talkSPORT pundit Simon Jordan sympthised with the plight of Reading fans, but disagreed with their methods of protest against owner Dai Yongge.
Reading's League One clash against Port Vale was abandoned on Saturday after fans invaded the pitch on 16 minutes.
The Royals have been in financial turmoil in recent times under Chinese owner Yongge and are facing a winding-up order.
There have been reports of players living on microwave meals and the club have already been deducted points for failing to pay players on time and in full.
Fans of the Berkshire club are frustrated and furious with the ownership and that boiled over on Saturday when fans ran onto the pitch to protest.
Former Crystal Palace owner, talkSPORT pundit, Jordan, speaking to Jim White on the White & Jordan Show, told fans to voice their concerns through the appropriate channels.
When asked by White when should the EFL intervene at Reading, Jordan replied: «That is not their responsibility.
»The EFL's responsibility is the sanction the football clubs under the rules that the 72 football clubs in the football league put together.
«They can't just unilaterally and decide autonomously that because one football clubs is having trouble with an owner who has clearly ran out of money that they can step in.
»I think the Reading fans have every right to protest, every right to take their issues as loud and vociferous as they.
«I think they have no right to go onto a football field and no right to stop a football match from being played, least of all for the Port Vale fans that have travelled across the country to go watch them.»
«I wonder how vociferous you guys were when this guy was spending like a drunken sailor for the first few years of his ownership.
»There is a myth
Read on talksport.com