The Guardian (USA)

Players to wear yellow laces in support of ban on gambling adverts in football

- Paul MacInnes

British footballer­s will stage their first on-pitch protest against the effects of gambling harm this weekend, with more than 100 players showing support for a ban on advertisin­g by bookmakers.

Players in FA Cup, Scottish Women’s Premier League Cup, Women’s Championsh­ip and non-league matches will wear yellow laces as they try to heighten the pressure on government to take action.

The League One side Forest Green will be part of the protest during their FA Cup first-round tie at South Shields, a match being shown live on the BBC. The club’s owner, Dale Vince, said his club were proud to support the initiative, organised by the pressure group The Big Step.

“Gambling companies are exploiting football and football fans, making huge profits at the expense of people’s lives,” Vince said. “Their overwhelmi­ng presence in our national sport is hypernorma­lising an addictive harmful product, with only self-regulation to protect the millions of young fans exposed. This is something Forest Green Rovers stands against.

“We will proudly wear yellow laces this weekend to reinforce our support for the campaign to end all gambling advertisin­g in football.”

Also wearing the laces will be Lewes Women, Glasgow City and the men’s non-league sides Dulwich Hamlet, Billericay Town, Llantwit Major, Headingley AFC and, on Tuesday, the Lewes men’s team. League Two Tranmere will warm up in yellow T-shirts before Saturday’s FA Cup first-round match against Carlisle.

The Big Step calls for an end to gambling advertisin­g and sponsorshi­p in football, a sport where young fans and viewers can be subjected to more than 700 gambling-related messages during a televised Premier League match. Recent Gambling Commission data showed that while overall levels of participat­ion in gambling had remained stable over the past year, the percentage of 16- to 24-year-olds who identified as problem gamblers had more than trebled.

A review of gambling laws was commission­ed by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport in 2020, with a ban on bookmakers’ logos on football shirts one mooted outcome. Two years later a white paper proposing reforms has been delayed four times and is yet to be published.

James Grimes, the founder of the Big Step and a former gambling addict, said: “This weekend is a bold reminder to the government that campaigner­s for gambling reform and our supportive football clubs are not going away until people can go to a match and support their heroes without being encouraged to gamble.”

 ?? Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA ?? Big Step campaigner­s demand gambling reform in July, with Everton among the Premier League clubs who advertise bookmakers on their shirts.
Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA Big Step campaigner­s demand gambling reform in July, with Everton among the Premier League clubs who advertise bookmakers on their shirts.

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