Fans say football regulator needs to be effective

Helen Richardson
BBC North East political reporter
PA Media Front entrance to the Stadium of Light in Sunderland with the club's logo on the wall above and the words Stadium of Light written in gold lettering below that. Fans - deliberately blurred by the camera to show motion - are in the foreground.PA Media
SAFC fans are hopeful a regulator will help

Football fans and experts across the North East of England and Cumbria say they broadly support the idea of an independent regulator for the national game, as long as it would be effective.

The Football Governance Bill is currently making its way through the House of Lords and will then be debated by MPs in the Commons.

The government says the new law would protect clubs, fans and the future of the game.

But the Premier League is concerned regulation could have a negative impact on financial competitiveness and investment.

Most football clubs in the region have had experience of contentious owners, financial woes and controversy.

Darlington's is arguably one of English football's greatest disasters.

George Reynolds - later to be convicted of tax evasion - bought the club in 1999 and built a 25,000 seater stadium, which he named after himself.

It left the Quakers in financial ruin, forced into administration and thrown out of the league.

Getty Images A flood-lit 25,000 seat football stadium with players training on the pitch, viewed from the back of the stands through a len that takes in the whole panorama of seats, green pitch and encouraging messages written across the rows of seats.Getty Images
The Reynolds Arena - later renamed - was built in 2003 as part of millionaire George Reynolds's investment in Darlington FC

The club is now owned by fans. A network of about 1,200 members pay the players' wages every month from their own pockets.

Darlington FC chief executive David Johnston said clubs get into financial difficulty because "people will go chasing a dream".

"The lure of the Premier League, the riches that come from the Premier League," he says.

"You need the right control and discipline as you would any business. A football club is no different."

It is hoped a new regulator would ensure Darlington's experience is assigned to history.

Chief executive of Darlington FC, David Johnston, who has short greying hair and a trimmed beard and is wearing a black high-necked jumper. He is pictured on his sofa at home with a picture on the wall and a pine chest of drawers behind him.
Darlington FC chief executive David Johnston believes a regulator would benefit clubs like his

Independent regulation should also mean football clubs cannot raise ticket prices, move stadiums, or change colours or logo without consulting fans first.

They would be also be required to publish what action they were taking to improve equality, diversity and inclusion - a move that is welcomed by Prof Stacey Pope of Durham University.

"Football clubs still have a very long way to go," she says.

"In fact you could say that many of them still operate in the dark ages."

Men's football has a "significant" problem with sexism and misogyny, Prof Pope believes.

"We know every week at men's football matches women are experiencing gendered violence and abuse," she says.

Prof Stacey Pope standing in front of the Durham University logo. She has shoulder length dark brown hair and a fringe and is wearing a blue dress, plan gold chain, and a black jacket
Prof Stacey Pope of Durham University says the men's game has a "significant problem" with misogyny

Fans are generally supportive of the plan for regulation, but they still have questions.

Sunderland AFC supporter Mike Clark from Whitley Bay says: "With the fit and proper owners test - who makes the decision on who is fit and proper?

"Who decides who has integrity and who doesn't?"

Another Sunderland fan, Ian Smith from Gateshead, believes football is now a business, not a sport.

"We've got to have some level of control," he says.

"Otherwise the richest clubs would get all the best players and the rest would suffer."

Ian Smith, outside the Stadium of Light in Sunderland. He has short grey hair and is wearing a black puffer jacket. He is smiling with a broad grin.
SAFC fan Ian Smith says more regulation is required

One of the biggest challenges facing a new regulator is how to address the huge financial divide between the Premier League and the rest of the football pyramid.

In 2007 "parachute payments" were introduced – money given annually to clubs relegated from the top flight to help them cover player wages when they drop to the championship.

The Premier League gives each relegated club £45m in the first year out of the top flight. That is more than it gives to the other 116 clubs in league one, league two and the national league.

Money from media rights is also a big issue. Every year the Premier League gets billions from broadcasters and it controls how that money is shared out among the rest of the pyramid.

'Chasm' between leagues

The Premier League says it is concerned a regulator would have "unprecedented and untested powers to intervene in the distribution of revenues" and that this could have "a negative impact" on competitiveness and investment.

Chief policy and social impact officer Clare Sumner said: "While the government champions growth across the economy, this legislation threatens to achieve the opposite.

"No-one wants the regulator to be causing and then managing the decline of one our greatest and most visible industries - but we genuinely believe that is the risk we run, if we inadvertently get this regulation wrong."

But the English Football League (EFL) has come out in support of regulation, keen to see a fairer distribution of money through the pyramid.

EFL chairman Rick Parry believes there is a "chasm" between the Premier League and the EFL.

"The gap was £11m in 1993 – it's now £3bn," he says.

"That is enormous and it's getting harder and harder for clubs going up and then coming straight back down again.

"There's too much financial jeopardy. You can't have clubs facing catastrophe either when they're relegated or when they're promoted."

Sunderland AFC home ground, The stadium of light, on a sunny Saturday afternoon in the winter. Fans are arriving ahead of a game, wearing coats and hats
Fans ahead of a cup game at Sunderland's Stadium of Light were broadly supportive of independent regulation

Looking at football clubs purely as businesses some ask why they should be subject to regulation.

Assistant professor at Northumbria University's business school, Dr Mark Middling, says they bring "so much meaning" to many members of the community.

"If the hotel across the road goes bust you're not going to get a hoard of previous guests of that hotel trying to raise a phoenix hotel," he says.

"If a club goes down, fans will rally.

"That's the level of passion that separates football clubs from other businesses."

Mark Middling pictured wearing a smart navy suit outside St James Park. He has short dark hair and grey stubble.
Dr Mark Middling of Northumbria University's business school says people care more about their football club than a business

Newcastle United, Sunderland AFC and Middlesbrough FC declined to give their views on the football governance bill at this stage.

League two club Carlisle United says an independent regulator was something they would welcome.

Chief executive Nigel Clibbens says football plays a "very special part in the fabric of society" and was "right at the heart of the community" in many places.

"That needs protecting and nurturing," he says.

"We've been fortunate at Carlisle that our ownership's been good but there's been other clubs where their ownership has let them down.

"This is about protecting clubs, not just now but for the long term."

Getty Images A stand and pitch at Carlisle United ground Brunton Park, pictured through the goal net so the net string is blurry. The words Carlisle United are written on the front of one of the stand roof's peaks.Getty Images
Carlisle United is broadly in favour of independent regulation

The Department for Culture, Media and Sport says the law will "put fans back at the heart of the game, take on rogue owners, and crucially help to put clubs on a sound financial footing".

The government hopes it will come into force later this year.

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