The long, long road toward football’s reform. Could these be the first tiny steps?

 

 

So if it is Tuesday that means its …. err…. Champions League, on Thursday.  But that is ok because Uefa has said so.  Just as the idea of UK having a Football Regulator is not ok because it is not organised by Uefa so that could mean Arsenal and others being kicked out of the Champions League.

The Guardian predicted that this will be Tottenham’s breakthrough season into the top four, ignoring the fact that Tottenham has made it into the top four before, although admittedly just once in the past five seasons, during which they have come 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th but not in that order.

If Tottenham carry on like this they will look like West Ham in disguise, sitting in a big stadium they haven’t paid for, mid-table, challenging no one and nothing. 

Meanwhile lurking in the background there is the trial of Manchester City’s 115 charges, with The Telegraph, telling us that quite a few clubs in the league are getting exercised about the lack of openness about the trial.  Why, after all, should it all be held in secret?

And talking of “Behind the Scenes” there is talk of a bit of an uprising over that issue of no transparency for anything that Manchester City does.  Maybe, just maybe, all these things happening together might just make someone in football wake up and think, “surely it shouldn’t all be like this.”  For that is how reform starts.

2 Replies to “The long, long road toward football’s reform. Could these be the first tiny steps?”

  1. What I don’t understand is: Why were M. City not charged at the first offence? How were they allowed 114 chances before being brought to Court.
    May be they are the Donald Trump of football.

  2. Very good point Charles.

    On the back of that rather prudent question, it would be interesting to know what is offence number one, and more importantly exactly WHEN does it date from?

    Once we know that, we can start getting at the meat of the matter, which isn’t perhaps whether Man city are guilty or not of said accusation number one, but rather why was nothing done at the time?

    For years laymen like myself have been raising our collective eyebrows at how certain sponsorship deals could be legitimate. Of course as a laymen I wasn’t privy to all the facts and even if I was I am no expert. But it just felt wrong.

    Unforetuneately we are in the hands of a compliant organisation, that never wants to rock the boat, and appears to simply cower in fear at the mere mention of the Abu Dhabi United Group.

    So 2 questions.

    -What was the first incident on the charge sheet, and more importantly the date.

    -What was the incident on the charge sheet that was effectively ‘the final straw’ that sent us down this legal path, and again more importantly, the date?

    Knowing both of these will be a big incite in to exactly how complicit/incompetent the Premier League have been in all this.

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