At the end
of the next football season it will be sixty years since Liverpool
were relegated from the then Division One to Division Two in 1952-1953. To add insult to injury they were replaced by
Everton who had been relegated a couple of seasons before. The other side that went down was
Middlesbrough replaced by Leicester
City .
The
previous season, 1951-1952 Liverpool had finished at half way after showing
some promise but which tailed off in the later half. Those of us with memories of that unhappy time
will be uncomfortably aware that we could be in for a repeat.
It was a
time when the owners were in dispute, there was disarray in management and in
the dressing room and the club, despite the level of its support did not have
the cash to rebuild a team that had enjoyed success since the end of the War.
This season
after the turn of the year Liverpool’s form was that of a relegation team and
it was only that enough points had been gained earlier to keep them up at the
half way level. If they begin next
season in this way they may not recover.
Their luck
in the Carling Cup means that they have a place in the lesser European contest
but as too many clubs have discovered the fixture and injury complications from
the many games these involve, not exactly big crowd games, could seriously
impair what needs to be done in The Premiership.
Next years
Premiership has all the signs of being highly competitive with a number of well
funded teams able to take care of themselves.
It would be very easy for Liverpool in
their current state to be locked into the grim struggle as one of four or five
teams desperate to retain their place.
Sixty years
ago they were not scoring enough goals.
This season has been much the same and has meant dropping points against
sides in games they should have been taking the maximum points from.
The lower
divisions of the football league are littered with teams that were once great
names, even in the Conference there are some to be found that at one time
enjoyed a time at the highest level.
In the next
few seasons it is inevitable that some teams now in the Premiership will drop
down to lower levels to join all those clubs of the past whose ageing fans
cling on to either their own memories or those of their parents or
grandparents.
Often in
the past such falls have been down to bad management, disagreements between
owners and over optimism about the accounts.
All these are in place at Liverpool who
in addition have the modern curse of the cloud of agents, financial advisers,
lawyers and consultants taking much of the money and increasing the levels of
debt.
From “The
Political Economy Of Football” an item “Talking To The Lawyers” taken from “The
Lawyer” of 22 May “Heading Skills” dealing with the legal in and outs of
several Premiership Clubs. This is the
item on Liverpool .
Quote:
When things are
going well at a football club, as it is for Manchester City ’s
Simon Cliff, it can be a dream job for a sports-loving lawyer.
Two years ago,
when The Lawyer spoke to Liverpool general
counsel Natalie Wignall (22 March 2010), this was undoubtedly the case. But if
two years is a long time in football, sometimes so is a day.
Between The
Lawyer arranging to speak to Wignall last week and the actual interview the
following day, manager and club legend ‘King’ Kenny Dalglish had left the club
and Wignall was tied up in negotiations.
It has been a
tumultuous season for Wignall and her beloved Reds, with several executive
departures creating a climate of uncertainty.
There has been
speculation that the club’s owner, the US-based Fenway Sports Group, was
unhappy with the way the Luis Suarez race claim case was handled by its legal
advisers.
Wignall supported
McCormicks senior partner and sport, media and entertainment specialist Peter
McCormick, along with club secretary Zoe Ward, when Liverpool
striker Suarez was found guilty by an FA commission for racially abusing
Manchester United’s Patrice Evra.
But the club was
then roundly condemned for its stance in support of Suarez after he was banned
for eight games.
Wignall
previously told The Lawyer that the in-house legal role was her “dream job”.
She has been at the club during a testing time, with legal wrangles on and off
the field, including the international dispute over the club’s ownership
(TheLawyer.com, 8 March 2012).
The ongoing
action has brought work to a number of the North West city’s law firms.
“I have to pinch
myself when I come in to work every day,” the born-and-bred Scouser, who lives
within walking distance of Liverpool’s Melwood training ground, told The Lawyer
in 2010. “It’s just the best job in the world.”
She conceded that
the intense scrutiny of the club can be difficult to deal with.
“It’s the extent
to which everything you do is in the public eye,” she says. “It’s just not like
any other business where you might win and lose big contracts, but either way
you get on with it. Here the performances on the pitch affect the business so
much more.”
Unquote
In the
media we are constantly told that the English Premiership is the market leader
in the world with huge revenues to come from all those foreigners daft enough
to be persuaded to show loyalty to the brands in question. We are told that this is all “good for
growth” and national pride and all that.
With most
of the Premiership now in foreign ownership, most of the leading players from
further shores, most of the huge debts owed to global financial interests and
most of the revenue going into players off shore accounts it would be a sector
of the economy that would be closed down if it were not still capable of being
able to part fools from their money.
Or the
Premiership may simply be one of the world’s most obvious money laundries. I do hope George Osborne enjoyed his works
outing to Munich with the Chelsea people. Perhaps he learned some lessons in debt
management there.
"Or the Premiership may simply be one of the world’s most obvious money laundries."
ReplyDeleteThat occurred to me too.
I hereby confess to two counts of imprpoper conduct within these grounds. I am an Everton supporter and a Yankee. Though some perverse pleasure was experienced during the Reds' struggles, this was mostly motivated by Benitez's "small club" insult which was dealt in one of the Toffees' most difficult seasons.
ReplyDeleteWhen my interest in the English game displaced interest in American sports in 1995 Liverpool and Everton were my favorite teams until I was told this was not acceptable by a British citizen. For what it's worth, your loyalty to the Reds will secure my desire to see them survive this coming season. In good form.
Self