Capello's Terry backing may be breach of contract
Capello's Terry backing may be breach of contract
"I thought it fair that John Terry keeps the captain's armband," said Capello.

London: Just like before the 2010 World Cup, a dispute revolving around John Terry is unsettling England's preparations for a major tournament. But this time, rather than acting as a unifier, Fabio Capello has been accused of exacerbating tensions ahead of the European Championships.

And the coach may have breached his lucrative contract as a result.

Capello's authority appears to have been undermined by his employers when Terry was fired as England captain on Friday by Football Association chairman David Bernstein.

While the decision was taken to prevent Terry leading England at Euro 2012 while awaiting a criminal trial on a racism charge, Capello is annoyed his views were ignored.

Rather than keeping that strong disapproval within the FA, though, Capello went public in a live interview with Italian television on Sunday night from London.

Stating from the outset that he "absolutely" did not agree with Bernstein's decision, Capello said players shouldn't be punished by the FA until the courts have dealt with any alleged crimes.

Directly contradicting his FA bosses in public has revived questions about Capello's future. He held onto the job despite England's dismal World Cup campaign two years ago.

"It is being taken very seriously by the FA because it may be that Fabio Capello has breached his contract," former FA executive director David Davies told the BBC on Monday. "You have to ask what his motive is. You have to suspect he wants to prevent John Terry retiring as a player before Euro 2012, but there are wider issues."

"You could have what some of the media are calling a morality circus while England are trying to win the second major tournament in football."

A similar "morality circus" overshadowed England's preparations for the 2010 World Cup, Capello's first tournament with the team.

Back then, it was Capello who decided to strip Terry of the captaincy over allegations of an affair with teammate Wayne Bridge's ex-girlfriend. Bridge announced his international retirement as a result of the claims.

Capello deemed that Terry had to lose the captaincy because he was no longer a role model, but decided to reinstate him in March.

After the fresh controversy flared in October, Capello backed the Chelsea defender over allegations he racially abused Queens Park Rangers defender Anton Ferdinand during a match, adopting the "innocent until proven guilty" stance.

The FA initially backed Capello but that changed on Wednesday after a court ruled that Terry would not stand trial until after Euro 2012.

"Fabio Capello, having been told by the FA in a private situation what they were going to do, has been a little bit unwise to come out as publicly as this," said Graham Taylor, England manager from 1990-93. "Whoever he makes as captain knows that he is not the manager's choice. That in itself doesn't help the dressing room."

By speaking out, Taylor believes Capello has managed to "disturb everything even more" and potentially jeopardized his contract, which expires after the tournament.

"It may be that he wants the FA to take a decision on this job," Taylor said. "To come out in this public fashion, actually, in one respect, gives England an even bigger problem for the selection and harmony of the squad for the European Championships."

The FA has remained silent publicly since Capello claimed he had been undermined.

"I told (the chairman) that I don't think someone can be punished until it becomes official," Capello told RAI. "The court will decide. It's going to be civil justice, not sports justice, to decide if John Terry committed that crime that he is accused of. And I thought it fair that John Terry keeps the captain's armband."

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