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Shay Given apologises for Holocaust remark on Final Score
Summary
Shay Given apologised after using the term 'Holocaust' to describe Wilfried Nancy's 33-day spell at Celtic on BBC's Final Score; he said he was mortified, pledged to become better educated and will donate his fee from the show to the Holocaust Educational Trust.
Content
Shay Given has issued a public apology after using the word "Holocaust" while discussing Wilfried Nancy's brief time as Celtic manager on BBC's Final Score. He described the usage as a mistake, said he was "genuinely mortified" and announced he will donate his fee from the programme to the Holocaust Educational Trust. The remark came while he was commenting on Nancy's 33-day tenure at Celtic, which ended after a run of poor results.
Key points:
- The comment was made live on BBC's Final Score during discussion of Wilfried Nancy's short spell as Celtic manager.
- Presenter Jason Mohammed acknowledged the earlier inappropriate language on air and apologised for any offence caused.
- Shay Given said he did not fully understand the meaning of the word he used, apologised unreservedly, and pledged to become better educated about it.
- Given also pledged to donate his fee from that day's show to the Holocaust Educational Trust.
Summary:
The incident led to an on-air acknowledgement of inappropriate language and a personal apology from Shay Given, who described himself as mortified and committed to learning. Undetermined at this time.
