Lee Bowyer has clashed with the League Managers Association chairman, and ex-Leeds United manager Howard Wilkinson over the tabled system for finishing he current Championship season, reports The Telegraph.

Two months after the last Football League fixture was played, and we're still no closer to finding out how, when, or even if the Championship season will be finished.

Wilkinson, 76, managed Leeds for eight years from 1988 to 1996, signing Bowyer in his final season in charge for £2.8 million from Charlton to make him the UK's most expensive teenager at the time.

Now though Wilkinson holds the position of chairman with the LMA, and he's proposed a points-per-game system to conclude the campaign - something Bowyer is publicly against.

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Bowyer has long been an advocate of finishing the season in the regular fashion. His side actually dropped into the bottom-three shortly before the postponement of the football, and he's made his feelings about the season very clear in the past two months.

Clubs in the EFL though are no closer to finding out out their fate - a points-per-game finale would see Leeds and West Brom promoted, and Charlton, Luton and Barnsley relegated, but the overriding feeling is that the season must be played out.

The verdict

This is a predicament like no other. Football teams have been in limbo over the past couple of months as the EFL and LMA work towards a solution, but we're seemingly no closer to that all-encompassing answer. Certain managers are bound to be upset with the outcome and others happy with it, but Wilkinson and co just need to ensure it's as fair as possible on teams.