Daily Mail

NHS addiction expert savages Rooney’s £7.8m bet firm deal

Top psychologi­st says player should visit his clinic ‘to learn why deal with 32Red is harmful’

- By Tom Witherow

WAYNE Rooney was slammed by one of the NHS’s top consultant psychologi­sts last night for taking millions to promote an online casino.

Matt Gaskell, clinical lead for the Northern Gambling Service, said the former England footballer was causing immense harm by promoting 32Red.

Rooney will wear the number 32 shirt after joining Championsh­ip side Derby County, which signed a ‘record breaking’ sponsorshi­p deal with the gambling firm on the back of his transfer.

On Tuesday he was accused of ‘selling his soul’ after agreeing the 18-month contract which will earn him £7.8million in wages. Within hours of the announceme­nt the father of four – who has admitted to gambling away thousands of pounds as a player – posted photos with 32Red branded shirts and the hashtag ‘#WR32’ to his 31.3million followers online.

Yesterday Rooney’s move back to the UK after a stint with DC United in Washington continued to attract criticism. One academic said it highlighte­d the ‘big moral issue’ of gambling in football. Critics also accused 32Red of being ‘ immoral and unethical’.

Mr Gaskell, who is helping to set up the first NHS clinic outside London for gambling addicts, said: ‘I can only think Wayne Rooney is not aware of the serious harm that gambling can cause young people.

‘He should visit us at the NHS Northern Gambling Service to learn why wearing that shirt number is harmful.’ Derek Webb, founder of the Campaign for Fairer Gambling, said: ‘These companies are immoral, unethical and have taken advantage of lax regulation and weak politician­s.

‘We need to stop young men getting addicted to gambling – they are using football to grow their wealth.’

Dr Dan Plumley, a senior lecturer in sport business management at Sheffield Hallam University, said Rooney’s ‘ unique’ arrangemen­t with the club’s sponsor added to the ‘ ethical issue’ football has with gambling.

He told the BBC: ‘There is a big moral issue with gambling at the minute. This is no coincidenc­e. And it is right to be pointed out.

‘The ethical issue, especially with the wider societal problems with gambling, has led to a lot of talk about it. It is an issue that is on everyone’s agenda.’ Experts suggested that Derby County would not be able to afford a player of Rooney’s calibre without 32Red’s sponsorshi­p deal.

The general manager at 32Red, Neil Banbury, said the arrangemen­t with Derby ‘shows a new model for football club sponsorshi­p is possible’.

Former Arsenal and England captain Tony Adams has previously said such sponsorshi­p deals should be brought to a halt.

He said last year: ‘It’s time gambling sponsorshi­p in football stopped, like the alcohol sponsorshi­p of the past.

‘Gambling’s everywhere. It’s destroying people’s lives.’

Industry regulator the Gambling Commission said that sponsorshi­p should be ‘undertaken in a socially responsibl­e manner’ and should not appeal in particular to under-18s.

Former Derby player Danny Mills, who also played alongside Rooney with England, said the deal ‘seems like a little bit of a publicity stunt’.

Gambling campaigner­s said that the arrangemen­t was a clear sign of the iron grip betting firms had on football.

Half of the 20 Premier League tweams and 16 of 24 Championsh­ip clubs are sponsored by gambling firms this season.

Gambling firms tried to allay fears after a whistle-to-whistle ban on TV advertisin­g during live sport, but critics say young fans are still bombarded with adverts on social media, players’ shirts and pitch-side hoardings.

32Red also sponsors Championsh­ip rivals Leeds United, Preston and Middlesbro­ugh, and Rangers in Scotland.

The firm was fined £2million last year for targeting a gambling addict who had spent more than £750,000 with free bonuses. The Gambling Commission found 32Red plied the customer with freebies despite 22 incidents which indicated they were a problem gambler. Based in Gibraltar, 32Red pays less corporatio­n tax that it would if it was based in the UK.

Its parent firm paid an effective corporatio­n tax rate of just 12 per cent, compared to the rate of 19 per cent in Britain.

Company filings show Kindred Group, which is based in Malta, paid £17.9million of tax – an effective tax rate of 12 per cent.

Last night 32Red refused to disclose how much tax it pays in the UK.

The firm does pay into Treasury coffers via the Remote Gaming Duty – a 21 per cent tax on revenues accrued in the UK – but does not disclose how much.

In all it paid £ 137million in duties in Western Europe, according to filings.

A spokesman for Kindred Group, which also has subsidiari­es registered in the British Virgin Islands and the Channel island of Alderney, said that it was ‘ fully regulated by the UK Gambling Commission, has a big office in London and pays all UK gambling levies to the UK Treasury.’

IN his autobiogra­phy Wayne Rooney condemned his own gambling habit as ‘stupid’. Yet at his new club Derby County, he agrees to wear a shirt with the number 32 on the back, promoting the betting firm 32Red. As a role model to countless young football fans, shouldn’t he of all people be warning of the dangers of gambling, rather than endorsing it as a harmless pursuit?

 ??  ?? Row: Wayne Rooney with a shirt promoting the gambling firm. Inset: NHS psychologi­st Matt Gaskell
Row: Wayne Rooney with a shirt promoting the gambling firm. Inset: NHS psychologi­st Matt Gaskell
 ??  ?? From yesterday’s Mail
From yesterday’s Mail

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