MX23RW : Friday, September 10 05:30:20| >> :120:23438:23438:

Paul Ince wants social media companies to do more to stop racist abuse

Paul Ince wants social media companies to do more to stop racist abuse
© Reuters
Paul Ince was inducted into the National Football Museum's Hall of Fame on Tuesday.

Paul Ince has urged social media platforms to do more to tackle racist abuse online and called on football's governing bodies to impose stronger punishments to those found guilty.

Ince, the first black man to captain England, was inducted into the National Football Museum's Hall of Fame on Tuesday, a reflection not only of 'the Guvnor's' superb career on the pitch but also his impact off it in the ongoing fight against discrimination.

And though the 53-year-old is certain the game is in a much better place than it was during his own playing career, Ince wants more to be done as players continue to face abuse online and elsewhere.

Twitter and Facebook have made commitments to remove racist abuse as it appears on their platforms, but Ince wants the companies to look at how changing technology could help them take a more proactive stance.

"Twitter, Facebook, Instagram...these big companies have to do something," Ince told the PA news agency.

"Players should be able to go on social media and not see it – social media is massive to the players now. They shouldn't have to experience abuse on social media. These platforms should have an algorithm that gets rid of it. Technology is changing all the time.

"We're not going to stamp it out 100 per cent, let's not be stupid, because it's not just a football thing, it's a social thing, but we can try and improve it for then next generation...

"There's always going to be some idiot who shouts something, some idiot who's had a few drinks, you can't stop that but you can try to set a deterrent.

"You see these situations where some fan shouted this or that and got a two-year ban. That's not enough. They need a life ban. You need a deterrent that big."

Eng/Italy Ince injury
Ince was the first black man to captain England (Adam Butler/PA)

Ince suffered racist abuse throughout a career which began at West Ham and took him to Manchester United, Inter Milan, Liverpool, Middlesbrough and Wolves before later spells with Swindon and Macclesfield.

Though the issue of abuse has risen in prominence in recent times, Ince said the situation is vastly different now to his own day, with players' willingness to speak out a positive sign.

"Racism has been part of the game for a long time," he said. "Viv (Anderson), John Barnes, Les (Ferdinand), (Ian) Wrighty, we've all got a story, we've all had to experience the worst from fans with bananas and coins and being called names.

"That sort of thing doesn't happen now so we've come a long way...I think we got to the stage where we thought we'd dealt with it and then all of a sudden it started to rear its ugly head again.

"I think because we see a lot of it and we report it we think it's getting worse but if you look back at our day it's not getting any worse."

Soccer – Coca Cola League Cup – final – Manchester United v Aston Villa – Wembley Stadium
Ince won two league titles and two FA Cups with Manchester United (PA)

Ince captained England seven times, doing so for the first time during a friendly tour of the United States in 1993.

He admitted he did not realise the impact of that moment at the time, but could reflect on his achievements on and off the pitch as former team-mate Anderson – the first black man to play for England – inducted him into the Hall of Fame on Tuesday.

"As a kid you dream about winning the FA Cup and league titles and all those medals are a measure of how you've done in your career," he said. "But to be in the Hall of Fame is history. People might forget which medals you won but being in the Hall of Fame, it's forever.

"I get a bit embarrassed when things like this happen but I look back now at my journey to get here and all the people I played with and for.

"People like John Lyall, Sir Alex Ferguson, Glenn Hoddle, Terry Venables, Bryan Robson – I could go on and on, there are so many influential people, but the biggest influence has been my wife Claire."

ID:461829:1false2false3false:QQ:: from db desktop :LenBod:collect8327:

Click here for more stories about Paul Ince

Click here for more stories about Manchester United

Collect / Create New Data
Share this article now:
Did you know...?
Leeds United's Patrick Bamford celebrates scoring their first goal on August 29, 2021
Read Next:
Patrick Bamford never stopped believing he would be an England international
>
Sports Mole Logo
Enter your email address to subscribe to Sports Mole's free match previews newsletter! Updates are sent twice a week.
Read more about Paul Ince Football

rhs 2.0
Todays Game Header Right
Tables
TeamPWDLFAGDPTS
1Tottenham HotspurSpurs33003039
2West Ham UnitedWest Ham321010557
3Manchester UnitedMan Utd32107257
4Chelsea32106157
5Liverpool32106157
6Everton32107347
7Manchester CityMan City320110196
8Brighton & Hove AlbionBrighton32014316
9Leicester CityLeicester320145-16
10Brentford31203125
11Aston Villa31115414
12Watford310235-23
13Southampton302146-22
14Crystal Palace302125-32
15Leeds UnitedLeeds302148-42
16Burnley301225-31
17Newcastle UnitedNewcastle301248-41
18Wolverhampton WanderersWolves300303-30
19Norwich CityNorwich3003110-90
20Arsenal300309-90
Olympic medal table header
CountryGold medalSilver MedalBronze MedalT
ChinaChina966051207
Great BritainGreat Britain413845124
United StatesUnited States373631104
Olympics flagParalympic Athletes from Russia363349118
NetherlandsNetherlands25171759

Subscribe to our Newsletter


Transfer Talk Daily
Match previews - twice weekly
Morning Briefing (7am UTC)
Ultra close-up image of Kevin De Bruyne [NOT FOR USE IN ARTICLES]Get the latest transfer news, match previews and news direct to your inbox!