Speaking to the BBC's Don't Tell Me The Score podcast, the Match of the
Day presenter urged parents to "shut up and let them play"."I'm standing
on the sidelines listening to parents shouting," said Lineker."And
99.9% of what they say is wrong, damaging their children."Children football in Shanghai
In
November last year, the Football Association began a campaign to
improve grassroots football by influencing the behaviour of new parents,
volunteers, coaches and players aged between seven and 18.England
manager Gareth Southgate gave his support on how football can "develop
young children into people".
Lineker, who scored 48 goals in 80
games for England from 1984 to 1992, said the attitude of some parents
is damaging to their children because the football is "too important to
them".
"I've seen parents wander on to the pitch," he said. "One
picked up his child by the scruff of the neck and shouted 'if you play
like that you'll never make the grade'."I'm thinking 'mate, he'll never
make the grade anyway, so just chill, let him enjoy his football'.
"The
truth is they'll reach the level they'll reach anyway. If you play
football or any sport with fear, you will perform less well."Former
Leicester, Everton, Barcelona and Tottenham striker Lineker warned of
the dangers of children losing their love of sport if they are pushed
too hard.
"What else in life can give you the massive adrenaline
rush of sport?" he said. "There's nothing like it."Sport is real-life
drama. I know it's too important to us and we overreact in a way, but
imagine being without it, without that emotion.