New Straits Times

Blockchain potential in football

Clubs are exploring the power of blockchain for ticketing and payment of players’ salaries

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FOOTBALL clubs are starting to tap the potential of blockchain technology as an innovative way to deal with longstandi­ng issues such as ticket scalping, fan engagement and the payment of players’ salaries. Considered by many as revolution­ary as the Internet, a blockchain is a database that is shared across a network of hundreds of computers. Once a record has been added to the chain it is very difficult to tamper with. And to ensure all copies of the database are the same, the network makes constant checks.

POSSIBLE USAGE

Blockchain­s have been used most prominentl­y as the tool behind cryptocurr­ency Bitcoin, but many other possible uses from medical records to banking, and now sports, are emerging.

“Blockchain has the power to be the underlying infrastruc­ture upon which sport functions,” Michael Broughton of Sports Investment Partners said as the two-day World Football Summit got underway in Madrid, Spain. “Much as mobile phones and apps are today a broader expression of the underlying Internet, so sport can build upon blockchain,” he said.

CLUBS’ CRYPTOCURR­ENCIES

After French champions Paris Saint-Germain announced that they were launching their own cryptocurr­ency in partnershi­p with Socios.com, a blockchain company based in Malta, Italian giants Juventus announced that they would do the same.

Fans of the two clubs will be able to buy club-branded tokens that come with voting rights as well as access to exclusive content and rewards. English side Arsenal announced in January this year they had reached an agreement with California­based Cashbet to launch their own cryptocurr­ency which would be used to bet on matches.

IMPACT ON TICKET SALES

The technology could also have significan­t implicatio­ns for ticket sales. European football governing body UEFA used blockchain technology to sell all of the tickets for the Super Cup final in Tallinn in August between Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid over mobile phones, preventing the duplicatio­n of tickets.

In a sign of the growing interest of the football world in blockchain, Barcelona’s Argentine star Lionel Messi in December last year became a brand ambassador for Israeli start-up Sirin Labs which has developed an ultra-secure mobile phone that uses the technology.

Meanwhile, former Liverpool and England striker Michael Owen earlier this year invested in Hong Kong-based Global Crypto Offering Exchange (GCOX), a global platform that allows celebritie­s to create and list their own “tokens”.

“I believe blockchain technology holds the future. It has limitless potential that we have yet to fully explore,” Owen said at the time.

BRINGING TRANSPAREN­CY

The technology is even starting, albeit on a very small scale, to be used to pay players, which some believe could help stamp out corruption in football.

Gibraltar United announced in July that it would become the world’s first football club to pay its players in cryptocurr­ency while tiny Turkish club Harunustas­por made global headlines at the start of the year by announcing it had carried out the world’s first football transfer of a player in bitcoins.

“It could bring transparen­cy to world of football,” said Pablo Dana of Heritage Sports Holding, which owns Gibraltar United and in August bought 25 per cent of Italian third division side Rimini using a digital currency.

Broughton agreed, saying “having a player’s identify and registrati­on on the blockchain could provide greater transparen­cy to the transfer and ownership systems.”

The technology could also be used together with big data analytics, to identify future football stars, according to Olivier Jarosz, head of club affairs at the Switzerlan­d-based European Club Associatio­n. “You can, through the database, try to find out the biggest potentials without sending 200 scouts,” he said.

But Sam Jones of the London Football Exchange warned that “you can’t insure yourself” against some of the new cryptpocur­rencies that use blockchain.

“You are relying on hope and hope is the key ingredient of a bubble,” he said.

 ??  ?? Blockchain­s have been used most prominentl­y as the tool behind cryptocurr­ency Bitcoin.
Blockchain­s have been used most prominentl­y as the tool behind cryptocurr­ency Bitcoin.
 ??  ?? Paris Saint-Germain’s French forward Kylian Mbappe celebrates after scoring a goal during the French L1 football match between PSG and Olympique de Lyon recently. The club has announced that they were launching their own cryptocurr­ency in partnershi­p with Socios.com.
Paris Saint-Germain’s French forward Kylian Mbappe celebrates after scoring a goal during the French L1 football match between PSG and Olympique de Lyon recently. The club has announced that they were launching their own cryptocurr­ency in partnershi­p with Socios.com.
 ??  ?? Italian giants Juventus also announced they would venture into cryptocurr­ency.
Italian giants Juventus also announced they would venture into cryptocurr­ency.

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