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16:24 February 8th, 2008

What’s English about it anyway?

Posted by: Simon Evans
Tags: Reuters Soccer Blog

So, who is behind the Premier League’s plan to play some games outside England? Reading today’s papers it seems the finger of blame is being pointed at the American investors in the English game.

In Friday’s Telegraph, Henry Winter writes: “Now we know why the Premier League is the new Klondike for American franchise-owners; why soccer agnostics like the Glazers are really here: it is to take an English institution and float it on the global market. Our game is now theirs.”

In the Guardian, football business writer David Conn also smells the Yankee Dollar behind this proposal: “It feels like the first dramatic innovation influenced by the US owners and the others who bought Premier League clubs as investments, as ‘global brands’, without truly understanding the football traditions their PRs advise them to acknowledge when they do their first press conferences.”

I’ve also checked out a few fans message boards where people are raging about ‘franchises’ and the ’selling of the soul’ of the English game (see the post by Mitch Phillips below as a response to that).

But, leaving aside the fact that FIFA may stop this happening, does anyone stop to ask themselves why the Americans and others have bought into English football?

Far from wanting to ‘Americanise’ the Premier League, I suspect these businessmen are attracted to English football because it offers a greater freedom to do what you want with your money than the very restricted world of U.S sports.

Think about it – the New York Giants didn’t win the Super Bowl because, like Chelsea or Manchester United, they spent far more on wages and transfer fees than other teams. You can’t do that in the NFL – there are salary caps and there is no transfer market in U.S sports in the sense that you can’ t make a $50 million bid for Tom Brady. The result is that unlike in England there is no such thing as a ‘Big Four’ monopolising success for two decades – power rotates and the game is much more interesting as a result. Money talks much louder in London.

In fact, U.S sports have a system where the weakest team gets the best pick of the next year’s young pros which is positively socialistic compared to the naked, raw, anyone welcome, he-who-spends-wins capitalism of the Premier League.

If there was a signal to the Americans to get involved in the Premier League it was probably the arrival of a certain Russian in London who really showed that (unlike in the NFL with its very strict, ‘members only’, ownership policy) anyone with a few million to spare can join the club.

Remember it was the English who created these conditions, it was the English who have been happy to sell their clubs to the highest bidder.

The Americans (and other foreigners) moved into the Premier League because almost anything goes. The sudden discovery of ‘roots’ and ‘national identity’ by English fans is laughable – particularly coming just 48 hours after they were cheering on ‘Fabio Capello’s England’. Fans have been happy to have three of the big four clubs sold off to foreign owners.

Those now crying about identity should ask themselves what exactly is still English about most of the Premier League clubs. Chelsea are owned by a Russian, coached by an Israeli (who follows a Portuguese, two Italians and a Dutchman) and the players are from all over the world. They wear shirts made by a German company and are sponsored by a South Korean electronics firm.

Compare this state of affairs with the supposedly evil greed of U.S sports where there are no professional teams owned by foreign capitalists, the idea of a team featuring just one or two Americans would be laughed at, players come from University sports programmes (unlike English football where schoolboys are bought and sold) and shirt sponsorship is banned.

English football chose to become the most unregulated, laissez-faire, commercialised sports league in the world and the fans have cheered on every step. Now that the (mostly) Asian fans who have helped pour money into their clubs’ coffers may have a chance to see one game a year, the English suddenly bleat about roots and tradition.

Too late, lads.

Simon Evans, Miami

15 comments so far

What’s English about it anyway? - Reuters Soccer Blog

Article on U.S investors infiltrating the premiership; good point made on American sports being more even due to salary caps and fair transfer rules.

- Posted by pligg.com

I’d say that’s about right. English football decided the path it wanted to travel over a decade ago, and this is no more or less than expected. How long before Man Utd are the first team on the moon?

- Posted by London

And while we’re at it, the only way this is all going to be sustainable is if the clubs take the inevitable next step and award themselves permanent places in the Premier League and Champions League, instead of leaving everything to competition (and therfore chance).
These clubs have Golden Tickets from Willy Wonka and they’re never, ever going to give them up.
I’m shifting my support to Tranmere.

- Posted by London

Brilliant Observatioin. English football would do good to follow the example of American sports and to welcome American dollars. Parody is good in sports if not for the fans, but also for the entire leauge. More American football games sell out there tickets when all teams are given a chance.

- Posted by Zac

[...] think that for English fans to complain now about the globalisation of football is laughable: that horse bolted long ago, they say. What kind of product did you think you were buying into [...]

- Posted by Pitch Invasion » Politics and Economics » The 39th Game

Ah, but soccer is a truly global game. The NFL would not be beyond importing from outside their shores if anybody else played it to any appreciable standard.

I still love the idea that the sport synonymous with apple pie America has a socialist infrastructure.

Exhuming McCarthy indeed.

- Posted by Lenin's Whippers

I love your final statement, “Now that the (mostly) Asian fans who have helped pour money into their clubs’ coffers may have a chance to see one game a year, the English suddenly bleat about roots and tradition.”

Well said. Those who profess they love the game and tradition can allow Manchester United and Liverpool to be saddled with huge personal debts by American owners, yet they raise a ruckus when the EPL go aboard in pursuit of more money.

- Posted by JohnST

There is one team with foreign ownership, the Seattle Mariners. When the team was looking to move in the early 1990s, Nintendo purchased the majority of the team, but Major League Baseball wanted the management of the team to be Americans, which it is, but the majority of the team is owned by Nintendo and Hiroshi Yamauchi the former chief of Nintendo in Japan has even been used to help sign Japanese players.

- Posted by Jeremy Brahm

Thanks for that information Jeremy - interesting to note the reaction of MLB. I’m not saying that reaction is right btw, but it is certainly a contrast to the ‘in you come boys’ attitude of the Premier League.

Lenin’s Whippers: Yes, I am sure you are right - the NFL would import players if there were any good foreigners to import (actually there were two Brits in the Super Bowl this year!) Major League Baseball has a significant number of non-US born players and that number will likely grow. Would the Boston Red Sox fans accept a Chelsea style team made up entirely of Hondurans, Japanese, Venezuelans, Cubans and Dominicans without a single American in the starting line-up? I honestly don’t think they would.

Anyway, that is slightly off topic - what strikes me from the debates all over the web on this issue is that there is very little recognition from English fans of the genuine support for their teams outside of England.

I wonder how global ‘EPL’ fans feel about this?

- Posted by Simon

I think English fans are mostly unaware and/or unconcerned about the legions of foreign fans they share their clubs with, which is fair enough.

I see the bigger problem not as a the Premier League losing its “Englishness” (because, you know, too late) but with the extra fixture. If each team plays every other team home and away then everything evens out at the end of the season. Add in an extra random game and you make a mockery of the league system.

So for me the problem isn’t the foreign location of the extra game, it’s just the extra game.

- Posted by Daryl

Yes, the EPL offers the Americans the freedom to spend, no salary caps etc etc.

Down at Liverpool, that statement’s absolute rubbish! And rubbish is being very polite. I think the ‘do what you want with your money’ for Hicks & Gillet = spending as little as possible, squeezing the life out of Liverpool and then walking away with a profit. As many players have been sold by Liverpool to balance what was spent to buy Torres and a few others. Debt for the new stadium has been put on the club.

S.O.S.

That aside, the benefits of playing 1 game in another continent with die-hard fans who wake up in the dead of the night to support their adopted team and have poured tonnes of money for the club buying expensive new original merchandise every season, paying expensive cableTV subscriptions, all without asking for anything in return and all for the love of their club.

This far outweighs selling a club to Americans who only regard football as a sport played with an oval ball.

- Posted by Five Times

I agree with every word Simon, top blog. As you know Italy has gone backwards. A few years ago there were foreign coaches like Fatih Terim, Eriksson and even David Platt, sort of.
Now there is no foreign coach in Serie A and some ‘big’ clubs like Lazio have no money to spend at all. Yet in a way it’s more ‘real’

- Posted by Mark Meadows

[...] Soccer Blog-What’s English about it anyway? [...]

- Posted by Simon Evans » Blog Archive » Catching up

What about Redknapp? Does Harry have a place in the Englsh setup - or is Harry’s place on the sidelines?

- Posted by posh

Very interessting Football Blog:

http://euro2008.swissinfo.ch

- Posted by Harry

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