KEMBAR78
Ian Holloway sheds light on feud with 'disrespectful' Gary Lineker - 'He was horrible to me' - The Mirror


Skip to main content
Daily Mirror

Ian Holloway sheds light on feud with 'disrespectful' Gary Lineker - 'He was horrible to me'

Ian Holloway has enjoyed a superb management career over nearly 30 years and the former Blackpool boss has now detailed a long-running feud with Match of the Day host Gary Lineker

Barely an inch below his right eye, Ian Holloway was sporting the scar from surgery to remove a cancerous spot. But in a surprising volley from the pulpit, it would appear Match of the Day anchor Gary Lineker has got under Ollie’s skin - and the wound hasn’t healed.


Lineker is nearing the end of his 26-year stint as sultan of a Saturday night institution, but Holloway is convinced the former England captain has never forgiven him for presiding over his beloved Leicester City’s relegation to the third tier back in 2008.


And in his new scattergun memoir, which sprays machine-gun fire across a raft of topics from football to ghosts, UFOs and dog poo, the Swindon Town manager lets rip in all directions.


“Here’s a cat among the pigeons. Gary’s not a nice man in my experience and maybe it was because of my time at Leicester,” says Holloway. "All I know is he was horrible to me and, in my opinion, dismissive and disrespectful.

“While I was at Blackpool, I was invited on Match of the Day but it was obvious Lineker didn’t want me there. He didn’t speak to me once and didn’t even say hello.

READ MORE: Arsenal ready to offer Viktor Gyokeres monster contract as transfer details emergeREAD MORE: Real Madrid star to spark Premier League transfer battle due to Jude Bellingham issue

“At the end, I went over and shook his hand and said, ‘Hello - maybe you don’t want to speak to me because of my time at Leicester, but hello Gary, how are you?’ He said, ‘Oh, oh, Ian, it wasn’t like that.’ I said, ‘Yes you were, mate. I knew you were.’


"A few years later I saw Alan Shearer at Wembley and he said, ‘I loved that time when you forced Gary to shake your hand.’ So he could see it, too.”

Holloway insists TV coverage of football demonises referees and in his book he is surprisingly supportive of VAR in principle where most of us would happily throw the baby out with the bathwater.


Again, Lineker is in his firing line. Holding court at the County Ground, he says: “Referees get one split-second to make a decision - only one look at it - but all you hear is people saying how s*** they were from watching Match of the Day.

“I’m sorry, but Gary Lineker and his little crew are making them look even more s*** because they can look at every incident from every angle. If referees had access to all the camera angles that Lineker and his friends have in a studio, they might get more decisions right.

“Nobody has any faith in referees because everyone has watched Match of the Day and Lineker and his pundits would slaughter every ref every Saturday night.


“Do you remember Brian Clough tearing a strip off John Motson on Football Focus and telling him Jimmy Hill (Lineker’s predecessor as Match of the Day anchor) and the BBC experts were lecturing us too much instead of showing actual football? And here we are, 40 years later, doing exactly the same thing.”

Holloway, now a proud member of English football’s 1,000-game club as a manager, also takes Arsenal to task for failing to heed Manchester City striker Erling Haaland ’s “stay humble” message.


He was deeply unimpressed by teenager Myles Lewis-Skelly mimicking the Norwegian titan’s yoga meditation goal celebration.

“I doubt if Erling had any clue the reaction his advice would get after City’s 2-2 draw with Arsenal in the 2024/25 season,” said Ollie. "To say it gave Arsenal the hump is an understatement, but what I didn’t like was the way Arsenal behaved in the return match at the Emirates.


“Why was Lewis-Skelly taking the mickey by copying Haaland’s goal celebration? Until you’ve won something, son, I’d advise you just get on with playing football because I wouldn’t have been happy if I was his manager.

“And what is Gabriel doing in Haaland’s face after they scored the first goal? The referee should have booked Gabriel for ungentlemanly conduct.

“When I was growing up, senior pros would never have allowed that Lewis-Skelly celebration to happen because if you did, you’d better be able to back it up with a few winner’s medals in your locker first.


“I think I’m right in saying Lewis-Skelly - who is a fantastic prospect, no argument - has won nothing yet.”

Respect is a key pillar of Holloway’s culture. He was horrified when a posse of his gloating Swindon players surrounded crestfallen Bradford defender Jack Shepherd after the 10-man Bantams defender’s stoppage-time own goal handed the Robins a dramatic 5-4 win last month.


But at 62, he is enjoying a new lease of life in Wiltshire after turning his latest club into a ministry of fun and leading Swindon from rock-bottom of the Football League to a top-half finish.

“This place was feeling a little bit sorry for itself, but we’ve climbed the table and we’ve had a laugh doing it,” he said.

“Football is about enjoyment so we’ve had some fun and I can’t thank the players enough. I’ve only been here six months but we found some consistency and now they’ve extended my contract another three years - happy days.”

Article continues below

Ian Holloway: The (mostly) Football World According to Ollie (Reach Sport, £12.99 hardback) is on sale now.

Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.

Follow Daily Mirror:



reach logo

At Reach and across our entities we and our partners use information collected through cookies and other identifiers from your device to improve experience on our site, analyse how it is used and to show personalised advertising. You can opt out of the sale or sharing of your data, at any time clicking the "Do Not Sell or Share my Data" button at the bottom of the webpage. Please note that your preferences are browser specific. Use of our website and any of our services represents your acceptance of the use of cookies and consent to the practices described in our Privacy Notice and Terms and Conditions.