrounding Clarke Carlisle's renewed struggle with depression will persuade troubled footballers to seek help Clarke Carlisle, the PFA chairman
Clarke Carlisle - Wikipedia


Gordon Taylor PFA exit backed by former chairman Clarke Carlisle Written by: fpnews Posted on: March 28, 2019 The Professional Footballers' Association is 'not fit for purpose' under Gordon Taylor and MUST be reformed to reflect the needs of modern footballers, according to Clarke Carlisle.
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