Wrexham FC player James McClean stood away from his teammates as they observed a minute’s silence ahead of Remembrance Sunday.
The 35-year-old, originally from Derry, Northern Ireland, has refused to take part in Remembrance commemorations ever since he moved to England to play for Sunderland in 2011.
It is a tradition for footballers to wear shirts or armbands emblazoned with Remembrance poppies for games throughout Remembrance weekend.
On Saturday at Wrexham’s League One home game against Mansfield Town at the Racecourse Ground, both teams stood for a minute’s silence before kick-off – but McClean stood deliberately separate.
Previously, McClean has said he refuses to observe traditions due to the British Army’s role in The Troubles.
He grew up on Derry’s Creggan estate, where six of the people killed on Bloody Sunday in 1972, were from.
The midfielder says he would wear the poppy if it was solely intended to remember servicemen and women who died in the world wars – as this includes Irish people. The British Legion implores people to remember British personnel lost in all conflicts for Remembrance.
McClean has received both condemnation and praise for his stance over the years.
Fined by ex-club for balaclava tweet
In 2020, he was fined by his former club Stoke City after he posted a picture of himself wearing a balaclava alongside two children, who he claimed he was giving a “history lesson”.
The post, which he later deleted, was captioned: “Today’s School lesson – History.”
He was fined two weeks’ wages by the club, which condemned the picture as “inappropriate”.
He later said: “I never wanted to cause any offence but I now realise that I did so and for that I apologise unreservedly. I have spoken to the club and will be deleting my Instagram account.”
Reputational risk no longer worth it for Qatar Qatar had taken a lot of heat for its association with Hamas but stuck it out in the hope it could help broker a ceasefire deal with Israel. Doha was regularly the venue for talks and Qatar’s leaders invested considerable time trying to bring Israel and Hamas to an agreement. Although some accused Qatar of harbouring terrorists, it suited the US, and […]
Post comments (0)