London (AFP) – Former Chelsea player Gary Johnson said on Thursday he should receive more financial compensation from the club after being sexually abused by their former chief scout Eddie Heath.

It recently emerged Chelsea, the current Premier League leaders, paid Johnson 50,000 pounds ($63,850, 59,230 euros) in 2015 not to go public with his allegations against Heath, who died in the 1980s.

Chelsea waived the confidentiality clause in the agreement in order to publicly apologise to Johnson, but he said the money was “not enough for the pain and suffering I’ve had”.

He told BBC television: “It took away my childhood –- I can never get that back.”

Johnson revealed he met three Chelsea directors on Wednesday and they apologised for the abuse to which he was subjected during his time at the club.

Asked if he felt he deserved more from Chelsea, he replied: “Yes. It would help me build a better life. I was pushed into a corner and told I had to sign it to get the money.”

Johnson is one of several former footballers to have spoken out about being abused by youth coaches during their formative years as players in a scandal that has rocked British sport.

London’s Metropolitan Police said it had opened a formal investigation into non-recent allegations involving clubs in the capital. It did not say which clubs were being probed.

Detective Chief Superintendent Ivan Balhatchet said all allegations would be handled “sensitively” and “very seriously”.

Twenty-one British police forces are investigating claims of sexual abuse in youth football, with hundreds of people reporting abuse.

England’s Football Association has also opened an investigation.

– Leicester link –

Premier League champions Leicester City and Aston Villa have also been drawn into the affair after claims about Ted Langford, who worked as a scout for both clubs.

Langford, who has since died, was jailed in 2007 for sexually abusing four young players in the 1970s and 1980s.

A Leicester spokesman said: “We take the current matter very seriously.

“At present, however, we have no indication of any allegations made against or in relation to Leicester City Football Club. We will, of course, investigate fully in the event any further information comes to light.”

A spokesman from Villa said: “The club co-operated fully with the authorities during the investigation at that time (2007).”

Southampton are facing the threat of legal action after a law firm revealed it had been instructed by a man alleging sexual abuse when he was a member of the club’s youth set-up during the 1980s.

Lawyers for the man, who spent two years at Southampton as a youth player, said he now suffers from severe mental health problems, Britain’s Press Association reported.

It comes after former Southampton and England player Matt Le Tissier revealed he was given a “very, very wrong” naked massage by a youth coach at the club.

Le Tissier did not say he had been abused.

Southampton say they are “committed to working together” with police to investigate any historical child sex abuse allegations.