Deadly Dychonomics: Premier League Clubs Won't Care if EFL Teams Go Under

Jamie Vardy scores a consolation goal for Fleetwood in their 5-1 home defeat to Blackpool in the FA Cup third round in 2012. | Photograph: Phil Oldham/Shutterstock
Jamie Vardy scores a consolation goal for Fleetwood in their 5-1 home defeat to Blackpool in the FA Cup third round in 2012. | Photograph: Phil Oldham/Shutterstock
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Deadly Dychonomics: Premier League Clubs Won't Care if EFL Teams Go Under

Jamie Vardy scores a consolation goal for Fleetwood in their 5-1 home defeat to Blackpool in the FA Cup third round in 2012. | Photograph: Phil Oldham/Shutterstock
Jamie Vardy scores a consolation goal for Fleetwood in their 5-1 home defeat to Blackpool in the FA Cup third round in 2012. | Photograph: Phil Oldham/Shutterstock

One by one, they lined up to condemn the madness. “It’s certainly destroying my enjoyment of the game of football,” said Roy Hodgson. “You’re ruining football for everybody,” fumed Jamie Carragher. “The game’s gone,” tweeted Andros Townsend. “Maybe we can all get together and stop it,” urged Steve Bruce.

Meanwhile, on Monday a group of football fans, former players, administrators, and politicians sent an open letter to the government warning that many EFL and National League clubs were “unable to meet their payroll obligations for next month”, and that without government assistance English football was facing “the collapse of the league structure that we have known for over one hundred years”.

The two were unrelated.

Perhaps it was no surprise, on reflection, that the imminent implosion of the domestic game generated considerably less ill-feeling over the weekend than the Premier League’s adoption of a handball rule that virtually everyone else in Europe was already using. This is, after all, how feelings work. They’re primal, unfocused, irrational, disproportionate. If someone slaps you in the face, your first thought isn’t necessarily going to run to all the millions of other people in the world getting punched.

But partly, too, it stems from the basic sense that the Premier League and the rest of English football may as well now exist in different worlds: a growing disconnect that the coming days could bring into ever sharper focus. On Tuesday, the Premier League clubs will hold a virtual meeting to discuss the game’s looming financial crisis, with little prospect of fans returning to stadiums unless the government makes another of its sudden and unceremonious U-turns.

And so one of the items on the agenda will be the possibility of providing emergency financial support to clubs further down the ladder, who rely disproportionately on gate income for their solvency. The culture secretary, Oliver Dowden, has already urged Premier League clubs to “step up to the plate” and “start looking after the football family as a whole”. All of which raises a host of supplementary questions. Namely: why would they? What’s in it for them? And is there not a certain doomed, unicorns-and-fairies idealism in expecting English football’s elite to care about propping up a system they have spent years actively seeking to obliterate?

It is at this point that people will generally throw in nice-sounding words like “ecosystem” and “the greater good”. They will point out how many of today’s Premier League stars – Jamie Vardy, Raheem Sterling, Harry Maguire – were forged at EFL clubs. Implicit in this is the idea that from top to bottom, we are all somehow part of an organic and interdependent whole. That when one club goes under, it weakens everyone.

For an alternative standpoint you only had to ask the Burnley manager, Sean Dyche, who took a dim view of Premier League clubs being pressured into bailing out their poorer counterparts. “Does that mean every hedge fund manager who is incredibly successful does that to the hedge fund managers who are not so successful?” he sniffed. “Do the restaurants who are surviving look after the ones who are not? If you are going to apply it to football, you have to apply it to everyone and every business.” (Congratulations, Sean: you’ve just invented social democracy!)

At its heart, Dychonomics is underpinned by a heartbreaking, devastatingly cynical, and yet largely accurate idea of the modern football club, which is essentially an animal of the market: one that sees not a pyramid but a jungle of predators and prey. Big clubs may not necessarily need smaller clubs to go under – far better, surely, to maintain them in vassalage as an easy talent pipeline and loan destination for young players – but they’re probably not too fussed either way. Big-club fanbases – now more disparate, international, and overwhelmingly organized online – certainly seem to care less about smaller clubs than they ever did.

Or, to put it another way: there may be individuals at Manchester United or Manchester City who personally mourn the plight of Macclesfield Town or Bury, or those we may yet lose. But the organism as a whole will feel nothing at all. It’s the same reason Amazon wants to shut your local bookshop, why Pret a Manger is indifferent to the fate of the sandwich shop round the corner, why the Athletic wants traditional newspapers to bleed to death. Nothing personal, you understand. But expecting the modern super-club to heed any impulse other than its own avarice is a bit like asking Siri to mend your broken heart.

And so, here we are: raging at handball decisions while an entire way of life goes to the wall. Perhaps this was inevitable once we began to recondition the entire concept of football around escapism and mass entertainment, discarding all its alternative meanings in the process. Football, the employer. Football, the glue and the pride of small towns. Football, the nice day out. Burn the entire structure from the ground up and few will bat an eyelid. Tamper with the product even one iota, and people will start howling about “moral corruption”, perversion and theft.

Meanwhile, whether it’s a condition-strapped Premier League loan or a massive cheque from Rishi Sunak, you assume someone will see the PR value in saving the EFL for now. In the long run, though, the triumph of Dychonomics is more or less complete. The only way the game can emerge from this crisis intact is if everyone manages to put aside their self-interest and work together for the common good. Well, we generally know how that turns out.

(The Guardian)



Harrison and Skupski Win Australian Open Doubles Title in 1st Major Together

Christian Harrison (L) of the USA and Neal Skupski (R) of Great Britian pose with the winners trophy after winning the men’s doubles final against Jason Kubler and Marc Polmans  of Australia on day 14 of the 2026 Australian Open tennis tournament at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, 31 January 2026. EPA/JOEL CARRETT
Christian Harrison (L) of the USA and Neal Skupski (R) of Great Britian pose with the winners trophy after winning the men’s doubles final against Jason Kubler and Marc Polmans of Australia on day 14 of the 2026 Australian Open tennis tournament at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, 31 January 2026. EPA/JOEL CARRETT
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Harrison and Skupski Win Australian Open Doubles Title in 1st Major Together

Christian Harrison (L) of the USA and Neal Skupski (R) of Great Britian pose with the winners trophy after winning the men’s doubles final against Jason Kubler and Marc Polmans  of Australia on day 14 of the 2026 Australian Open tennis tournament at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, 31 January 2026. EPA/JOEL CARRETT
Christian Harrison (L) of the USA and Neal Skupski (R) of Great Britian pose with the winners trophy after winning the men’s doubles final against Jason Kubler and Marc Polmans of Australia on day 14 of the 2026 Australian Open tennis tournament at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, 31 January 2026. EPA/JOEL CARRETT

Sixth seeds Neal Skupski and Christian Harrison defeated Australia's wildcard pairing of Jason Kubler and Marc Polmans 7-6(4) 6-4 to capture the Australian Open men's doubles title on Saturday in their first Grand Slam event as a team.

The British-American duo's victory at Rod Laver Arena gave Harrison his first Grand Slam title and marked Skupski's fourth in doubles and mixed doubles, though his first outside Wimbledon.

The partnership is remarkably fresh, as the pair started playing together only two weeks ago in Adelaide after training for a week together in Baton Rouge in December.

"We obviously started playing together in Adelaide two weeks ago now," Reuters quoted Skupski as saying.

"We didn't know obviously how it would go. It seems to be going pretty well so far!"

With the roof closed at Rod ⁠Laver Arena due to the rain, the match began at a fast pace under the lights and proved to be an entertaining affair, as the opening set went with serve until Harrison and Skupski broke for a 4-2 lead.

But with the raucous Australian fans firmly behind them, Kubler and Polmans - wearing his trademark legionnaire hat - broke Harrison's serve and consolidated it to level the set at 5-5 before forcing a tiebreak.

They were neck-and-neck in the ⁠tiebreak at 4-4 until the British-American duo inched ahead and took the opening set when Skupski smashed an emphatic overhead shot at the net to silence the home fans.

In the second set, Harrison and Skupski broke Polmans' serve early for a 3-1 advantage and they did not look back despite a determined fightback from the Australian pair.

They made it 5-3 on Skupski's serve when Harrison smashed a volley at the net to put the pressure back on the Australians, who managed to keep them at bay by saving a championship point on serve.

But Harrison proved indomitable at the baseline on his own serve as they served for the title.

Although they ⁠failed to convert another championship point, they sealed the title at the third time of asking when the American fired an ace down the middle.

The victory brings another Grand Slam trophy into the Harrison household after his elder brother Ryan, also his coach, won the French Open doubles title in 2017.

"My parents are back home, and I remember I was with them when I watched my brother win the French Open on TV and they were emotional wrecks. So I know they're probably doing the same right now," Harrison said.

"Thanks to my partner, without you it's not possible. I was so excited to just get on the court with you. In some tight moments, I knew your experience was going to help pay off in the end and it did. It was fun to battle in this match together."


Elise Mertens and Zhang Shuai Win Australian Open Women's Doubles Title

Elise Mertens of Belgium and Zhang Shuai, left, of China pose with their trophy after defeating Anna Danilina, right, of Kazakhstan and Aleksandra Krunic of Serbia in the women's doubles final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Elise Mertens of Belgium and Zhang Shuai, left, of China pose with their trophy after defeating Anna Danilina, right, of Kazakhstan and Aleksandra Krunic of Serbia in the women's doubles final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
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Elise Mertens and Zhang Shuai Win Australian Open Women's Doubles Title

Elise Mertens of Belgium and Zhang Shuai, left, of China pose with their trophy after defeating Anna Danilina, right, of Kazakhstan and Aleksandra Krunic of Serbia in the women's doubles final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Elise Mertens of Belgium and Zhang Shuai, left, of China pose with their trophy after defeating Anna Danilina, right, of Kazakhstan and Aleksandra Krunic of Serbia in the women's doubles final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

Elise Mertens marked her return to the No. 1 ranking in women's doubles by combining with China's Zhang Shuai to win the Australian Open title on Saturday.

Back together after four years apart as a team, Mertens and Zhang trailed 3-0 and 4-1 in the first set but rallied to beat Anna Danilina of Kazakhstan and Serbia's Aleksandra Krunic 7-6 (4), 6-4. Mertens and Zhang led the final set 5-0 before withstanding a comeback attempt when Danilina and Krunic won four straight games.

Currently ranked No. 6 in doubles, Mertens, who won the Wimbledon doubles title last year with Veronika Kudermetova, will return to the No. 1 ranking after the Australian Open.

That will mark the Belgian player's 40th cumulative week as No. 1 in doubles and was guaranteed regardless of the outcome of the Melbourne Park final Saturday.

The win Saturday was Mertens' sixth Grand Slam doubles title, including 2021 and 2024 at Melbourne Park. Zhang now has three, including the 2019 Australian Open and the 2021 US Open.

It was their first Grand Slam trophy as a team, having lost the 2022 Wimbledon final in their last appearance together.

“This is like cherry on the cake,” The Associated Press quoted Mertens as saying. “We paired up as a team very last-minute . . . this was our first tournament back together. In the second round we saved three match points, so that kind of took us to another level. An unbelievable two weeks."

Mertens reached the fourth round of women’s singles at Melbourne Park this year before being beaten by eventual finalist Elena Rybakina.
Zhang says she and Mertens adapt well.

“We know how to play finals, we know how to win finals,” Zhang said. “We are both very calm. If something doesn't work . . . we always adjust.”
 


Fulham Sign Man City Winger Oscar Bobb

Norway winger Oscar Bobb (Reuters)
Norway winger Oscar Bobb (Reuters)
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Fulham Sign Man City Winger Oscar Bobb

Norway winger Oscar Bobb (Reuters)
Norway winger Oscar Bobb (Reuters)

Fulham signed Norway winger Oscar Bobb from Manchester City for a reported fee of £27 million ($37 million) on Friday.

The 22-year-old has joined Marco Silva's side on a five-and-a-half-year deal, which reportedly includes a 20 percent sell-on clause.

A graduate of City's youth academy, Bobb had slipped down the pecking order at the Etihad Stadium after the arrival of Ghana forward Antoine Semenyo from Bournemouth earlier in January.

"It feels great to be here. I had a great day meeting everyone and I am very excited," Bobb told FFCtv.

"I have always known Fulham to be a good club, with good players and a great stadium."

Bobb sought insight from Norway teammate Sander Berge before the move to Craven Cottage.

"I spoke to Sander, my good friend, and I spoke to the manager and he explained what the system's like and how the lads are and how the club is. He (Silva) seemed lovely, so it was an easy decision basically," AFP quoted him as saying.

Fulham, who visit Manchester United on Sunday, are seventh in the Premier League.