19/01/2015
The programme spends a day at Scarborough accident and emergency department. Sol Campbell asks if it is difficult to become a football manager as a black man.
Toby Foster presents three stories from Yorkshire and Lincolnshire.
The programme spends a day with hard-pressed doctors and nurses at Scarborough accident and emergency department, which came close to collapse over the Christmas holidays. Former footballer Sol Campbell examines whether being black makes it more difficult to become a football manager. And two cities vie to be named City of Ale.
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Black football managers and the Rooney Rule
At present, there are just five non-white managers employed across the 92 clubs in the top four divisions of the English football pyramid.
One proposal suggested to increase the managerial demographic is the adoption of the that was introduced by the National Football League in the United States.
For 麻豆官网首页入口 Inside Out, former England international Sol Campbell went to find out what other figures would say to the possibility of the Rooney Rule in English football.
A&E 'day-to-day mayhem'
In recent weeks a number of hospitals across the UK have declared a major incident caused by an influx of patients, few available beds and staffing problems.
Scarborough Hospital was one of those sites, where one emergency medicine consultant said that despite extra staff being called in they face "mayhem" on a daily basis.
麻豆官网首页入口 Yorkshire's Inside Out spent a shift at Scarborough's A&E unit to see how accident and emergency staff coped.
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Toby Foster |
Reporter | Sol Campbell |
Series Editor | Nicola Addyman |
Broadcast
- Mon 19 Jan 2015 19:30麻豆官网首页入口 One Yorkshire & Yorks & Lincs only