Posts Tagged ‘Soccer’

Deloitte Money Football League 2012Do you want to write a piece on this? Asked the esteemed editor of this website forwarding me a copy of Deloitte’s new report into the finances of Europe’s top 20 football teams.

No. I replied. Well, more yes and no. Because I’ve no interest in pouring over the finances of Europe’s top clubs. The only balance sheets that interest me are the ones you won’t read about in Deloitte’s report.

Those of clubs like Darlington who are currently facing extinction. The team’s supporters trust are trying to arrange a community takeover of the club which will go into liquidation if they don’t succeed.

Or clubs like Portsmouth who are again, after a prospective buyer pulled out of the deal, seeking a new owner to take them out of administration. Plymouth are in the same situation as they battle to secure the existence of their club and their football league status.

So no, I don’t have any interest in how the top clubs have enlarged their revenue. Especially when those clubs use their power to leverage clubs outside the game’s top tier.

Just look at the way the Premier League held a shotgun to the head of the Football league when they wanted to get rid of the tribunal system for youth team players. The Premier League threatened to withhold money they paid for youth development schemes at lower leagues clubs, unless clubs agreed to a new set-up allowing top clubs to cherry-pick talent for nominal sums.

The majority of football fans do not support these so-called top clubs. The real story is how top level football is fast becoming a closed shop. The top clubs only exist through our consent. If they continue to suck the life out of the rest game what are we going to have left?

English: John Terry Nederlands: http://www.pos...

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Anton Ferdinand will decide in the next 48 hours whether to shake John Terry’s hand when QPR meet Chelsea in the FA Cup on Saturday. That’s according to this morning’s copy of The Times.

Reports elsewhere say that Ferdinand has already decided to snub the Chelsea captain’s handshake, while others say Ferdinand’s is under strict instructions from his club to politely adhere to the pre-match formalities.

Obviously, no-one knows what will happen when the two men meet. All we do know, is that this is an epoch defining event in football. A point in history against which all future events will be measured.

Already the Olympic countdown clock in Trafalgar Square has been recalibrated, and is now ticking down to 3pm on Saturday.

Crowds have begun to gather in St Marks Square in a 24-hour vigil. And the Pope will lead a service in the hope that God will offer Ferdinand divine guidance on the issue.

So serious are the potential consequences the guardians of the famous ‘Doomsday clock’, which indicates how close the world is to Armageddon, have inched the minute hand one notch closer global catastrophe.

A small number of people have even formed a new cult and retreated to a deserted Scottish Isle. There they will live secluded from the world existing solely by a new code of ethics based on asking themselves: “What would Anton do?”

Meanwhile, for those who have decided to remain in the UK and live through these tumultuous events, Sky News will broadcast rolling coverage of the event. Using helicopters their cameras will track Ferdinand and Terry as they emerge from the tunnel, warm-up, and move down the line of players as they go through the pre-game rituals.

So, with judgement day looming and with the world’s religious leaders calling for peace, we will all continue to count down to the big moment. Only to find out that Anton’s out with a groin strain….

Roy Keane’s famous tirade against the “prawn sandwich brigade” highlighted how football’s traditions and soul were threatened by the creeping corporatisation of football.

Eleven years have now passed since Keane’s spluttered seafood salvo. Since then the inexorable march of commercial interests have made his complaints seem almost trivial, rather than a serious warning about the rot setting in at the heart of the game. The subsequent years of swelling TV revenues and global viewing figures have immunised the Premier League’s members against criticism. And, it seems, irony.

I was confronted with this horrible truth on a recent tube journey. Across the platform from me was a poster for Chelsea Football Club advertising it’s corporate hospitality packages and championing the quality of their prawn sandwiches. On the face of it the adverts seem astonishing. Maybe, they’re a cheeky way of reconnecting with ordinary fans? The answer though is no.

The adverts lack hint of irony or humility. They only impression they convey is arrogance. The sense that ordinary fans concerns about the soul of the game count for nothing against Chelsea’s desire to chase the corporate entertainment shilling. Chelsea are saying: “Football isn’t about you, and we don’t care if you know it.” The Premier League, it seems, has finally eaten itself.

Have to say that I did quite enjoy this video of the great football experiment taking a Sunday League team and make them into “world beaters”.

The only way is Essex comes to mind, and the Sky Sports advert.

Got me thinking…which mediocre Premier League footballers could do with some added coaching….?

I reckon Newcastle’s Shola Ameobi would be up there…

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This weekend the Premier League is back. Last weekend saw the opening round of the Football League and the appetiser that is the Community Shield, but this weekend is the first of the season’s full round of fixtures across the country.

And by god do we need this right now.

We’re all (mostly? partially?) intelligent people who think about the game. We know what’s wrong with it; money, corruption, overhyping, overexposure, unsophisticated tactics, lame professional analysis on TV and in the papers.

And we’ve all seen what’s happened this week. The country seems to be falling apart right now. Riots in major cities, neighbourhoods ablaze, property damaged, livelihoods lost, people hurt or killed, communities torn apart and displays of outright thuggery on the streets. People across the country are losing the ability to think rationally and knees are jerking so hard that I’m surprised half the country don’t have bloody noses. The stock markets are falling and the economy is stumbling into a pit of despair for the second time in three years. Wars, famine and scarily idiotic politics abroad. It’s grim.

But now, this weekend, let’s put that behind us.

Let’s keep the grumbles to ‘why haven’t we signed a new centre-back’ or ‘how are we going to accommodate the 17 central midfielders we’ve got on our books’. Football may be a circus, a distraction from other things that are really, really important, but if the world is full of seriousness then it is boring and depressing. There’s room for joy and suffering side by side in your life. Now is the time for some joy.

This weekend, forget about it all for a couple of hours. Revel in the brilliance that is football. Watch some of it on TV. Even better go to your nearest football ground and cheer on your local team. You don’t have to normally support them, just go along for the hell of it. Even if the standard is poor, go. Have fun, take your family and friends, be there.

Just enjoy football and not think about anything else for a bit. It can wait. It will wait. The football won’t.

Alejandro FaurlínFollowing last night’s dramatic twist in the race for the final automatic promotion spot, eyes turn today to the FA hearing that could send shockwaves through the top 6. Despite being aware of the issue since March, the FA in its typically mind-boggling fashion has decided to wait until today to start proceedings on the matter of the alleged third-party ownership of QPR midfielder Alejandro Faurlín.

An FA ‘source’ indicated to The Sun last week that QPR could face a points deduction of up to 15 points. QPR fans had their promotion party on Easter Monday swept from them temporarily by an injury-time Norwich goal – could the FA seriously spoil the party now that they’ve claimed the Championship title?

QPR should be worried. In the event they are found guilty of third-party ownership, and all indications seem to be pointing that way, the possibility of a serious points deduction is a very real possibility.

Let’s look back at the Carlos Tevez case for a minute, which really brought the issue of third party ownership to light. When Tevez and team-mate Javier Mascherano were registered as players, West Ham failed to disclose that they had entered into an agreement with third-party companies. Tevez was owned by Media Sports Investments and Just Sports Inc, Mascherano by Global Soccer Agencies and Mystere Services Ltd – all four companies represented by Kia Joorabchian, who in essence held the contracts and transfer rights.

The first thing to point out is that the charges to QPR deal with more than the alleged third-party ownership of Faurlín, and their failure to declare this prior to his July 2009 signing. These include:

- allegedly using or seeking to pay an unauthorised agent in relation to the Faurlín’s registration
- allegedly submitting false information contained in documents to the FA in relation to Faurlín signing an extension to his playing contract in October 2010

If their initial response is any indication of what they will be arguing today, QPR will plead their innocence to these charges. This could be the first alarm bell for QPR fans. When the Premier League gave their verdict on the Tevez case, they made it clear that West Ham’s admission of guilt factored into the decision not to dock points and instead receive a £5.5m fine.

A separate consideration is that it isn’t the Premier League that is looking at the QPR case, but the FA. In the Tevez case, they were only brought to review the Premier League’s initial decision following an appeal by the then-relegated Sheffield United, and Fulham. There was significant criticism levelled at West Ham during that review, stating that they had been “deliberately deceitful”. The FA tribunal also stated the following:

“The tribunal had much sympathy for Sheffield United’s grievances. However, the tribunal had to apply the principles of judicial review and determine whether the decision [not to deduct points] was irrational or perverse. This is a very strict test and is very difficult to satisfy. It concluded that it was impossible for this tribunal to find that the decision was irrational or perverse.”

They accepted that it was a serious offence, but it is clear that he FA were not willing to overturn a Premier League decision that would have had serious implications on the make-up of their league. This time round though, it is the FA that gets first say. Had the FA decided the original Tevez case, perhaps a points deduction would have followed. They will also surely remember the claims by West Ham during the original hearing that the third-party agreement with Joorabchian had been torn up – found to be false during the subsequent hearings.

QPR fans might be reassured though by one of the key considerations the Premier League made in its initial verdict, against a points deduction:

-A points deduction so late in the season might have consigned the club to relegation
-The players and fans of West Ham are in no way to blame for the situation and therefore should not suffer

A significant points deduction so late in the season would strip QPR of the promotion they’ve already celebrated twice. There would be effectively little they could do on the pitch to retain that automatic spot, and would be lumped with the unpredictable playoffs. You can argue that the Premier League shouldn’t have taken the fans and players into account when looking at the Tevez case, but the reality is they did and there’s no reason he FA couldn’t do likewise.

You could also argue that pretty much everyone would accept that Tevez was probably the main reason West Ham stayed up, so was shown to have a significant impact, could the same be said of QPR re: Faurlín, a player which though steady has not had the impact on their season as someone like Adel Taarabt.

At a recent Culture, Media & Sport Committee hearing on football governance, the FA was slammed by both the Minister Hugh Robertson and William Gaillard, one of Michel Platini’s key advisers. They have, like the Premier League in 2007, left this decision till one of the last weeks of the season. They must this week decide this issue, knowing that legal challenges may result whatever they decide, be it from QPR themselves or other clubs in the top 6.

There certainly is less of a groundswell of opinion that QPR has wronged the League, in contrast to the strong criticism of West Ham, though on the face of it the crimes appear very similar. It’s a big week for QPR, but also for the FA. If another club gets a slap-on-the-wrist token punishment, then what is the point in having this rule on third-party ownership? The FA might try and make an example of QPR where the Premier League failed in the case of the Hammers.

Harsh on the QPR fans certainly, but when it comes down to fundamental questions over whether a club has acted within the rules of the game, the fans shouldn’t come into the equation. QPR should, in light of the Tevez case, have known better. The FA, in light of the Premier League’s utter failure to impose a significant punishment for this issue 4 years ago, will want a sterner punishment this time to finally draw a line under the issue of third-party agreements. I predict we’ll see a points deduction that is significant enough to strip QPR of 1st place, but not enough to push them into the playoffs

How many times has one of your mate’s mates told you that the Spanish league is the best in the world? I’m sick of people comparing leagues – it can’t be done.

But the Spanish comparison irks me more than most. How many English people can honestly say they have watched a La Liga game that didn’t involve Barcelona or Real Madrid? You can’t compare entire leagues by the top teams in them.

Deportivo hosted Barcelona last Sunday and the home fans voiced their displeasure. The banner in the photo roughly translates as: “we don’t want another Scottish league” (See picture, right). In other words, the Spanish fans don’t want a league dominated by two clubs. (Or a league that ultimately has to wrangle with its structure to keep it interesting).

But Barcelona and Real Madrid do dominate. Sid Lowe revealed that the two teams “have won 121 of their last 142 relevant games against the league’s other sides” in his Guardian column yesterday. That is, frankly, ridiculous.

Fans of the English Premier League moan about the traditional top four (Man United, Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool). But at least that is four teams out of 20 and not two out of 18. That said, it still takes a huge injection of cash from the owner (Man City) or a massive and loyal fan base (Spurs) to make a dent at the top of the Premier League.

The FA and the Premier League should look to the demise of competition in La Liga and prepare to take a firm stance soon. The reason being that it won’t be long before the traditional top four (and, let’s be honest, Man City and Spurs too – right place, right time) look to the demise of competition in La Liga and see an opportunity.

The reason is that Spanish clubs can negotiate their own TV rights. So every Barcelona game and every Real Madrid game is televised. More crucially, it means the clubs can tie up the overseas market.

Under the current Premier League model, a proportion of the Asian money for the viewing of Man United v Chelsea will end up at Stoke, Wolves et al. (Indeed, due to parachute payments, it also ends up at Hull, Middlesborough etc etc).

That doesn’t happen in Spain. And that is a huge factor in the lack of competitiveness in La Liga.

Strong leagues need strong management.

 

Am I the only person who is starting to think that Liverpool are slowly becoming a poor imitation of Newcastle United?

Hear me out:

  • A club overly-romantic about past glory.
  • Fanatical supporters who believe they’re entitled to success.
  • A succession of beleaguered managers that have failed to win the title.
  • Fandom overriding rational logic.
  • Disgruntled players who see their future elsewhere.
  • A belief that a messiah in the form of an ex-player/manager will come and save the day.

You see, not such a far-fetched comparison is it? Some similarities are uncanny. The only thing missing is a fat, meddling, buffoon from London! Hold on, isn’t Roy Hodgson from Croydon? (ok, that was a little harsh).

As a Liverpool fan I’ve been perturbed and a little surprised about all the column inches Liverpool FC have been consuming over the last few days. There seems to be genuine hysteria emanating from the club.

It was embarrassing to hear cries of “Hodgson for England” and “Dalglish” from the fans during the recent home defeat to Wolves. Alright yes, Roy Hodgson hasn’t done a good job as Liverpool manager. Actually in truth, he hasn’t even done an average one but the level of hostility towards the man is becoming unacceptable.

Every interview he has conducted has been brutally assassinated and taken out of context. Even something as banal as Hodgson rubbing his face is now up for discussion on the LFC internet forums. Ex-players who in the summer were praising his appointment have now trickled out of the woodwork to publicly damn him.

Hodgson isn’t the only one to have fallen foul of the Liverpool fans of late. Paul Konchesky, a limited but willing player has become a target of the boo boys in the last few weeks. It would appear that a few disparaging remarks made by Konchesky’s mum about the city of Liverpool and its fans on Facebook (I know…. Facebook???) has done a lot of damage. Didn’t she have anything better to do, like change her profile picture or send a friend request???

Liverpool fans are supposed to be the most knowledge football fans around (truly a self-proclaimed notion). Therefore, can they not see that the club as a whole is going through a rebuilding process and need some patience? A magic wand will not be waved and everything will be rosy again. No plaster or band-aid can cover over the mistakes made in the last 18 months.

The new owners Fenway Sports Group (FSG or formerly known as NESV) will need time to evaluate the structure and long-term planning of the club. Changes will be made, I’m certain. These changes however, need to be the correct ones for the club. No quick-fixes here please! Whilst I admire and greatly respect Kenny Dalglish (affectionately known as ‘the King’ by many). He is a man who has not managed a football club for 11 years!

I watch with baited breath to see how Liverpool football club conducts itself over the next two transfer windows. Most importantly the current one, which is already four days old. New players are a priority and prudence as well as conscientiousness will have to be exhausted. The question is, will the board back Hodgson and give him the money he desperately needs?

It will seem inevitable that there will a parting of the ways between the club and manager at some point in the near future. My only wish is that it’s done at the end of the season in an amicable way. That will allow Hodgson to leave with some dignity instead of with his tail tucked between his legs.

The words “You’ll Never Walk Alone” are paramount to the club. Enough of the witch-hunts and agenda’s.  It’s time to be united.

Dragged through the mud and courtroomsFinally the Liverpool Football Club takeover has come to a dramatic end.

The soap opera that saw the club embroiled in court room battles, injunctions, £1 billion lawsuits claims and counter claims, personal accusations, and the very serious the threat of the club going into administration loomed large.

The Hicks and Gillet years will always be remembered as the leadership that had brought one of English Football brightest institutions steeped in success and tradition to its crumbling knees.

A grim outlook that has been replicated on the pitch with the humbling defeats to lowly League 2 outfit Northampton in the Carling Cup, and Premier League new boys Blackpool respectively. It could be easy to remark on what has occurred and pick the bones over the whole sorry episode, but for this article a different direction is going to be taken.

With this post I am going to refer to something I wrote almost four years ago during my Masters studies in a discussion forum over the state of English football, and to a degree the sport as a whole and what it represents in the early 21st Century. Also reviewed was the worrying and increasing dependency of finance within the game.

The reference to the proposed Liverpool takeover at the time in the piece was that of two suitors, Dubai International Capital, and what proved to be the sucessful bid from Tom Hicks and George Gillett. With the consistent talk of Manchester United’s financial situation and visible protests, the literal transformation  of  the Manchester City’s fortunes, and Portsmouth being the first Premier League club to go in to administration  within this four year timeframe, I pose this question once read, has much changed regarding the sport and the highlighted issues mentioned?

Like always enjoy folks….

From my perspective the current trend that seems to be taking place in English football regarding club ownership, is quite a delicate and complicated situation that is not easy to unravel.  Liverpool FC is the most recent club to be the subject of a takeover bid. Arguably this would present an instant short-term resolution and a bright rosy future for the club but I have my reservations.

As a fan of the club without doubt the initial appeal of the proposed takeover would place the club in a stronger position where they could compete with the present market setter’s Chelsea in terms of economic resources off the pitch and naturally on-pitch by attracting the big-name star players. Although this may not guarantee an immediate change of Liverpool’s fortunes on the playing field from possible title-contenders to actual annual champions, without question it would put the club on par if not surpass some of the world’s top clubs. Clearly all this talk of Premiership clubs being taken over is not a coincidence but clearly a direct relation to what has occurred at Chelsea FC, and their resulting dominance.

Despite waning public standing amongst football fans of Chelsea, what cannot be disputed is Roman Abramovich’s commitment to the club, and presenting him as a genuine football fan. Which introduces the question how or what makes a genuine football fan? Is it merely because a person states that they follow a particular team, buy the clubs memorabilia, or regularly attend matches no matter the distance or cost?

Well whatever the basis maybe, Abramovich may forward his case stating he brought the club outright. In doing so he instantly wrote off the club’s pending £80 million debt, and has spent heavily on attaining the best human resources available be it players, management and administrative staff. If that’s not enough we the football viewing public regularly see him on our television screens always watching his prestigious acquisition every time they play.

Aside from Chelsea, recent reports have suggested that Abramovich now plans to commit £20 million to his native Russia and its national football team in developing state-of-the-art facilities in which current players will use and help develop talent in future players. It could be said that this gives evidence to Abramovich’s keen interest in football. Perhaps Chelsea’s benefactor is an isolated case, but this brings me to my initial concern with the sudden interest of such individuals and Premiership clubs. Do these people really have a genuine interest in football and the well being of the clubs they are proposing to buy?

As a Liverpool fan I am not that bothered what nationality is stated in the passport of the owner now or in the future, all that concerns me is are they going to do right by the club. The Premiership has a rich cosmopolitan flavour with many players, managers and their nationalities represented in the league. I feel that this has heightened the playing standard set in England so in theory why can’t the same be said of overseas owners and investors?

My fear is that we might have a situation where such grouped individuals are merely looking to strip the tenuous but prosperous investments some clubs may retain, just to line their own pockets or any other drastic act that is detrimental to the clubs future. I suppose I say this because my worry is that football is our national game and although globally popular I am always concerned do these individuals recognise what these clubs mean to people. Due to the fact they do not live or have not grown following a club and the English football culture.

I understand that the way the game is at present, it is no longer just a game. A statement that which brings me to reference the article ‘Play Element In Contemporary Sport’ by Johann Huizinga. In which he refers to the loss in free spirit play displayed in sport. This sentiment is a suitable description trend appearing in English football. Top-level soccer is no longer about playing the game; it is big-time business on all fronts with mere participation was sidestepped long ago and winning and losing is now taking a back seat. But is the imminent future and success of clubs pending on finding a rich individual, overseas or over wise? Is the league table going to resemble a financial rich list with the wealthiest owner at the top in an ascending order? Time will tell…

 

Badge of Sheffield Wednesday

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On a quiet news day at the end of July, there was an item at the end of a radio broadcast that virtually passed by unnoticed. I stopped in my tracks, in slight disbelief, as if I’d be able to hear it again. A throwaway one sentence update at the end of the sports bulletin informed listeners that a last minute loan from a bank had rescued Sheffield Wednesday from going into administration. 

I immediately logged onto the internet, amazed and slightly ashamed that I hadn’t known that one of the world’s oldest football clubs was close to extinction. A rudimentary search gave the details – a £550,000 debt to HM Revenue & Customs had been covered at the eleventh hour by a loan from the Co-Operative Bank.

The surprise remained though, and for me marked a tipping point in the current state of English football. Sheffield Wednesday, formed in 1867, were founder members of The Alliance League (and its first champions), later The Football League, and even members of the inaugural Premier League. A club steeped in both footballing and social history had almost disappeared without most people noticing. Of course, it’s not just Sheffield Wednesday.

The question, for me, is why doesn’t anyone care? My first thought was that most people don’t view clubs like Wednesday as any more than just football clubs. Without getting too pretentious, the oldest football clubs in England are inextricably linked to everything that defines our nation: industry, class, war and wealth.

There’s a reason that the north-west has a greater concentration of football clubs than any other part of the nation. There’s a reason also that the West Midlands has several of the oldest clubs in existence. There’s a reason that whilst London has many of the countries biggest clubs, none have ever won the European Cup. Football clubs provide a rich tapestry of the evolution of England – to chart football’s history is to chart the history of the working classes, industrialisation and the shifting of power and wealth between evolving cities.

Yet, to the general public, the perception of football is as a noveau riche industry flooded with undeserved millions. An uncouth thugs game that titillates the masses. In my mind, there is undoubtedly still a snobbery about football amongst those with old money and real power. If any other institution that was over 140-years old was this close to failure, there would be uproar. Imagine the uproar if the Royal Ballet (a sprightly 79-years old) or a similar institution were on the verge of collapse. In fact, there was more public outcry over the abolition of the UK Film Council, an entirely worthy organisation but one with only a 10-year history of contributing to society.

But to point fingers at snobbery and the wider public is unfair. Football has steadily increased wealth for those at the top of the pyramid system in England, and ruthlessly punished those towards the bottom. In a sport swimming in cash, the volatility and uncertainty for clubs outside the top flight has never been so high. Since the formation of the Premier League in 1992, at least 45 of the 92 Football League clubs have entered administration, many more than once. That list includes Barnsley, Derby County, Leeds United and Notts County, the oldest professional football club in the world. Yet most fans and the ‘custodians’ of the professional game couldn’t give a stuff.

When football itself does not care about its rich heritage, why should anyone else? 

With apologies to fans who support clubs outside the Premier League, we have been stupefied by ‘the greatest league in the world’, whilst the rest of our great sporting and national history is left to flounder. We’ve been distracted by the shiny and glossy variety of top flight football, like a child with a new toy gadget who unwittingly but callously discards his faithful dog-eared teddy.

I don’t know how, but we should not let our oldest and most distinguished clubs slip away so silently. Football clubs are not an expendable part of British history. One day, perhaps when the sheikhs, Americans and oligarchs have abandoned the Premier League for a bloated European super league or taken their money home in boredom, we might find time to survey the wider landscape of English football and rue the fact that we let some of the greatest and oldest institutions of the sport go to the wall without so much as a decent protest or a respectable farewell.