Just in case there’s
a danger of too great an outbreak of pro-Roland sentiment …. What to make of
the club’s response to the “bitterly disappointing” (according to CFO David
Joyes) Financial Fair Play regulations changes, outlined in a statement on the
club site and subsequently repeated in a radio interview reported on the BBC
site (and apparently to be elaborated upon in tomorrow’s programme)?
It does of course
depend on your starting point. If you regard the size of losses being run up by
some Championship (and other) clubs as unsustainable and consequently seriously
destabilising, or if you’ve bought a network of clubs across Europe with a view
to using a consortium model to potentially exploit the FFP changes – if they were
implemented as envisaged – I would imagine that ‘bitterly disappointing’ is a
fair response. Alternatively if you believe that FFP changes are unnecessary
and unwanted, or that a pan-European consortium model is at best the exploiting
of a loophole that should be closed sooner or later and at worst nothing more
than cheating, the reaction would be somewhat different. And if I were writing
the headline for a piece on the vote in favour of the FFP changes, it might
have been along the lines of ‘shock, horror, Championship clubs vote in their
own best interests’.
So let’s not go
claiming that there’s any moral high ground to be claimed, whichever side of the
argument you’re on. The idea that football clubs ‘should’ be run at a profit,
or at breakeven, or at modest losses can’t be grounded in the idea that all
successful businesses follow those guidelines. They don’t, neither ‘should’
they. There is no virtue involved (OK, I had neither a Catholic nor a Calvinist
upbringing). Of course for investment in any business to be justified on purely
commercial grounds there has to be reason to believe that the investment will
show an attractive enough return in an acceptable (for the investor) timeframe
(and if for other reasons an individual/group wishes to pour money into a
football club good luck to them). Given that running a Premiership club at a
profit is no small challenge, that potential return has to come in the form of
the value of the asset, ie the value of your club in the Premiership against
that in the Championship. As long as there are owners – and potential
purchasers who would pass the ‘fit and proper person’ test (which seems to encompass
just about everyone who ever lived) – prepared to fund losses of whatever size (and
for whatever reason) to pursue the Premiership goal, where does
unsustainability and/or unfairness, let alone morality, come into it?
It can only be on the
grounds that either football clubs should be run in a fashion that retains at
least the appearance of a level playing field, much as there are rules
governing the design/speed of a Formula One car, or that football is a special
industry, given its importance in the community (ie the supporters). The former
seems at best a pipe dream as long as the Premiership lure is there, at worse
unnecessary interference. The latter may have more merit, with football clubs
in that sense having more in common with banks, given the consequences of
failure. Only problem then is that if football has shown itself to be adept at
anything in my lifetime it’s been ensuring that clubs very, very seldom actually
go out of existence (and even more rarely relocated to another part of the
country). Supporters may suffer from owners’ excesses in the form of relegation
after administration and points deductions, but at least in all but a few cases
the next week they still have a team to support. Also, in my opinion, FFP is
about as misguided in its thinking and as likely to prove ultimately useless
and current bank regulation reform.
I have no problems
whatsoever in the footballing authorities having the powers to investigate a
club’s finances in order to assess if there is excessive risk being taken, with
the powers to take punitative action if the conclusion is that there is (not
without problems admittedly as docking points from/fining clubs in an exposed
position would have obvious consequences; these can be circumvented by a
warnings procedure to give the owners time to correct the situation, like bank
stress tests if you like). This is after all the job of any company’s auditors.
But if the owner of Bolton Wanderers wishes to pour money into his club and to end
up with a large amount of debt to himself on the books, what exactly is the
problem as in no way is this unsustainable? It’s just a figure in the books. Perhaps
clubs in that situation could be asked to provide something akin to the banks’ ‘living
wills’, to outline how the club would survive in the event of their demise/they
run out of money/they run out of enthusiasm.
I would see such
things as desirable. I actually also favour phasing out parachute payments,
which encourage distortions. As a short-term fix to allow clubs time to adjust
to the widening of the financial gulf between the Premiership and the
Championship they had a time and a place. Now all clubs are aware of the risks
and have had the time to incorporate changes in players’ contracts to alter remuneration
in the event of relegation (parachute payments have worked against this). Of
course that means that it would be more difficult for Premiership teams, especially
the newly promoted, to sign some players. So what? Instead oblige clubs in the
Premiership (and the Championship) to outline how they would cope in the event
of relegation.
What is not desirable
(in my opinion) is some poorly drafted, stupidly rigid, and easily circumvented
formula for what is and what is not sustainable. And that’s to overlook the
possibility that FFP ends up getting challenged in the courts. As with the
banks I actually favour regulation that is geared around ensuring that
risk-takers end up personally carrying the can if those risks end badly, ie
convergence of interest. How on earth can an individual involved with a club
that goes into administration be later considered a fit and proper person to
get involved with another? (Of course the answer comes in the form of a
chequebook.)
So back to Joyes’
statement and comments. He outlined that the clubs which voted in favour of the
easing of FFP rules fell into three main groups. If I was one of the clubs in
one of those groups, I would have voted for the changes. Doesn’t make them (or
me, I hope) ‘immoral’. Perhaps the clue came in the radio interview. He said
(reportedly) that “one of the reasons why our owner bought the club in January
was because FFP was in place” and that “we do have an advantage as we are in a
network of clubs around Europe …” To have viewed view FFP as a done deal as
written can be considered somewhat naïve, or more kindly that a business plan
based on an assumption that it was should have been seen as involving an
element of risk, which may not pay off.
Let’s take another
line. To date, no Championship club has benefited to the extent of securing
promotion to the Premiership from a consortium model. So the issue is not on
the radar. What could happen if and when one does, or for some reason a
club/authority brings the issue to the fore? Could other clubs call for the
current restrictions on ownership of more than one club in England be applied
at a European level, on the grounds that an ability to move players around
between clubs – and potentially to buy players for the consortium with that in
mind – constitutes an unfair advantage and the exploitation of a loophole not
yet closed? Clearly doing this is within the rules as they stand, but as we’ve
seen rules can change. Whether or not a consortium approach is fine, the future
of football, questionable but within the rules, or ’immoral’ is another matter
of opinion. Just let’s not try to pretend that the stance of our club is
anything more than promoting its best interests, to try to defend a perceived
advantage, just as others have done by the way they voted.
3 comments:
Excellent analysis, to make a virtue of frugality may sound good but does not make business sense in football just as it does not in any business. RD is saying that he is going to buck the market by making long term investment decisions(in the Academy) at the expense of medium term ones.Unfortunately there is no evidence thus works,unless you are Crewe and your objective is to stay alive in the fourth division..
Great piece and from independent perspective would be agreeing with you but from a Charlton fan perspective the one thing that always keeps you going is hope that you could progress and achieve greater success, in last twenty years ambition of clubs keeps getting eroded due to hedgemony at top and a few billionaires... anything that gives greatest amount of hope to greatest amount of clubs must surely be good for the game and greatest number of supporters... purely accepting our lot until we get a billionaire owner is not something i buy into... maybe i should have given up when parker forced his transfer to polish lamps boots
Thanks for the comments guys. I did actually try to write another paragraph or two, along the lines of we have absolutely no right to expect someone to buy our club and pour in money, plus something more positive along the lines of Duchatelet has every right to feel proud about the improvements to the ground and the competitive team/squad that has been put together (in direct contrast to the January moves). Just didn't end as neatly.
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