Karen Carney: Ex-England international deletes Twitter after online abuse
- Published

Leeds shared the above tweet along with footage of Carney's comments
Karen Carney has deleted her Twitter three days after a tweet by Leeds United questioning her comments as a pundit led to online abuse.
Leeds' owner defended Tuesday's message but the club condemned the abuse aimed at the former England international.
Carney said Leeds "out-run" opponents and an enforced rest during the Covid-19 pandemic aided their Championship promotion push last season.
The Women in Football group said Leeds' tweet was "inappropriate".
The video of Carney's comments shared in the tweet, which remains on Leeds' , has been viewed 5.8m times.
Carney, who won 144 England caps, made her comments during Tuesday's Amazon Prime broadcast of Leeds' 5-0 win over West Brom in the Premier League.
Football in the UK was on hold between March and June because of the coronavirus pandemic and Carney, 33, said of Leeds: "They out-run everyone and credit to them. My only concern would be will they blow up at the end of the season?
"We saw that the last couple of seasons. I actually think they got promoted because of Covid in of it gave them a bit of respite. I don't know if they would have got up if they didn't have that break."
Leeds won the Championship by 10 points in 2019-20. They won seven and drew one of their nine Championship matches when football resumed in June following the initial Covid-19 lockdown. They had won six and drawn one of their nine fixtures before the lockdown.
United's tweet sharing footage of Carney's comments tagged the of Amazon Prime, for whom she works as a pundit.
United's owner Andrea Radrizzani, replying to a tweet which said Leeds should be "ashamed" of their actions, wrote: "I take the responsibility of the club tweet.
"I consider that comment [from Carney] completely unnecessary and disrespectful to our club and particularly to the fantastic hard work of our players and coaches."
The Premier League club later said: "Everyone at our club respects Karen greatly for all she has achieved in the game, as well as her work in the media and the charity work she undertakes."
Former Leeds and England defender Rio Ferdinand was among those who called on the club to delete the post, which has been retweeted 11,500 times.
Others in the media said the tweet was inflammatory and would invite criticism of former Birmingham, Arsenal and Chelsea winger Carney on social media.
Tennis commentator David Law tweeted: "Did you really need to tweet something like this and invite a pile-on">