Gary Lineker today quit the BBC in shame over his antisemitic Instagram post, apologising again and calling his exit ‘the responsible course of action’.

The 64-year-old will present his final Match of the Day on Sunday after 26 years in the job.

He will leave the corporation two years earlier than expected and will no longer work for the BBC presenting FA Cup matches and at the next World Cup in America in 2026. 

Mr Lineker said in a statement: ‘Football has been at the heart of my life for as long as I can remember – both on the pitch and in the studio.

‘I care deeply about the game, and about the work I’ve done with the BBC over many years. As I’ve said, I would never consciously repost anything antisemitic – it goes against everything I stand for.

‘However, I recognise the error and upset that I caused, and reiterate how sorry I am. Stepping back now feels like the responsible course of action.’

Gary Lineker is set to set to step down from the BBC today over antisemitism allegations and will not helm the broadcaster’s coverage of the 2026 World Cup

Lineker shared a now-deleted reel on Instagram which originated with pro-Palestine group Palestine Lobby

Today it emerged that he took aim at his BBC boss in what was the ‘final straw’ for the corporation as they considered his future.

Lineker said that Alex Kay-Jelski had ‘no television experience’ and suggested his plans to revamp Match of the Day without him would fail.

A BBC source has claimed that the criticism of Mr Kay-Jelski may have been the ‘final straw’ for the corporation who had ‘indulged him [Lineker] bending its rules to breaking point’.

Lineker made the comments about his boss in an interview where he apologised for sharing a pro-Palestine video featuring an anti-Jewish rat slur. 

‘I think (a regime change) has (happened), and that’s what I was alluding to (in an earlier interview),’ Lineker told Telegraph Sport.

‘He [Alex Kay-Jelski] has his reasons, he wants to change Match of the Day a bit. Ultimately, I don’t think they will, because I don’t see how you move a highlights show away from being about highlights.

‘I think he wants more journalists – he has come from that background. He has got no television experience.’

The 64-year-old is expected to quit the BBC today after being pushed out of the broadcasting corporation amid his anti-Semitic rat post saga.    

He will no longer lead the broadcaster’s coverage of the 2026 World Cup and present FA Cup games after his final Match of the Day on Sunday.

The Campaign Against Antisemitism hailed the news today and said Lineker is ‘an egotist who mistook celebrity for moral authority’ who ‘used his fame to inflame’.

Lineker questioned his boss Alex Kay-Jelski’s experience in TV as he tried to keep his job

‘Impartiality at the BBC is dead, and Mr Lineker has been Exhibit A. He could have been the Des Lynam of our generation. Instead, he transformed in front of the nation’s eyes into Mr Not So Nice Guy. 

‘At last the final whistle has been blown on his tenure at the BBC, and now it is time to ask how and why management allowed him to play on until now, foul after foul’, they said in a statement.

Sources close to the footballer turned broadcaster have confirmed he will quit today and ‘won’t be back’.

Incredibly one pro-Lineker source has suggested he is leaving to protect the corporation – not that he is being pushed out.

‘Gary acknowledged his position at the BBC, anchoring the most prestigious tournament in world football, was untenable, and he will not be hosting the World Cup.

‘He offered to step down at the end of the season, and did not want the BBC — an organisation he still holds in the highest of esteem — dragged into any further controversy.

‘He remains absolutely devastated by the recent turn of events and is deeply regretful about how his post was interpreted. His last Match of the Day will air on Sunday now and he won’t be back’, the insider told The Sun.

One source told MailOnline there there is anger about the idea he is trying to protect the BBC from further harm given how much damage he has caused in recent years.

‘He has no self-awareness whatsoever’, they added. 

Another source told the Telegraph: ‘The BBC’s endless willingness to overlook his apparent anti-Semitism dressed as Palestinian advocacy constantly makes Jewish staff feel how little they matter to the corporation. Perhaps Lineker lacks the sophistication to know the difference, but what’s senior management’s excuse?’

The ex-Tottenham star will leave with BBC bosses considering the sport’s broadcaster’s position untenable amid allegations of antisemitism.

Following backlash from sections of the Jewish community, the Match of the Day presenter insisted he would ‘never knowingly share anything anti-Semitic’.

Lineker, 64, has apologised unreservedly for the ‘mistake’ saying ‘that image does not reflect my views’. 

The image of rats and vermin are considered provocative since they were widely used as propaganda against Jews in 1930s Nazi Germany.

The former England striker was already set to leave his role as presenter of Match of the Day at the end of the season, but will now no longer host the corporation’s coverage of the FA Cup in 2025-26 and the World Cup in 2026.

Among the Nazis’ depictions of Jewish people as rats was this poster produced by Adolf Hitler’s regime during their 1940s occupation of Denmark

On Saturday afternoon, he took to TV screens across the country again to front coverage of the FA Cup final between Manchester City and Crystal Palace from Wembley alongside the likes of Wayne Rooney.

Lineker is listed by the BBC as their highest-paid presenter, receiving £1.4million from the BBC last year. 

He shared the controversial post, originally uploaded by another account, as it featured a critique of Zionism – the belief that there should be a national homeland for Jewish people in Israel.

The BBC stalwart has previously been vocal with his views on the Israeli invasion of Gaza following the October 7 attacks – among other issues – but is not thought to have ever publicly apologised for content he has shared.

Mr Lineker refused to say sorry in 2023 for comparing the then Tory government’s rhetoric over its immigration policy to that of Nazi Germany.

The remark triggered a BBC suspension but this was lifted when colleagues walked out in support of the presenter.

The BBC’s social media rules were then rewritten to say presenters of flagship programmes outside news and current affairs – including Match of the Day – have ‘a particular responsibility to respect the BBC’s impartiality, because of their profile on the BBC’.

Lineker’s inflammatory tweet from 2023 compared ministers’ language over migration to ‘Germany in the 30s’ 

Mrs Braverman said at the time she felt that Mr Lineker’s comments were ‘disappointing’ when he compared her policies to Nazi Germany

Gary Lineker told Amol Rajan that he had the right to give his views despite impartiality rules and said he was ‘right’ to criticise Suella Braverman and the Tories over their immigration polices

Lineker, however, remained unrepentant about the series of incendiary tweets from 2023 that led to his suspension. 

In an interview published on BBC2 last month, he said: ‘I don’t regret saying them publicly, because I was right – what I said, it was accurate.

‘Why shouldn’t I have an opinion on things? I’m a b***dy footballer who’s turned into a sports presenter’.

In the same interview with the BBC’s Amol Rajan, he was asked whether it was part of his remit to give a view on Middle East politics.

Lineker said: ‘I’m sorry. It’s more important than the BBC. What’s going on there [Gaza] is the mass murder of thousands of children — probably something that we should have a little opinion on.’

But on Wednesday, after outrage at the rat image intensified, the former England captain said: ‘On Instagram I reposted material which I have since learned contained offensive references.

‘I very much regret these references. I would never knowingly share anything anti-Semitic. It goes against everything I believe in.

‘The post was removed as soon as I became aware of the issue.

Gary Lineker returned to TV screens for the first time on Saturday to host the FA Cup final after apologising for sharing an ‘anti-Semitic’ social media post

The long-standing sports presenter was at the helm of Match of the Day for 25 seasons but was due to step down at the end of this season even prior to this latest controversy 

Lineker has been repeatedly outspoken on the Israel-Palestine conflict, something that has caused controversy within the BBC

‘Whilst I strongly believe in the importance of speaking out on humanitarian issues, including the tragedy unfolding in Gaza, I also know that how we do so matters.

‘I take full responsibility for this mistake. That image does not reflect my views. It was an error on my part for which I apologise unreservedly.’

In an interview with The Telegraph this week, Mr Lineker described what is going on in Gaza as ‘beyond depraved.’

He said: ‘We still seem to be on the side of the people who are doing this. We’re still supplying arms.

‘And you think, ‘Wow, how?’ The vast majority of people see it for what it is now.’

On the subject of October 7 he said it was ‘inevitable’ the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land would ’cause massive problems’. 

The 64-year-old added fuel to the fire earlier this week over an unrelated issue – as he appeared to take a swipe at the BBC’s director of sport as of last year, Alex Kay-Jelski, saying he ‘wants to change Match of the Day a bit’.

Footballer turned presenter Gary Lineker on Match of the Day in 1999 – his first season in the role he held for 25 years

Lineker was widely praised for his heroic performance in the 1990 World Cup (pictured here in the quarter final against Cameroon) as England reached the semi-final before being beaten on penalties by Germany 

Lineker poses with the Premier League trophy shortly before starting his stint as presenter of Match of the Day in 1999

He told Telegraph Sport: ‘I think [a regime change] has [happened], and that’s what I was alluding to [in an earlier interview].

‘He has his reasons, he wants to change Match of the Day a bit. Ultimately, I don’t think they will, because I don’t see how you move a highlights show away from being about highlights.

‘I think he wants more journalists – he has come from that background. He has got no television experience.’

One BBC staff member, who has since he proved right, claimed the combination of sharing the rat emoji and making the comments about Kay-Jelski could spell the end for Lineker at the BBC.

They said: ‘That is being seen as a real dig at the head of sport, which you just don’t do.

‘But for it to come so soon after the social media controversy makes it a real problem for him.’ 

Lineker’s future has been the subject of speculation for some time, especially after Mail Sport revealed an email in October last year which purported to announce his impending departure

Gary Lineker himself has said that he believes the BBC didn’t want him to stay on Match of the Day 

Lineker began his professional career at Leicester CIty, for whom he scored 95 goals in 194 games

Lineker’s prolific strike rate earned him a move to Everton for £800,000 – a tiny sum by today’s standards

In 1986 Lineker got a transfer to Barcelona, then managed by legendary British gaffer Terry Venables

Lineker lost his coveted centre forward spot under Johan Cryuff so returned to England with Spurs. Pictured: Lineker whirling away in celebration after scoring the first goal during a 2-0 win over Queens Park Rangers in  September 1991

Spurs and England team mates Paul Gascoigne (left) and Gary Lineker (right) share a joke at a Tottenham Hotspur pre season photocall prior to the 1990/91 season

Lineker made his England debut in 1984, earning 80 internationals caps and scoring 48 goals over an eight-year international career. Pictured: Lineker after scoring a hat trick against Mexico in the 1986 World Cup finals 

Earlier this year, Lineker implied that the BBC wanted him to move on from Match of the Day. 

He said: ‘Well, perhaps they want me to leave. There was the sense of that.’

While the BBC refused to comment on Lineker’s implication at the time, they referred to him as a ‘world-class presenter’ – while adding that Match of the Day ‘continually evolves for changing viewing habits’.

Having made his name at Leicester City, where he played between 1978 and 1985, Lineker went on to play for Everton and Spurs before earning a big-money £2.8million move to Barcelona.   

Lineker made his England debut in 1984, earning 80 internationals caps and scoring 48 goals over an eight-year international career.

That puts him forth in England’s list of all-time record goalscorers, after Harry Kane, Wayne Rooney and Sir Bobby Charlton. 

The BBC confirmed in November 2024 that Lineker would be stepping down from Match of the Day at the end of this season after 26 years in the job. 

MailOnline has approached the BBC for comment.

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