10 Things Paolo Di Canio Wants You To Forget

6. David Miliband Left Football Because Of Him

If there was one thing Sunderland fans could be proud of, it was that in an age of faceless corporate bean-counters running football clubs to the detriment of the modern fan, they could at least look up to the director's box and see a man like David Miliband sat there instead. Symbolising a lot of what the North East itself stands for, Miliband was a young (for a politician anyway) and ambitious Labour MP who, from the near-by borough of South Shields, looked like becoming the new leader of the party on a ticket of solid socialist principles and a respect for the common working man. A great bloke by all accounts, and one who was doing great work as the club's vice-chairman and non-executive director. However, following the appointment of Di Canio, Miliband felt that he couldn't work in the same institution as a man who held such public right-wing principles and resigned on the spot. This had the domino effect of the region's historic Miners' Association ending their association with the club as well, as his appointment became a hugely political issue for Sunderland's fanbase. Something any future chairmen will have to keep in mind when looking over his CV.
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Managing Editor

WhatCulture's Managing Editor and Chief Reporter | Previously seen in Vice, Esquire, FourFourTwo, Sabotage Times, Loaded, The Set Pieces, and Mundial Magazine