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[Football] Alan Pace's statement. (Burnley)



TomandJerry

Well-known member
Oct 1, 2013
11,463
Dear supporters,

A breakaway Super League should never have happened, but this is about much more than club self-interest and is an example of how the governance of football in this country and throughout Europe needs to be reformed.

The six*Premier League*clubs taking this step have turned their back on our moral duty as custodians of the game to protect English football and, the spirit of the sport, at all costs.

Weak governance has led us to this point.

Therefore, today I am calling on Boris Johnson and Oliver Dowden to follow their welcome intervention and now appoint an independent regulator to protect English football with legislation.

As a former financier, I understand the commercial considerations for these clubs and can appreciate their frustration at being the largest revenue drivers for the UEFA Champions League, without receiving the same levels of influence and reward.

However, this is a move which does not treat fans or the game’s history with the respect it deserves and is not the solution.

We need to ensure that football is protected. The game is bigger than all of us, and its future cannot be compromised by self-interest.

The contempt the proposals have received was inevitable.

It is truly a shame that it has come to this. We are the greatest league in the world and we can do more to bring people together and set the path forward for all and not just the few.

We have a responsibility to all that have come before us and all those who will follow in the wider game.

While we too at Burnley have ambitious plans to grow the club’s revenues, those plans have always been on the back of performance, both on and off the pitch, and not artificial protectionism.

As my business partners and I have now been working and living in Burnley for several months and are in the process of moving permanently to the area, I would greatly encourage my fellow chairmen to walk the streets around their local communities and get to know them personally, rather than creating more distance between themselves and fans.

This is also why I invite No10, the Government and the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport to now legislate.

Ultimately, we need a strong regulator in the style of OFTEL or OFCOM to protect and build the interests of English football.

It’s time to do things differently!

Over the coming days, I will be working hard alongside my fellow club owners and governing bodies to fight these proposals and find a solution to improved football governance in this country.

I welcome initial noises coming from the UK Government and encourage them to provide strong leadership on these proposals, given their seismic impact on the UK’s cultural landscape.

Yours, in Football

Alan Pace



Sent from my EML-L09 using Tapatalk
 




VAL1850

Well-known member
Nov 22, 2008
1,921
Beachy Head & WSU
Well said

"While we too at Burnley have ambitious plans to grow the club’s revenues, those plans have always been on the back of performance, both on and off the pitch, and not artificial protectionism.
 


Uh_huh_him

Well-known member
Sep 28, 2011
10,679
Interesting idea to bring in a regulator.

I daresay there are a few clubs who wouldn't welcome being audited.
 


Badger Boy

Mr Badger
Jan 28, 2016
3,655
I daresay there are a few clubs who wouldn't welcome being audited.

Which is exactly why it should happen and is absolutely necessary. I wonder if this is the beginning of the process to introduce salary caps? Or like in USA you can only spend a maximum percentage of your turnover on wages.
 


Swansman

Pro-peace
May 13, 2019
22,320
Sweden
The guy bought the club with its own money while putting it in debt... he should know a thing or two about the lack of regulations.
 




hart's shirt

Well-known member
Jul 8, 2003
10,188
Kitbag in Dubai
Ultimately, we need a strong regulator in the style of OFTEL or OFCOM to protect and build the interests of English football.

Based on current sentiment, OFOFOF would seem appropriate.
 


RexCathedra

Aurea Mediocritas
Jan 14, 2005
3,499
Vacationland
In major leagues in the US, generally your total spend on payroll is capped, and the cap's the same for all teams regardless of revenue -- the caps are based on league overall revenue. Revenue sharing is commonnplace, from TV money, but also some of the revenue from other some other sources.

For NFL football, there are whole websites dedicated to tracking the cap.

All major US sports have either a hard cap, or a soft cap, or a luxury tax...or a combination.
 


matt

Well-known member
Mar 19, 2007
1,539
In major leagues in the US, generally your total spend on payroll is capped, and the cap's the same for all teams regardless of revenue -- the caps are based on league overall revenue. Revenue sharing is commonnplace, from TV money, but also some of the revenue from other some other sources.

For NFL football, there are whole websites dedicated to tracking the cap.

All major US sports have either a hard cap, or a soft cap, or a luxury tax...or a combination.

And none of them have promotion/relegation. A salary cap does seem like a blindingly obvious addition, but might create issues with teams who are relegated (assuming there is a lower cap in the Championship).
 


Surf's Up

Well-known member
Jul 17, 2011
10,169
Here
As my business partners and I have now been working and living in Burnley for several months and are in the process of moving permanently to the area, I would greatly encourage my fellow chairmen to walk the streets around their local communities and get to know them personally, rather than creating more distance between themselves and fans.


JCLs - presumably moving to two ups/two downs with outside privy , a corner shop and a Rovers Return - oh, and they'll artificially inflate the local price of wippet's and flat caps as they bulk purchase same.
 


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