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On the eve of Financial Fair Play, 55 percent of clubs post a lossUEFA revealed fresh details on the woeful state of European club football to Play the Game ahead of the introduction of the new Financial Fair Play measure that aims to curb the game’s endemic losses.
Earlier this year at Soccerex, UEFA’s head of club licensing, Andrea Traverso, revealed that the annual review of Europe’s top clubs was expected to show losses of €1.8 billion in 2010 – up from €1.2 billion in 2009.
Mr Perry also revealed that of the 650 clubs in the annual report, 230 suffered a drop in attendances of five percent or more, and although 130 clubs saw a rise in attendances, the overall picture was “slightly negative.” Clubs continued to drive revenue up with 2010 expected to show an increase in turnover of between 5 percent and 10 percent. However, only 45 percent of the clubs in the annual review broke even. The remaining 55 percent posted a loss. “Incomes have tripled over the last 13 years but it’s not about income, it’s about controlling costs,” said Mr Perry. “Financial Fair Play (FFP) is not an answer to all these problems but we think it will help.” 31 clubs do not meet current criteria According to Perry, 31 clubs from places including Bulgaria, Greece and Spain have already been excluded from the Champions League or Europa League for failing to meet the current UEFA club licensing criteria, and he said that the European body would confront clubs trying to evade the introduction of FFP. “We are not scared of the legal ramifications, nothing difficult is easy,” he added. Stefan Szymanski, an academic from the University of Michigan and the co-author of Soccernomics, responded by claiming that football remains a resilient business with 68 insolvencies at clubs in the top four divisions in England since 1982. Only two clubs had been killed off: Aldershot and Maidstone. “Football is a far more stable business than any other on earth,” claimed Mr Szymanski. “This is because when a club goes under, the creditors don’t want the club to fail.” He went on to brand this as “immoral” and said that the owners of failing clubs who took advantage of creditors’ affection for a club were effectively “stealing.”
“Football is serially unstable,” said Mr Beech, who also offered a different view of what constituted a club. He said that a club existed in three senses: the club as viewed by the fans, the club as a business, and the club as represented by the team on the pitch. “You need to keep all three elements distinct when analysing football,” said Beech, who cited the failure of English club Accrington Stanley, a founder member of the Football League that quit the competition in 1961. “ When fans chanted ‘Save our Stanley’ they really meant ‘Save our board of directors,’ said Beech, who added that this situation remained the same today. FFP may end benefactor model He confessed that the introduction of FFP is unlikely to change the upper echelons of European football, where the top 10 clubs turned over double the amount of revenue earned by the next 10 sides, but the panel agreed that FFP would produce real change in the long-term. Mr Beech argued that FFP would eventually end the benefactor model that is increasingly prevalent in the UK with the ownership of Chelsea by Roman Abramovich and Manchester City by Sheikh Mansour. Another panel member, Christian Müller, chief financial officer of the DFB, argued that the current restricted ownership and rigid licensing of the Bundesliga, including a need to prove positive liquidity before each season in order to get a license, placed German clubs in a far better position to meet the challenges of FFP. “I expect a slow but stable expansion of FFP across Europe,” said Mr Müller. “I expect a change in England, Italy and Spain and a better performance [on the pitch] by the Bundesliga clubs.” Download the UEFA Club licensing and financial fair play regulations here Latest News
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When I spoke of Accrington Stanley being in trouble, I was referring not to the Accrington Stanley which folded in the nineteen sixties, but to the much more recent financial difficulties of the current club. I was arguing that the 'Save our Stanley' campaign was in fact a campaign to save the then board of direcors, i.e. the 'club as company', but that the fans may have (wrongly) seen the 'club as construct' as being threatened.
Stefan and I have been discussing our data since the sesion yesterday, and plan to put our heads together. Any rumours that we will arm-wrestling in the bar tonight to the amusement of our fellow delegates are entirely unfounded!