Fair Game today released the results of the Fair Game Index, a first-of-its-kind comprehensive state-of-play analysis of England’s clubs.
The
Fair Game Index rates each club on four criteria - financial
sustainability, good governance, equality standards and fan engagement –
all measures set to come under the remit of football’s new Independent
Regulator in time for the 2024/25 season.
In the White Paper, A sustainable future – reforming club football governance,
published on 23 February 2023, along with pledging to commit to a new
Independent Regulator for English Football, the Government also stated
that it will introduce a State of Play Survey for Football.
Fair Game partnered with world-renowned independent experts and organisations in football to create that survey.
The
Index focuses on the four key criteria, using over 80 different
touchpoints, to create the most comprehensive analysis of the top 92
clubs in the English pyramid ever produced.
AFC Wimbledon emerge
as England’s best run club with an overall score of 73.58 out of 100.
The Premier League’s top club are Brentford.
Championship side
Plymouth Argyle boast a perfect score in the Financial Sustainability
metric, whilst League One’s Cambridge United set the standard for Good
Governance. Exeter City are the highest scorers for Fan Engagement, with
Lincoln taking the honours for Equality Standards. In fact, clubs in
Sky Bet League’s One and Two scored higher overall across all four
criteria than their counterparts in the Sky Bet Championship.
Fair
Game is calling for the abolition of the much talked about parachute
payments which allow a club relegated from the Premier League to receive
£45m over three seasons. This figure is more than the Premier League
gives to all 48 clubs in Sky Bet League One and Sky Bet League Two as
well as all 72 in the National League, meaning that one club receives
more than 120 combined!
The combined cost of Parachute Payments
over three seasons could pay for half of all clubs (outside the Premier
League) to have new hospitality facilities, a 4G standard pitch, a
Category 3 academy, and an award-winning community programme for an
entire year.
Crucially, Fair Game’s financial experts and
partners have also concluded that to properly transform the game, the
Index must be used as the Government’s “backstop” criteria for any
financial deal between the Premier League, the FA and the English
Football League over the distribution of TV revenues.
Clubs
would receive a greater portion of the vast pie of television revenue
the better they performed in the Index. Well-run clubs would be
rewarded for upholding the values fans demand of their clubs, providing a
financial incentive which could end the era of unscrupulous owners and
financial mismanagement.
In this model, 92% of clubs below the Premier League would benefit.
Mark Middling, Director of Financial Policy for Fair Game and Senior Lecturer in Accounting at Northumbria University, said:
“Football
is unsustainable. Since the start of the Premier League, there have
been 64 incidents of clubs in the top four divisions going into
administration.
“Companies House data reveals that 44 of the top
92 were technically insolvent in 2022, and 31% of clubs were spending
more than they earn on players’ wages - that figure rises to 68% when
you look at the Championship.
“And of course we have seen the collapse of Bury and Macclesfield, with numerous other clubs on the brink.
“The culture of penalties to control clubs has failed. Football needs a reboot.”
Greg Campbell, partner at Campbell Tickell and leading expert on regulative practices in the UK, said:
"The
most effective kind of regulation is not simply about the regulator
waving a big stick: it’s ‘co-regulation’, where organisations being
regulated are encouraged and incentivised to improve, leading to better
and more effective outcomes.
“What is impressive about the Fair
Game Index is that it would build in rewards for clubs that demonstrate
good practice in such areas as their governance, financial management,
fan engagement, and promotion of diversity and inclusion, and the way
they engage with and support their local communities. In short, this
model would be a great asset for a new Independent Regulator for
Football and help create a fairer future for our National Game.”
Niall Couper, CEO of Fair Game, added:
“There will be a new regulator. There will be a new state of play survey for football. There will be new financial flow.
“The
Fair Game Index paints a realistic picture of what our game could look
like, a future where football chooses to reward well-run clubs.
“Fair
Game are working hard with communities, experts, football interest
groups, fans, clubs and politicians to transform this picture into
reality.
“For the first time, the building blocks are in place.”
Couper added:
“Premier
League clubs have rejected calls to increase the financial flow through
the pyramid because of risky financial behaviour by some clubs in the
EFL. Distributing more money through the Index to the better run clubs
in the pyramid resolves those concerns.”
Text at top (next game etc)
Next Game: Scarborough In The League At Edgar Street On Tuesday 19th November At 7.45pm