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Gary Neville ashamed he failed to support England’s black players following racist abuse in Spain

GARY NEVILLE is still haunted over his failure to back England’s black players following their disgusting racist abuse in Spain.

And the former England and Manchester United star believes Premier League stars should now walk off the pitch if they are targeted.

Gary Neville is still haunted over his failure to back England’s black players following their disgusting racist abuse in Spain

Sky Sports pundit Neville admits he is ashamed over his failure to act when England’s stars, including Ashley Cole, were targeted by racists throughout a friendly away in Madrid in 2004.

Neville said: “I’ve been quite vocal on Sky Sports over the last 12 to 18 months around racism and just felt very uncomfortable with, to be fair, my lack of action when I think that I sat next to Ashley Cole in that dressing room in Spain all those years ago.

“I came off the pitch at the end of the game, got in the shower, didn’t say a word to him, went and did my interviews after the game, probably ignored or semi answered the question on racism, walked onto the bus, went back home and didn’t think.

“I just accepted it almost. It is appalling.

“The reality is we put racial abuse in the same category as the abuse we would receive for playing for Manchester United for England. We just put it down as abuse. We didn’t think, we just got on with it.

“It’s appalling and I’m ashamed of the fact for someone who was on the PFA management committee and fought for players’ rights at nearly every level, I didn’t fight hard enough on this.

“I didn’t demonstrate anything and it’s not good enough. It’s not me. Now ultimately it has to change, it is everyone in this country.”

Asked if players should now walk off the pitch if they are racially abused, the former right-back said: “Yes. I genuinely think now there wouldn’t be one single person in this country who would disagree with the action of walking off the pitch if a player was being racially abused.

“Not one single person would think it wasn’t the right thing to do.

“I know there are areas of complexity and challenge, which is that you could get fans from other clubs wrecking games.

“Forget that. Let’s trust people to start with and not imagine the abnormalities or abuse of the system that may exist.

“Gareth Southgate was on the Football Show the other day and was explaining the FIFA or UEFA protocols he had to go through. It felt like an instruction manual. There shouldn’t be an instruction manual on how to deal with racism.

“Ultimately, it’s quite simple – it is unacceptable. We are not going to accept it and we are not going to stand for it when we play football. I never thought of this when I was in that Bernabeu stadium, I didn’t.”

Neville believes the latest anti-racism protests are making a difference – with Sky Sports also pledging £30million to fight discrimination.

He said: “What we’ve seen in the last few weeks, the protests in the last weekends, have been enlightening.

“I felt warm, I felt tingly a little bit about watching it.

“The passion, the feeling, the intensity of it. I felt that ultimately it feels like something a bit different.”

Neville admits he is ashamed over his failure to act when England’s stars were targeted by racists throughout a friendly away in Madrid in 2004