The FA has made a mess of the John Terry case | Mark Perryman

Taking away John Terry’s armband but letting his trial be delayed isn’t the way to show that racist abuse is a serious charge

The FA’s decision that John Terry should no longer be England captain is the right one, but for the wrong reasons.

Any suggestion that he might be distracted from the job at hand, leading England at Euro 2012, simply doesn’t add up. Terry is captaining Chelsea week in, week out, with no obvious impact on his ability to put in the crunching tackles and well-aimed headers, plus the gutsy leadership on the pitch he is rightly renowned for. Likewise, if it is suggested his England captaincy under the cloud of the forthcoming trial for racist abuse might harm the image of English football, then what is he doing captaining one of the most high-profile teams in our League and about to recommence their Champions League campaign too?

No, today’s decision by the FA is a model of indecisive action. The alleged incident took place at a game in October 2011. Almost two months later the Crown Prosecution Service decides there is sufficient evidence for a case to answer. Another two months on and finally the case came to court this week only for it to be announced that the trial will be delayed until after Euro 2012, on July 9 – nine months after the alleged incident.

Various reasons have been given for the delay, the main one being that Terry, Anton Ferdinand and the various witnesses likely to be called were too busy playing football. The danger is that this seems to suggest the offence of racist abuse of a player isn’t that serious, and can wait until the end of the season to be sorted out. But it is unlikely this would be a drawn-out case – it should take a week or a fortnight at most – and if it had gone to trial at the end of this month, when England are due to play a friendly match, perhaps only one or two games at most would have been missed. Why couldn’t the FA have had a loud word in the ear of both clubs – whose concerns over players being called both for the defence and prosecution influenced the judge’s decision to postpone the trial – and made it clear that they expected this issue to be dealt with quickly, and that dragging it on would do nobody any favours.

Instead we have today’s messy decision, for which the only plausible explanation is that the FA fears that if Terry were convicted, England would have been captained at the Euros by a proven racist.

This case should have been dealt with in the same way any public servant accused of racial abuse would be treated: immediately suspended on full pay and given the opportunity to clear their name as quickly as possible. A Premier League footballer, particularly one who represents his country too, should be no different from a teacher, a nurse, or a policeman. They take all the riches earned via becoming a “role model”; and should therefore accept the responsibilities too.

Decisive leadership by the FA would have helped force the pace of both the investigation and date of the trial from the start. We’ve been treated instead to anything but.

And where does this leave us now? Most thought football had moved on decisively from the racism it indulged in the 1970s and 1980s. The game even seemed ready to grapple with the complexities of exclusion that, for instance, have left us with just two clubs out of the 92 in the Premier and Football Leagues with black managers. But instead we are left questioning whether football is as serious about kicking out racism as we once thought it was.

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Sir Alex Ferguson: Rio Ferdinand should shake John Terry’s hand

• Ferdinand and Terry could face each other on Sunday
• ‘It doesn’t detract from anything to shake John Terry’s hand’

Sir Alex Ferguson intends to speak with Rio Ferdinand ahead of Manchester United’s Premier League encounter with Chelsea on Sunday to try and calm concerns about the pre-match handshake.

As John Terry is doubtful for the Stamford Bridge encounter with a knee injury, the issue over whether Ferdinand should shake his England team-mate’s hand may not arise.

However, a tweet sent by Rio after it was confirmed that Terry would not face a court case into his alleged racial abuse of Ferdinand’s brother, Anton, until after Euro 2012, seemed to indicate the 33-year-old was not too impressed by the situation. “I feel insulted,” Ferdinand wrote. “Woke up with a bad taste in my mouth, it’s a goddamn joke!”

And with the elder Ferdinand believed to be in two minds about whether to shake hands with Terry after the Premier League confirmed they had no plans to scrap the traditional pre-match greeting, Ferguson wants to reassure the 33-year-old.

“John Terry might not play but I would have a word with Rio about the situation,” Ferguson said. “Rio has been fighting racism for many years and the lad must rise above it. It doesn’t detract from anything to shake John Terry’s hand. He [Rio] has done nothing to be ashamed of.”

It is the first of two such cases United are faced with on successive weekends given that Luis Suárez is set to be in the Liverpool squad to face the Red Devils at Old Trafford on Saturday 11 February. It would be the Uruguayan’s first meeting with Patrice Evra since he was banned for eight matches for making racist comments towards the Frenchman.

“Patrice Evra has already shown the courage to fight it by complaining about it,” Ferguson said. “It is nothing to be ashamed of. There is not a problem shaking hands.

“The handshake started with Sky. There is nothing wrong with it,” he said. “It is only a handshake. There have been plenty of examples of players shaking hands whilst saying you won’t be shaking my hand at the end. Football is football. It is a competitive game.”

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guardian.co.uk

Chelsea rule out wearing T-shirts in support of John Terry

Club confirms their players will not echo Liverpool’s support of Luis Suárez as skipper faces race abuse charges

Chelsea have confirmed they rejected a proposal for their players to wear T-shirts in support of captain John Terry.

Some of the Blues squad and staff had raised the prospect of donning supportive slogans on their tops, showing their backing for Terry, who has been charged with racially abusing QPR defender Anton Ferdinand.

Liverpool were heavily criticised in some quarters for allowing their players to wear T-shirts in support of Luis Suárez during the warm-up before Wednesday night’s Premier League game at Wigan, following the striker’s eight-match ban for racially abusing Patrice Evra.

Chelsea, who fully back Terry in his fight to clear his name, did not want to risk emulating something that could be viewed as provocative or construed as a potential contempt of court offence ahead of Terry’s hearing at west London magistrates court on 1 February.

A club spokesman said: “We were aware of the idea being discussed among some of the players and staff.

“The club fully supports John but did not think the wearing of T-shirts was an appropriate or helpful show of that support.”

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