The Price of Football
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The Price of Football

Understanding Football Club Finance

Kieran Maguire

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eBook - ePub

The Price of Football

Understanding Football Club Finance

Kieran Maguire

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The first edition of The Price of Football quickly established itself as the go-to guide to understanding football club finance for the serious fan. Kieran Maguire, one of the UK's top football finance analysts, shows how professional clubs operate as businesses and explains, in non-technical language, how to read, understand and interrogate club accounts.

As a clear-headed analysis and presentation of the financial imperatives and challenges facing football clubs across the English and Scottish Leagues, it has become a welcome resource not only for students of the industry, but by a wider constituency of supporters looking to understand their club's latest transfer deal, or season ticket price.

This fully revised and updated edition includes analysis of the most recent club accounts, the latest legal rulings on club affairs, as well as the impact of Covid-19 on the game's finances.

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Información

Año
2021
ISBN
9781788213288
Edición
2
Categoría
Business
1
INTRODUCTION
In an ideal world this book would not need to be written as there would be no interest or demand for it. Football is the world’s most universal sport, on both a domestic and international stage and all the discussion from fans and others should be about goals, saves, formations, VAR, red and yellow cards, managerial decisions and shouting obscenities at Mike Dean (other referees are also available).
But at what cost can we ignore the financial impact of the sport? For football fans, many of the top ten moments in their lives will be football related yet ask them what they dislike most about the game and you will most likely hear that “money has ruined it”. Transfer fees, footballers’ wages, clubs being bought and sold on a whim as rich men’s toys, arguments over the objectives and application of financial fair play – all this and more has, in the eyes of many, turned a much loved, emotionally-fuelled sport into a cold, callous business.
The idea for this book arose by accident. I was on the BBC 1 Breakfast couch, having been asked to fill in the gaps between Carol Kirkwood’s regular weather forecasts, and was talking about the latest television deal for the Premier League; the publisher of Agenda, Steven Gerrard (no, not that one) was eating his Weetabix watching the television at the time and thought that football finance would be a good idea for a book.
The central focus of this book is the influence of money and finance on the game. It seeks to discuss the big questions that spring to mind and simplify in layman’s terms wherever possible some key finance related issues. Questions such as what are the sources of income, both internal and external, for a club? How do you show those sources in the accounts? How do you deal with benefactors, new stadia, players coming to and leaving the club? What happens in the accounts if that multi-million-pound centre forward, signed a year ago, turns out to be rubbish? (This may be of particular use to any fan who has had Andy Carroll play for their favourite team in the last few years).
While there will be facts and figures along the way, this book is not intended to turn the reader into accountants (tricky), or even to like them (impossible). It is intended to give an overview of what happens in terms of the financial implications of all the transactions that are regularly discussed in the media, in club press releases and for those of you who may be studying a football finance module as part of your education.
Football is the greatest game in the world. It makes you hug complete strangers on a Saturday afternoon and encourages grown men and women to sing, and for those reasons alone it is to be cherished. This book won’t make you want to hug a football club finance director, although each to their own of course, but hopefully it will help you understand better just what he or she is talking about and whether you should take their comments at face value or with scepticism.
According to FIFA, the governing body of football, there were 265 million registered football players when last surveyed, albeit about a decade ago. Since then FIFA have been preoccupied by other issues and researching the popularity of the sport has not been as high on their agenda. Of this 265 million, only a small fraction of these players participate in the game on a professional level, in terms of being paid money to play for an individual team. To fund the costs of running a football team, wages, maintenance, infrastructure and so on, a club must generate income. This book aims to identify the main sources of income, the typical costs that are incurred, and how clubs are bought, sold and valued.
Football started as an amateur sport, and the first rules were created in England in the nineteenth century. Initially there were a variety of rules, depending on the geographical location of the club in the country. The game in the first half of the nineteenth century was played most frequently between public schools, as well as between villages and towns. Games could take up to three days to complete. Given that most teams did not travel far to play their opponents there were few problems in agreeing to the rules as local ones took precedence. Confusion only started to arise when universities started playing football as there would be players from different public schools at universities trying to play by their own local rules, so it was essential that an agreed format for the game was created.
Cambridge University took it upon themselves to devise a set of rules to avoid confusion and these became popular in the south of England. Northerners preferred to play by their own rules so followed another collection set up by the then Sheffield Football Club. In 1863 the Football Association was formed in London and established a set of rules which contained elements of each of the Cambridge and Sheffield variants. Finally in 1877 the London Football Association and Sheffield Football Association agreed upon a common set of laws, which have formed the template for the evolution of the game ever since.
The first international match took place in 1872 between Scotland and England. The attendance was 4,000, but spectators were willing to pay 1 shilling (5 pence) to watch the game, giving total gate receipts of £200. There was a realization that football was not just a sport, but also entertainment for the masses, and perhaps a potential business too. The world’s first professional football club was Notts County, although Crystal Palace dispute this claim. Clubs initially organized their own fixtures against opposing teams in what was a glorified set of exhibition matches. However, to be successful they needed players who were available, talented, fit and healthy, which given the working conditions and poverty of the Victorian era was no easy task. It was impractical for footballers to take time off work to practise and play in matches. Football needed to transform from an amateur to a professional sport if clubs wanted to attract large crowds to pay to watch games.
The codification of the game led to the creation of tournaments. The Football Association Challenge Cup (more commonly known as the FA Cup) was the world’s first organized tournament, kicking off in 1871. The competition was initially marred by some clubs withdrawing from the competition being unable to pay wages or transport costs to fulfil fixtures, but nevertheless it went from strength to strength. As attendances at matches increased and the game became more popular, the first league competition commenced in 1888, again in England. It consisted of one division, 12 clubs (all from the north and the midlands; southern teams were still mainly amateur at this time with gentlemen players). Since then the game has moved on with rapid pace to become the global phenomenon it is today. There are presently 210 countries affiliated to FIFA, as well as many non-recognized states and islands who play in their own tournaments not sanctioned by FIFA.
The growth of the game has coincided with an increase in its finances. The 2020 edition of the highly respected Deloitte Money League showed the 20 largest global club sides (in terms of income) generated revenue of €9.3 billion and FIFA itself had cash and financial assets exceeding $3 billion. In the chapters that follow we will look at the extent to which finance impacts upon the game, in terms of funding, income, wages, ticket prices and infrastructure. As football clubs have become multi-million-pound operations they need to present their monetary information in a professional manner too, which means they need to prepare financial reports. And this is where we shall begin.
Part I
Football club financial reports
2
The balance sheet
The first step towards understanding football finances is being able to decipher a set of club accounts. This can be an overwhelming task as they may consist of many pages of technical jargon and so are best broken down into their key components. There are three main financial statements published by all businesses, including football clubs, typically contained in what is usually referred to as an annual report, and consist of:
1.The balance sheet, which shows the financial position of the club in terms of what it owns in the form of assets and what it owes to both outside parties (liabilities) and owners (equity, also referred to as capital);
2.The profit or loss account (sometimes called the income statement), which deals with revenues, costs and profit; and
3.The cash flow statement, which shows where cash has come from and how it has been spent. The most common mistake made by those unfamiliar with finance is to assume that cash and profit are the same, which is not the case in practice.
Most football clubs in the UK are limited liability companies, which are legally obliged to submit their financial statements to the government agency Companies House. The great thing for anyone interested in the finances of the club they support is that this information is freely available to access and download from the Companies House website. Rules vary in other countries as to the extent of financial information in the public domain according to local legislation. The amount of detail shown in the accounts sent to Companies House varies according to the size of the club. There are supporting footnotes that must be prepared as well as the main financial statements. The extent of these is again dependent upon the size of the club’s finances. Manchester United plc’s annual report for the...

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