Gary neville
Football must take 'giant leap' to fight racism - Neville
Former England international Gary Neville said he should have fought harder against racism during his playing days.
Premier League chiefs are aiming for a return to action in June and several clubs opened their training grounds to players this week as they work on 'Project Restart'.
Clubs in England's top-flight need to help soften the estimated £1 billion blow of potentially failing to complete the season.
United have not won a Premier League title since 2013 despite spending nearly £1 billion ($1.30 billion) on incoming transfers without a director of football to identify potential recruits.
Match-going United fans have been reluctant to turn on Mourinho, instead often pointing fingers at executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward's reluctance to back the manager.
Sterling was subjected to reported racist abuse from Chelsea fans during City's 2-0 defeat at Stamford Bridge.
Neville believes the board panicked in sacking Moyes after less than a year and must back Mourinho now.
Monday’s 3-0 home defeat to Tottenham Hotspur was the second loss of United’s opening three matches and they now languish in 13th place ahead of next weekend’s trip to Burnley.