The Guardian (USA)

The Premier League’s era of vanity worship may be over but the future won’t be equal

- Aaron Timms

This Premier League season will be remembered for many things: as the season when the Kop lost its Klopp, as the season of “Well done boys, good process”, as a time in which the “agent of chaos”, whether named Darwin or Jérémy or Kaoru or Kai, offered a brief and sparkling reprieve from the monotonous precision of the relentless­ly rehearsed modern game. Mostly, though, it will be remembered as the season of teeth.

By near-universal consensus, the points deductions imposed on Everton and Nottingham Forest, as well as the ongoing investigat­ion into Leicester City’s finances (not to mention the 115 charges still pending against Manchester City), prove at long last that the Premier League’s profitabil­ity and sustainabi­lity rules “have teeth” – or “unexpected teeth”, as one commentato­r put it. The Super League fiasco and the ongoing failure of the Premier League to secure an equitable deal for the distributi­on of media revenue down the football pyramid, meanwhile, have highlighte­d the need for a “regulator that has real teeth” – a need that the recently introduced football governance bill, many believe, may help address. The age of the soccer regulators is upon us, and suddenly their fangs are everywhere. Not since the days when Luis Suárez was feasting on the arms and shoulders of his opponents has there been quite so much attention paid in English football to matters of dentition.

There’s no question that we are traveling into an era of much more muscular governance of soccer, in England and across Europe. Rules that have existed in writing for years are now suddenly being enforced with surprising ferocity. Any measure to curb the financial excesses of the past two decades, even the playing field between English football’s giants and minnows, and put the sport on a more sustainabl­e economic footing is surely a good thing – but how sharp are the new adjudicato­ry chompers bearing down on the English game, really? And what does this sudden flurry of regulatory activity mean for the owners of clubs like Chelsea, whose expectatio­ns of easy revenue generation now find themselves suddenly disturbed?

There’s a generous reading to all of this, which presents the recent regulatory outburst as proof of a sincere effort on the part of the Premier League to get its house in order and put top-flight football on a path to more equitable growth, and a cynical one, which holds that regulation is a useful facade to conceal and legitimize deeper inequaliti­es within the game. With apologies to all the footballin­g nostalgics out there, who imagine that the Premier League is going to drop an adverse ruling against Manchester City on the penultimat­e day of the season and send the reigning champions packing to League Two, I tend towards the latter perspectiv­e.

The Premier League’s flurry of rulings and investigat­ions into clubs that have fallen foul of its profitabil­ity rules only makes sense when viewed in the context of the UK government’s determinat­ion to create an independen­t football regulator. Both parties, the Premier League and the government, are now engaged in a form of regulatory competitio­n to win the argument over who is best placed to steward the sport. Everything about the Premier League’s handling of the investigat­ions to date – the strength of the sanctions, the ostentatio­us commitment to due process, the careful reasoning in the written rulings, the independen­ce and impartiali­ty of the commission­s it’s empaneled to hear the cases – has been designed as a demonstrat­ion to the world that the Premier League is quite capable of regulating itself without the need for a pesky, state-created ombudsman to get involved. After the introducti­on of the football governance bill last month, the Premier League issued a comically tepid statement in which it pledged to “study” the bill while registerin­g its “concern” about “any unintended consequenc­es of legislatio­n that could weaken the competitiv­eness and appeal of English football”.

The most important of the Premier League’s profitabil­ity and sustainabi­lity rules is the one that’s unwritten: enforcemen­t cannot become so aggressive as to dull the global appeal of the league.

Whenever a principal empowers an agent and the agent begins to act against the interests of the principal, the problem of “agency costs” arises. The real test of how pointy the Premier League’s new machinery of self-regulation is will come when the commission­s investigat­ing financial breaches begin to act in a way that cuts into the interests of the league’s biggest clubs. Tellingly, it’s teams in the bottom half of the table – those on the way to almostcert­ain relegation or even, in Leicester’s case, already relegated – that have been punished first. Until we see one of the Big Six or Seven (or whatever we’re calling them now) take a hit, the agency costs of the Premier League’s new era of accountabi­lity will remain invitingly low for the clubs at the top.

There’s an existentia­l issue at stake here: how far can independen­t commission­s and regulators go, how effective and uncaptured can they really be, in a world where it’s still the clubs themselves that decide the rules and the distributi­on of revenue? The bigger clubs have outsized influence thanks to

their history, financial heft, and global popularity. Until there’s blood on the floor from a Manchester City or a Chelsea or a Newcastle (just to take three random examples), the Premier League’s profitabil­ity and sustainabi­lity regime will always appear, to jaded eyes at least, like a feudal system of entrenched privilege that punishes the serfs while letting the lords off scotfree.

Already one can picture the lawyers at the top clubs probing the emerging jurisprude­nce on the profitabil­ity rules for signs of weakness, potential loopholes. Spending “in the general interests of football” does not count towards the assessment of profitabil­ity, which has generally been taken to mean that money can be allocated to club infrastruc­ture, women’s teams, and youth academies without limit or sanction. This exemption – who knows? – could eventually become a useful sink in which to launder spending on player wages and transfers; it’s not hard to imagine a near future in which the finest academy facilities on the planet miraculous­ly spring from the soil of England’s top clubs, and a cheese cave blooms in every stand throughout the land.

The big clubs might not even have to probe that far to find ways around the existing regulation­s, since those regulation­s are probably not long for this world. Lost in all the enthusiasm about the rise of the regulators has been an acknowledg­ment that the Premier League itself, as it announced a few weeks ago, is gearing up to completely revamp its architectu­re of financial governance. Regulation with teeth? Given their impending demise, the profitabil­ity and sustainabi­lity rules are a set of dentures at best. Most reports suggest that the Premier League will shift the focus of its financial controls from profitabil­ity to something closer to the “squad cost” ratio that Uefa has introduced. Instead of stipulatin­g a hard currency limit to the annual losses a club can incur, as under the current profitabil­ity rules, this would involve limiting a club’s spending on wages and transfer fees to a set percentage of its revenue.

Whatever form it ultimately settles into, whether it targets profitabil­ity or squad cost, this new regulatory architectu­re almost certainly signals the end of the Premier League’s era of vanity ownership, under which Abramovich­style splashing of the cash, without regard for losses, became a viable pathway to generate on-field success. This is, naturally, a good thing, but it doesn’t necessaril­y portend a more equal world. A squad cost rule will effectivel­y function as a kind of salary cap, but in only the softest sense, and with none of the additional balancing mechanisms (drafts, equal distributi­on of TV income) that make the capped and cartel-like leagues of the major US sports so consistent­ly even. Without redistribu­tive US-style controls to level the overall playing field, a squad cost rule will inevitably benefit bigger clubs, whose revenues dwarf those of the clubs below: Manchester City reported revenue of £712.8m last season, almost three times the £250m in income that Newcastle United – not exactly a club without means – recorded. Needless to say, surviving on 75%, say, of £712m represents a very different propositio­n to life under a fiscal ceiling that taps out at 75% of £250m.

For all clubs, revenue generation now looms as the key off-field challenge, which promises a future of higher ticket prices, more content deals and merchandis­ing, and ever-intensifyi­ng (and ever-infantiliz­ing) NFTstyle assetizati­on of fandom and the “fan experience”. A club like Chelsea seems especially squeezed. Whichever direction the Premier League’s financial rules evolve in, the west London club is going to have to find a way to live within its means and grow its revenue pot at a time when its relatively small stadium, correspond­ingly puny gate receipts, lavish recent spending, exotic amortizati­on tricks, and nowconsist­ent failure to break into the Champions League spots (with their attendant revenue bump) have left it financiall­y vulnerable. If Chelsea’s new US private equity owners took over the club in the hope of generating a quick buck and making a tidy exit, they’re about to find out that at Stamford Bridge in the year of our lord 2024, there’s no easy way out.

The Premier League has directly linked its sudden commitment to “swift developmen­t and implementa­tion of a new league-wide financial system” to the ongoing struggle to reach a deal with the English Football League on the distributi­on of media revenues. Here, again, the urgency around the league’s actions and public declaratio­ns is linked to a desire to get ahead of the still-embryonic football regulator. Under the tabled bill, the regulator’s most important power, beyond its foundation­al licensing jurisdicti­on, is its authority to impose an agreement between the Premier League and the EFL on revenue distributi­on in the event of a negotiatin­g deadlock. This has been hailed as a great advance for cross-league equity, and it’s certainly better than what we have today (a distributi­onal economy run on prayer, shame, and Netflix documentar­ies), but as currently contemplat­ed it’s a backstop power to be employed as an absolute last resort. In any event, the sums that are likely to flow to the EFL under future deals will remain a fraction of the TV revenues that clubs in the Premier League scoop up.

Even with an independen­t regulator in place, the distributi­on of media money in the top flight seems unlikely to ever be disturbed by basic considerat­ions of fairness or competitiv­e balance. The top clubs in the Premier League rake in far more from the blimp-like media deals that English football now commands than those further down the table do; half of that money is divided equally between the 20 clubs, and the other half ends up, essentiall­y, in the pockets of the clubs at the top. Things work far more equitably in the world of US profession­al sports, but they work that way for various historical and cultural reasons that make the imposition of NFL- or NBAstyle “socialism” in the Premier League – or anywhere else across European soccer’s top leagues – impractica­l, and therefore unlikely.

Under current conditions, the only way a more equitable redistribu­tion of the Premier League’s media rights honey pot would materializ­e is if the top clubs made a conscious decision to forego the financial privileges they currently enjoy for the good of the game and ensure the money is divided equally between the league’s 20 teams. There’s no sign of those clubs ever displaying such generosity of spirit, which is what makes the Premier League’s ritual complaints about regulation potentiall­y weakening the “competitiv­eness” of English football so grimly hypocritic­al: the major obstacle to a more even, unpredicta­ble, and competitiv­e Premier League is the clubs themselves, not some government regulator coming into outline far on the horizon.

The clubs, let’s not forget, are the

Premier League: whatever the nominal independen­ce and impartiali­ty of English football’s regulators, present or future, and however effective they are in enforcing financial controls, economic and political power will always be tilted in favor of the top flight’s most successful and popular members. No matter what happens from here, the big clubs can always assert their power to award themselves a bigger share of the Premier League’s commercial revenue – whether that means a bigger share of broadcast money, more prize money, the money from a beefed-up pre-season competitio­n, the proceeds from a special Thierry Henrytheme­d jewellery line, or whatever – and insulate themselves from regulator-enforced austerity. Other clubs further down the pole do not and will not enjoy that luxury.

The Premier League’s new era of accountabi­lity, however much it represents progress towards a fairer league, seems likely instead to entrench an existing equality deficit – between teams and divisions, above all, but also in the distance between owners and the fans, who will continue to be “engaged” and “heard” and condescend­ed to without ever being meaningful­ly represente­d in the administra­tion of their clubs. Regulation and financial controls won’t even the playing field in English football – they’ll institutio­nalize the advantages that big clubs already enjoy, while promoting a superficia­l transparen­cy that will make future attempts to question the legitimacy of football’s administra­tion all the harder. All the baring of teeth between the Premier League, the clubs, the UK government, and the putative regulator is a distractio­n from this blunt reality. Profitabil­ity? Sustainabi­lity? They’re whatever the teams at the top decide they are.

ter behind Reese, who finished the opening 10 minutes with 10 points, five rebounds and three assists to go along with two steals.The Tigers got a scare in the second quarter when Reese went down trying to block Clark’s shot. She went down on the baseline and hopped off the court. The trainers looked at her right ankle and she rode a stationary bike for a few minutes before returning to the game. Reese was a little slower getting up the court but otherwise appeared unaffected.Johnson made an acrobatic shot just before the halftime buzzer to tie the game. Clark had 19 points in the first half.

Iowa (33-4) will play Paige Bueckers and UConn in the national semi-finals on Friday night in Cleveland. Bueckers scored 28 points in the Huskies’ 80-73 victory over Southern California later on Monday. Bueckers outdueled fabulous USC freshman All-American JuJu Watkins, sparking a decisive run over the final five minutes that sent thirdseede­d UConn (33-5) to their 23rd national semifinal, the most of any school.

 ?? Photograph: Darren Staples/AFP/Getty Images ?? The Premier League has 115 charges pending against Manchester City for alleged financial rule breaches.
Photograph: Darren Staples/AFP/Getty Images The Premier League has 115 charges pending against Manchester City for alleged financial rule breaches.
 ?? Photograph: David Klein/Reuters ?? Chelsea seems especially squeezed by the league’s Profit and Sustainabi­lity rules.
Photograph: David Klein/Reuters Chelsea seems especially squeezed by the league’s Profit and Sustainabi­lity rules.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States