The New Zealand Herald

How clubs can be better sports

Queens Park Rangers sets example about doing good in the hood that the rest of the word should follow

- Helen Borich comment Helen Borich is a director of Write Solutions, a copywritin­g, editing and proofreadi­ng service

Football can be a powerful force for change. From the ghettos of Brazil to the council estates of England and beyond, football has the power to transform individual lives and unite communitie­s while giving pleasure to millions of people worldwide. Football is also big business.

Clubs have become global brands commanding lucrative sponsorshi­p deals worth many millions.

Indeed, it comes as no surprise that the top three highest-paid athletes in the world are footballer­s. Messi, Ronaldo and Neymar all earned more than $100 million last year alone.

In this context, the example of humble English Football League club Queens Park Rangers is truly extraordin­ary.

For this relatively small and by no means rich football club has just gifted its stadium naming rights to a charity for free.

Yes, that’s right, they haven’t gone for the highest bidder as you would have expected a club that’s often struggled financiall­y might do. They have quietly and magnanimou­sly renamed their stadium for free.

No longer will football fans and pundits be referring to QPR’s home ground as Loftus Road; instead, it’s now known as the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium.

It’s an incredibly generous gesture that allows the charity a fantastic platform to develop and do an enormous amount of good.

What makes the story even better is that Kiyan Prince was one of QPR’s own. By all accounts an exceptiona­l football talent on the verge of an outstandin­g career, Kiyan was a member of QPR’s youth academy before his life was tragically cut short. Fatally stabbed while

trying to intervene in a fight outside his school, Kiyan was only 15 years old when he died in 2006.

His inspiratio­nal dad, Mark Prince, himself a former boxing champion, has since made it his life’s work to combat knife crime and to inspire young people to take a different path.

QPR, like many other sports clubs, has a long and proud history of making a difference in the community.

Recently recognised as London Community Club of the Year, QPR undertakes a broad range of initiative­s including ongoing projects to support those affected by the Grenfell Tower disaster which was in QPR’s backyard.

Very few sports clubs, though, have taken their commitment to doing good in the community to the level that QPR has, or the example the club has set in involving fans in the process.

QPR drew up a shortlist of five charities and invited fans to vote on which one should be awarded stadium naming rights.

With 63 per cent of the vote, the Kiyan Prince Foundation was the fans’ clear favourite.

QPR’s admirable and innovative initiative is worthy of much greater recognitio­n and fanfare than it’s attracted so far.

Even if only a handful of other sports clubs across all codes were to follow in their footsteps, then sport in general could be a real force for social change.

Imagine, for example, if the Vodafone Warriors were renamed not in response to a big-money sponsorshi­p deal, but in recognitio­n of a local charity making a massive difference on the ground.

What a force for change that would be. And surely such a generous gesture would attract even more lucrative sponsorshi­p deals from companies eager to bask in the reflected glory.

Sport really does have the power to effect change and maybe it’s time clubs in New Zealand thought seriously about how they can contribute to the greater good.

QPR’s worthy example has certainly set the bar high and should provide plenty of food for thought.

Very few sports clubs, though, have taken their commitment to doing good in the community to the level that QPR has. Helen Borich

 ?? Photo / Charlotte Wilson ?? QPR’s Loftus Road stadium is to become known as the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium under a charitable naming rights deal.
Photo / Charlotte Wilson QPR’s Loftus Road stadium is to become known as the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium under a charitable naming rights deal.
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