Football's Crisis Shines Merciless Light on Game's Inequalities

While the Premier League is straining to resume matches and thereby fulfil its lucrative pay-TV contracts League One and Two clubs could go bust. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
While the Premier League is straining to resume matches and thereby fulfil its lucrative pay-TV contracts League One and Two clubs could go bust. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
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Football's Crisis Shines Merciless Light on Game's Inequalities

While the Premier League is straining to resume matches and thereby fulfil its lucrative pay-TV contracts League One and Two clubs could go bust. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
While the Premier League is straining to resume matches and thereby fulfil its lucrative pay-TV contracts League One and Two clubs could go bust. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock

f one impact of the Covid‑19 catastrophe has been to hold Britain rigid and shine a merciless light on all our structures, it was inevitable that football’s struggles would culminate in a piercing look at the money. And just as there are calls for fundamental improvements to the nation’s inequities when the horror is finally over, a focus is emerging on football’s own inequalities and how sustainable they really are.

The financial gap between the Premier League and the rest has widened exponentially over the 28 years since the First Division clubs broke away from sharing with the Football League’s other three divisions, but the divide now is brutal. While the Premier League is straining to resume matches and thereby fulfil its lucrative pay-TV contracts, and seeking government support by saying that it distributes big money down the system, League One and Two clubs are contemplating packing up and fearing many could go bust.

The EFL chairman, Rick Parry, a shrewd appointment by the league, is highly experienced, an architect of the Premier League breakaway and its first chief executive, who believes the gap grew too vast. During this crisis the culture secretary, Oliver Dowden, and the sports minister, Nigel Huddleston, have been given some quick home-schooling on the realities of football’s finances, and put right on two elements of classic Premier League spin.

The first came after Dowden himself spoke in parliament last month of his desire to get the Premier League playing again, virus permitting, “as soon as possible”, because this would “help release resources through the rest of the system”. Parry is understood not to have been slow to question that, and the EFL told Dowden that as the Premier League had already advanced half of next season’s relatively tiny “solidarity” money, no more funds would be released to its clubs by the Premier League completing this season’s matches.

The second, which infuriated many football people, was the Premier League’s public assurance that it gives about £400m to the EFL a season, so the EFL made clear to the government how that breaks down. Of that total, £273m, almost 70%, is parachute payments, paid to the Premier League’s own few clubs when relegated, and is a profound disrupter of the financial stability and fairness of competition in the Championship.

With Dowden and Huddleston new to their roles they seem to have only just understood the maths: the total solidarity money shared with EFL clubs from the Premier League’s TV deals, which are £8.65bn from 2019-22, is £98m per season, 3.4%. A further £100m has in recent years been spent on grassroots facilities and community projects, which is all good work and much admired and publicised, but amounts also to 3.4%.

So Premier League claims that starting again will “release resources” through the system, and the folding of parachute payments into an overall lump sum of big money descending from the top have been called out. Now, there is a true financial crisis germinating, one of very many within this public health disaster, and a government supporting whole sections of the economy will not be providing aid for a sport soaked in TV billions which trickles too little down.

At Thursday’s video call Dowden and Huddleston asked Richard Masters, the Premier League chief executive, to discuss with Parry and the FA chief executive, Mark Bullingham, how to “ensure finances from the game’s resumption supports the wider football family”. The government also said its controversial backing for football to resume in empty stadiums should be reciprocated with “widening access for fans to view live coverage”. The ministers appear to mean free-to-air TV, but the Premier League, which has not had a single live free‑to‑air match dating back to 1992, is unlikely to do too much if it risks undermining its pay-TV contracts.

Clearly there are major hurdles to overcome if football is to start again, the biggest being the terrible virus that has killed more than 40,000 people in Britain. It is not clear at all if a resumption is possible, safe, appropriate, or will boost the nation’s morale as Boris Johnson has claimed. Troy Deeney is only the latest Premier League player to question restarting in these circumstances.

But when it finally does, and Britain begins to emerge from this crisis, perhaps there could be a reset of football’s divided structures and inequalities, along with all the other necessary rebuilding the country will need.

The Guardian Sport



McLaren Boss Calls for Permanent F1 Stewards after Herbert Axed

Formula One F1 - Las Vegas Grand Prix - Las Vegas Strip Circuit, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States - November 21, 2024 McLaren chief executive Zak Brown before practice REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein a
Formula One F1 - Las Vegas Grand Prix - Las Vegas Strip Circuit, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States - November 21, 2024 McLaren chief executive Zak Brown before practice REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein a
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McLaren Boss Calls for Permanent F1 Stewards after Herbert Axed

Formula One F1 - Las Vegas Grand Prix - Las Vegas Strip Circuit, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States - November 21, 2024 McLaren chief executive Zak Brown before practice REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein a
Formula One F1 - Las Vegas Grand Prix - Las Vegas Strip Circuit, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States - November 21, 2024 McLaren chief executive Zak Brown before practice REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein a

McLaren boss Zak Brown called for permanent stewards in Formula One after the governing FIA dropped former racer Johnny Herbert on Wednesday, arguing his work as a media pundit was incompatible with the role.

Brown, whose team won the constructors' title last season, told the Autosport Business Exchange conference in London that McLaren would happily pay their share of the cost of professional officials.

Stewards are largely unpaid volunteers, other than travel expenses, appointed by the FIA on race-by-race basis to ensure the rules are applied consistently and fairly during race weekends and handing out punishments as necessary.

"I don't think we're set up for success by not having full-time stewards," said Brown.

"As far as paying for stewards, this will probably be unpopular amongst my fellow teams (but) I'm happy if McLaren and all the racing teams contribute. I think it's so important for the sport.

"It can't be that expensive. If everyone contributes it's not going to break the bank."

Herbert, a three-times race winner from 160 starts who competed for an array of F1 teams in the 1980s and 1990s and won the Le Mans 24 Hours, had been scheduled to officiate at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix on March 16.

The 60-year-old former Sky Sports F1 pundit angered four-times world champion Max Verstappen and father Jos last season for media comments about the Red Bull driver's track behaviour, according to Reuters.

"It is with regret that we announce today that Johnny Herbert will no longer fulfil the position of F1 driver steward for the FIA," the governing body said in a statement.

"Johnny is widely respected and brought invaluable experience and expertise to his role. However, after discussion, it was mutually agreed that his duties as an FIA steward and that of a media pundit were incompatible.

"We thank him for his service and wish him well in his future endeavours."

There was no immediate comment from Herbert, one of the stewards in Mexico City last season who handed Verstappen two 10-second penalties for aggressive moves on his McLaren title rival Lando Norris.

"Those penalties in Mexico won’t stop Max Verstappen from pushing Lando Norris off the track in the future," the Briton commented afterwards, referring to the Dutch driver's driving style as "harsh".

"I am such a big fan of Verstappen and it frustrates me massively when he drives the way he did in Mexico," he added.

The Briton has continued to offer opinions, circulated in the media, for betting websites.