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The National (Scotland)
The National (Scotland)
Sport
Jamie Gardner

LMA want to end recruitment ‘bias’ amid lack of managerial diversity

The League Managers’ Association has called for an end to the “bias” in recruitment which it believes is fostering a lack of diversity among bosses in the English game.

There are currently just two black managers out of the 92 clubs in the top four tiers of English football – Nuno Espirito Santo at Nottingham Forest and Darren Moore at Port Vale in League Two.

LMA chief executive Richard Bevan insists clubs and governing bodies have to act quickly.

“We continue to advocate for enhanced compulsory recruitment and employment regulations and practices, removing the barriers of informality in the game’s employment market that act to limit the career progression of individuals from under-represented groups,” he said.

“It is important the game strives to remove bias from, and increase transparency in, recruitment. Only by doing so can access to employment be a truly level playing field.”

The LMA is partnering with Sheffield Hallam University to get an in-depth understanding of the career experience of coaches from under-represented groups.

Assisting coaches from diverse backgrounds to obtain UEFA qualifications is vital, Bevan said, describing them as “the mandatory, master key to the door of employment”.


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Bevan was speaking at the launch of a new campaign supported by the LMA, where managers are working to raise awareness during World Alzheimer’s Month by wearing Alzheimer’s Society badges.

Interim England manager Lee Carsley will kick things off when his side face the Republic of Ireland in Dublin on Saturday evening, before other managers across the men’s and women’s game also show their support for the campaign throughout September.

The campaign aims to help fans learn the signs and symptoms of dementia.

Former Brighton and Chelsea boss Graham Potter, whose mum had dementia, is supporting the campaign and said: “I know first-hand what a difficult and cruel condition it is and why the work of charities like Alzheimer’s Society is so vital.

“Dementia impacts so many people in different ways – it’s a crisis that can’t be ignored, but many people still don’t know much about the signs and symptoms

“Football has the power to educate and empower a massive audience, so I’m very pleased to see the sport come together for an issue close to my heart to help fans learn what to look out for.”

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