Ian Wright would have paid the rehabilitation of Kayleigh McDonald’s after his LCA injury, he was revealed.
After Aluko had a blow on the legend of Arsenal for having taken up room in the female game and “dominant” the roles, thus blocking the chances for female experts – the flies of the gesture of the legend of the arsenal in the face of his criticism.
According to the Telegraph, Wright has paid the rehabilitation of McDonald’s knee injured for four months in addition to a sports lawyer to help defend the Stoke City player.
Stoke did not pay the treatment of McDonald’s and she created a GoFundme page. The club then went back and according to the report, before it was then informed that the funding would be withdrawn.
Wright would then have paid the McDonald of £ 1,700 per month necessary for rehabilitation.
She said to the Telegraph: “I wouldn’t be in a great place mentally if it was not for Ian Wright.
The incredible private gesture of Ian Wright to help a footballer was revealed

Kayleigh McDonald’s rehabilitation costs after the LCA injury were covered by Wright

Eni Aluko and Wright are frequent co-droops, working together for links such as the qualifications of the Women’s World Cup in 2021 (photo), but she criticized him on radio 4
“I would probably still wait for my surgery if it was not for him. For him to do this for me, someone he did not know, I think there should be more spotlights that shine on him.
Wright also talked about vitriol for female experts and even donated £ 15,000 to a female coaching initiative, allowing 664 women to attend a level one lesson.
Earlier Wednesday, the former striker of England and Chelsea Aluko spoke at the feminine time of Radio Four and said: “ I worked with Ian for a long time and, you know, I think he is a brilliant diffuser, but I think he is aware of what he does in the female game. I think it should be aware of it.
“The fact is that there is a limited amount of available spaces. If we had a situation where there was an equal opportunity in the male game for the broadcasters and the coaches that there is in the female game, it is a free for all.
“But this is not the case. I cannot dominate the male game in the way you know, you used Ian as an example.
When asked to clarify if she thinks he is bad for Wright, 61, to be a figure at the forefront of women’s football coverage, Aluko added: “ I don’t know for evil, but I think we have to be aware and that we must make sure that women are not prevented from walking in the broadcasting in the game of women.
“It’s still new, it always grows. There is a limited amount of opportunities and I think men must be aware of it.
“Men must be aware that, you know, you are in a growing sport, a growing sport for women, and we have not always had these opportunities, and it is therefore conscience and support other women through this path.”

Wright (right) was accused by Aluko (left) to block opportunities for women
Following Aluko’s claims, Mail Sport approached Wright for his answer.
Wright launched a podcast alongside Steph Houghton last year about the female game and talks about it regularly with Kelly Cates on the BBC.
The much appreciated pundit is also a regular element on the screens covering the male game and is located alongside Gary Neville, Roy Keane and Jill Scott on overlapping.
Aluko thinks that his broadcasting career has been damaged by the case in civil defamation against Joey Barton.
Aluko continues the former Manchester City and Newcastle midfielder for Libel on two positions that he published in January from last year on X.
Barton, 42, made comments that had a defamatory meaning when he accused him of being a “racing card player,” said a judge two weeks ago.
The judge also noted that if the other post had no defamatory meaning, he had a defamatory “sense of innuendo”.
Although he won the first step in the case, which Barton could still appeal, Aluko says that his Punditry career has been damaged.

Joey Barton made online comments that had a defamatory meaning, a judge ruled

Aluko says that she had less work of Punditry in the middle of the case against Barton
“This happens in many industries-when women get up for themselves, their careers take a hit,” she told BBC Radio 4.
“I have been broadcasting for 11 years. I’m not new. And in the past 18 months, I have made the least television I have ever made.
“It’s just a fact. It is not a feeling, it is an opinion. It’s a fact. So I think people can draw their own conclusions.
According to the database of Internet commentators, Aluko made 44 appearances of rising in progress in 2023, but this figure fell to 27 last year.
She added: “There is a double standard where there is still a limited quantity of opportunities for women, broadcasters, both in the game for men and women.”