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Save our starlets! Fans plan protest to stop top clubs signing young talent on the cheap

Leeds received more than £600,000 from Everton for Luke Garbutt under tribunal system

Rik Sharma- 31 October 2011

Genç yıldız adaylarının üst düzey kulüpler tarafından çok ucuza sözleşme imzalatılmasına karşı İngiltere'de oluşturulan ortak girişim grubu,  yapacağı protestolarla bu gidişi sona erdirmek istiyor. Football League matches face kicking off in near-empty stadiums on Saturday as fans protest against a controversial new policy which threatens the future of youth academies.


A group named The 72 Unite have urged supporters of all 72 Football League clubs to boycott the first five minutes of Saturday's matches in protest at the decision of Football League

Football League matches face kicking off in near-empty stadiums on Saturday as fans protest against a controversial new policy which threatens the future of youth academies.

 

 

Cost effective: Leeds received more than £600,000 from Everton for Luke Garbutt

 

The group fear the new academy system could be 'the final nail in the coffin for the survival of professional football outside the Premier League'.

The EPPP is a new four-tier academy system which the Premier League demanded replace the existing set-up, threatening to withhold youth development funding for Football League clubs if they did not accept it.  

The plan, due to come into effect at the start of the 2012-13 season, means the top clubs will be exempt from the rules preventing them from signing under-16s who live more than 90 minutes' travelling distance away (or an hour for under-12s), allowing them to scout and sign players from anywhere in the country.

Peterborough chairman Barry Fry

Warning: Peterborough chairman Barry Fry fears for youth academies

The plan also replaces the tribunal system, which asks each club to justify its valuation of the player involved before it decides on a fee considered fair. The new rules mean a selling club is paid £3,000 per year for every year of a player's development between the ages of nine and 11. The fee per year from 12 to 16 will range between £12,500 and £40,000.

hands off our academies poster

Peterborough Director of Football Barry Fry warned the move could have serious repercussions for smaller clubs.

'What frightens me is that a lot of clubs will pull out of having a youth system altogether,' he said.

Leeds chief executive Shaun Harvey said the plan marked 'a dark day for football'.

'Take Luke Garbutt as an example who left here for Everton, despite offers from us to stay. A tribunal agreed a fee of £600,000 with a further £750,000 on appearances and a 20% sell-on. Under the new system we would have received £134,000 instead of £600,000 with further contingent payments based on appearances', he said.

But a Premier League spokesman insisted that the system was a great example of English football working together to raise its standards.

'There is widespread support for many of the ideas and aspirations contained within EPPP at Football League level', he said.{jcomments on}



 
Premier League owners want relegation, says Scudamore
Birmingham, Swansea, QPR and West Ham fans experienced either relegation or promotion last season
BBC-20 October 2011
Fans felt the joy of promotion and despair of relegation last season.
Premier League chief executive Richard Scudamore says there is not a single club that wants to scrap relegation.
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'Premier Lig'de küme düşme olmasın' tartışması

BBC- 18 EKİM 2011

İngiltere Premier Ligi'ndeki küme düşme uygulamasının kaldırılmasının talep edildiği bildirildi.

Premier Lig Menajerler Derneği başkanı Richard Bevan tarafından yapılan açıklamada, ligde yabancı şahıs ve şirketler tarafından sahip olunan kulüplerin, küme düşmenin kaldırılması yönünde bir talebi olduğu belirtildi.

Lig yönetimi, küme düşme ve çıkmanın futbol yönetmeliklerinin bir parçası olduğunu savunarak, Premier Lig'de yaşanan mücadeleyi artırdıkları bildirdi.

'Gelirler artacak'

Premier Lig Menajerler Derneği başkanı Richard Bevan'ın dile getirdiği talebin dört ya da beş kulübün daha yabancı sahipleri olması halinde daha güçlü bir biçimde dile getirilebileceği tahmin ediliyor.

Bevan, Premier Lig'deki kulüplerin sahiplerinin gelirlerinin, küme düşmenin kalkması halinde artacağını, bu sebeple de yabancı ya da İngiliz sahipler için çekici bir fikir olduğunu belirtti.

Hâlihazırda Premier Lig'de bulunan yirmi kulübün yarısına yakını, yabancı şirket ya da şahıslara ait.

Son olarak Blackburn Rovers da, Manchester United, Manchester City, Liverpool ve Chelsea gibi yabancılar tarafından sahip olunan Premier Lig kulüpleri arasına katıldı.

Ancak Premier Lig'i düzenleyen kuralların değiştirilmesi için en az on dört kulübün onayı gerekiyor.

Ayrıca İngiltere Futbol Federasyonu’nun kulüplerin kararlarını veto etme hakkı bulunuyor.

Premier Lig yönetiminden yapılan açıklamada Bevan’ın dile getirdiği küme düşmenin kaldırılması talebinin tanınmadığı belirtildi.

Futbol reformu talebi

Menajerler Derneği başkanı Richard Bevan'ın açıklaması, İngiliz hükümetinin geçen hafta ülkedeki futbolun idare biçimin değişmesi gerektiği yönündeki çağrısının ardından geldi.

Spor Bakanı Hugh Robertson tarafından gündeme taşınan reform kapsamında futbol federasyonun idaresi altında gerçekleşen kulüplerin mali yönetiminin ve borçlarının mercek altına alınması bekleniyor.

Hükümet ayrıca futbol federasyonu yönetim kurulunun yapısının gözden geçirilmesini talep etti.{jcomments on}

 
Foreign owners 'want end to Premier League relegation'

_56111700_richardbevan

Monday, 17 October 2011 11:57 UK

Owners want to scrap Premier League relegation, says League Managers Association chief Richard Bevan.


Several foreign-owned Premier League clubs want to scrap relegation, according to League Managers Association (LMA) chief Richard Bevan.

Bevan fears that if more clubs are sold to foreign investors they may have enough votes to force changes.

But the Premier League said relegation and promotion were part of its rules and added to the league's strength.

Bevan hopes that a parliamentary inquiry into football governance would also help prevent the proposal.

"We're very keen that the report is successful in helping the Football Association introduce a licensing programme for clubs," he said.

"Because there are a number of overseas-owned clubs already talking about bringing about the avoidance of promotion and relegation in the Premier League.

"If we have four or five more new owners, that could happen."

PREMIER LEAGUE FOREIGN OWNERS

  • Aston Villa (Randy Lerner)
  • Blackburn (Venky's Group)
  • Chelsea (Roman Abramovich)
  • Fulham (Mohamed Al Fayed)
  • Liverpool (Fenway Sports Group)
  • Manchester United (Glazer family)
  • Manchester City (Sheikh Mansour)
  • Sunderland (Ellis Short)
  • QPR (Tony Fernandes)
  • *Arsenal's Stan Kroenke is a majority shareholder

Nearly half of the Premier League's 20 clubs are under foreign ownership, with rules stipulating that if changes are to be made to the format, 14 clubs must vote in favour of any new reforms.

Blackburn joined the likes of Manchester United, Manchester City, Liverpool and Chelsea in this class when they were taken over by Indian-owned Venky's Group last season.

But the Premier League told BBC Sport that the move would be a non-starter, with the Football Association retaining the power to veto any proposals.

The Premier League clubs have not formally discussed any such move since Bolton chairman Phil Gartside proposed his two-tiered structure two years ago, an idea which was soon dismissed.

However, Bevan still believes it is a possibility, arguing any new owner of a Premier League club would not need to be foreign for them to see there would be money to be made from scrapping relegation.

"It doesn't really matter if you're from overseas or not, does it?" he said. "It doesn't matter whether you're from Birmingham or you're from Burma."

A Premier League spokesman said that they did not recognise LMA chief executive Bevan's claims, which come a week after the government demanded changes to the way that football is run.

Sports minister Hugh Robertson said that an FA-led licensing system would be brought in to safeguard against issues such as financial mismanagement, asset-stripping owners and tax avoidance.

The government also asked for rules to manage club debts and an overhaul of the FA board.

Last Wednesday, Liverpool's managing director Ian Ayre said the Premier League's overseas television revenues should be skewed in favour of big clubs.{jcomments on}

 
Barça: Futbol, Katalunya kimliği ve ötesi

Pascale Harter/BBC Muhabiri, Barselona, 27 Mayıs 2011

Manchester United'la oynadığı Şampiyonlar Ligi Finali'ni kazanarak, 2010-2011 sezonu Avrupa Şampiyonu olan Barcelona'nın taraftarları için, takımları sadece futboldan ibaret değil. 

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Premier Lig ve yayıncı kuruluşa darbe

6 Ekim 2011-İngiltere'de bir iş yeri sahibi, müşterilerine Premier Lig futbol maçlarını yayınlama hakkının kısıtlanması sebebiyle Avrupa İnsan Hakları Mahkemesi'ne taşıdığı davayı kazandı.

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Premier League games can be shown on foreign decoders

Bill Wilson- 5 October 2011-

Business reporter, BBC News 

Karen Murphy: "I'm glad I took it on even though it's taken up quite a chunk of my life"

A pub landlady has won the latest stage of her fight to air Premier League games using a foreign TV decoder.

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Türkiye İlk 20'ye Giremedi!

İspanya dünya futbolunun zirvesinde...Uluslararası Futbol Federasyonları Birliği'nin dünya sıralamasında İspanya yine zirveye çıktı.Bir önceki sıralamada zirveyi Hollanda'ya bırakan İspanya, bugün yayımlanan yeni listede 1605 puanla tekrar ilk sırada gösterildi.

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Sir Alex Ferguson says television has too much power

 

BBC- 27 September 2011

 Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson believes television has too much power over English football.


In an exclusive interview with BBC North West Tonight, Ferguson said TV controls aspects of the game because of the vast amount of money it provides.

He claimed clubs did not have enough say when it came to fixtures and, as a result, those sides competing in Europe were worse off.

No matter how many times Manchester United appear on TV in Singapore or America and no matter where they finish in the table, each of the 20 Premier League teams splits the overseas television cash equally

"When you shake hands with the devil you have to pay the price," he said.

"Television is God at the moment. It is king.

"When you see the fixture lists come out now, they [the television companies] can pick and choose whenever they want the top teams on television.

"You get some ridiculous situations when you're playing on Wednesday night in Europe and then at lunchtime the following Saturday. You ask any manager if they would pick that themselves... there'd be no chance."

The 69-year-old Scot also reckoned that clubs are not even getting the kind of money they deserve from TV given that the Premier League now sells its product to 200 countries.

"When you think of that, I don't think we get enough money," he said

Former Football Association chief executive Brian Barwick agreed that football is now "super-reliant on television" but suggested that TV revenue had helped facilitate United's success under Ferguson.

"Sir Alex's comments always have to be taken seriously - he is a very wise and experienced football man," Barwick told BBC Sport.

Football 'super reliant' on TV - Barwick

"But I do think Manchester United have almost had a lion's share of TV revenue over a period of time and it has helped build a fantastic stadium in Old Trafford and helped build Sir Alex's teams with star players.

"Manchester United will always do well in the television market because a lot of people follow them.

"The Premier League should be applauded for the number of countries it has got the game to. It has been a massive success story."

The Premier League's television rights deal was last renewed in February 2009 when Sky reportedly paid in excess of £1.6bn to show five 23-game packages from 2010-13. Irish-based broadcaster Setanta paid £159m for one bundle of 69 matches over the three years. This package was later taken over by ESPN.

The record deal equates to clubs earning, on average, £4.3m for each game shown live on television.

THE RISE OF PREMIER LEAGUE TV REVENUE

  • 1992-1997: BSkyB, 60 games per season, £191m
  • 1997-2001: BSkyB, 60 games per season, £670m
  • 2001-2004: BSkyB, 110 games per season, £1.2bn
  • 2004-2007: BSkyB, 138 games per season, £1.024bn
  • 2007-2010: BSkyB and Setanta, 138 games per season £1.706bn
  • 2010-2013: BSkyB/Setanta (replaced by ESPN) 138 games per season, £1.782bn

In addition, overseas TV deals earned Premier League clubs just over £17m each last season.

Under the new deal, United earned more than £60m from television last season - a combination of fees for having their matches shown live and prize money based upon league position.

So far this season, the champions have appeared in six televised league games and are scheduled to appear three more times before the end of November.

In an in-depth interview with North West Tonight, Sir Alex Ferguson also discussed:

  • The effect of losing to Barcelona in the 2009 Champions League Final: "When Barcelona beat us in Rome there was an issue on how we could get to that level. We've made steady progress since then."
  • On the club's youth policy: "We have a nucleus of young players aged around the 20-21 mark who can be the nucleus of what we regarded as the Giggs, Scholes, Neville, Beckham era."
  • On his longevity at the club: "Nobody talks about sacking [me] so I can have the vision of looking two, three years ahead."
  • On his rumoured dressing room tirades: "Myths grow all the time. If I was to listen to the number of times I've thrown teacups then we've gone through some crockery in this place. It's completely exaggerated, but I don't like people arguing back with me."
  • On losing: "I don't like losing but I've mellowed. I maybe have a short fuse but it goes away quicker now."
  • On football's future: "I feel sympathy for the working class lad. I've always championed about ticket prices and try to equate that to people's salaries. I look at some of those London prices when we go there and it's horrendous. But I think the Premier league is a strong product because there's a tremendous honesty in our game and fans play a part in that."
  • On players' salaries: "You can understand that clubs are desperate to win something and their imagination stretches and they end up paying silly money for players you'd never consider."
  • On turning 70 in December: "When I was 60-65 it didn't bother me. I am just glad to be here. Getting to Hogmanay at 70 - I'm delighted."{jcomments on}

 

 
Konchesky learns from lessons at Liverpool
Paul Fletcher-9 September 2011
This time last year Paul Konchesky was preparing to make his Liverpool debut after a deadline-day move from Premier League rivals Fulham.

Fast forward 12 months and the 30-year-old is gearing up for Leicester's trip to Barnsley as the Championship resumes after the international break.

He has exchanged one of the most famous clubs in England for one of the most ambitious.

The east Midlands club are bankrolled by their Thai owners - the wealthy Raksriaksorn family who own a firm that sells duty-free goods at Thailand's airports - and have strengthened way beyond the means of many top-flight clubs, let alone most of their Championship rivals, as Sven-Goran Eriksson's team attempt to fast-track promotion to the Premier League.

In the Football League, Leicester have been the story of the summer; compulsive viewing - the club with a wow factor as one new face after another arrived. The likes of Kasper Schmeichel, Neil Danns, John Paintsil, David Nugent, Michael Ball, Matthew Mills, Sean St. Ledger and Jermaine Beckford have all joined in addition to Konchesky, who signed in early July. The club have spent close to £10m, with many of their signings believed to be on high wages.

 knochesky595

Konchesky is confident Leicester will handle the pressure to succeed

Big signings equal huge expectations but a return of four points from their opening four league games, including back-to-back home defeats, created an early build-up of pressure that was partially relieved by a 3-2 home win over high-flying Southampton in the previous fixture.

"After [losing] the first two home games it was crucial that we defeated Saints," Konchesky told me. "The home games have been very tough because of the expectations of the fans.

"We have spent a lot of money and the supporters want us to win every game but the Championship is a tough league."

To be able to shut out the pressure Konchesky tries not to look too far ahead, just focusing on the next game, while he reckons that activities such as a recent trip to the races have helped to foster a good team spirit.

Konchesky is also confident that his time on Merseyside will help him withstand the pressure at Leicester.

Twelve months ago a slightly fortunate goalless draw at Birmingham marked a solid if unspectacular start to his Anfield career but the defender's time at Liverpool coincided with a troubled period for the club.

New manager Roy Hodgson struggled to establish himself following his move from Fulham and he left the club after a 3-1 defeat at Blackburn on 5 January. That fixture also proved to be the last of the 18 appearances Konchesky made in a Liverpool shirt.

Konchesky's time at Anfield was not helped by an unwise Facebook comment made by the player's mother, who branded some of the club's supporters "Scouse scum". On the field he did not lack effort and his attitude was excellent but he struggled to adjust to the standards required of a club aiming for a top-four finish. He was honest enough to hold his hands up after his mistake late in a fixture at Tottenham in late November cost his team a 2-1 defeat. Konchesky did not play after Kenny Dalglish returned to the club in early January and was loaned out to Nottingham Forest, before joining Leicester permanently.

"I enjoyed my time at Liverpool, the experience of being at a top club," added Konchesky. "I wish them nothing but good luck.

"The tough times were when I was not playing but I was at a club where there is constant pressure, every season, so hopefully from leaving there to come here I am now used to high expectations."

Konchesky, who has previously also played for Charlton, Tottenham and West Ham, won both of his England caps under his current boss Eriksson. The first came in a 3-1 friendly defeat against Australia in 2003 and the second saw him feature as a substitute in a 3-2 win over Argentina in 2005. He reckons the Swede was a big factor in his move to the King Power Stadium.

"Sven is a nice man and a great coach," added Konchesky. "He has been there with England and he can calm things down and give us confidence.

"Everyone is talking about Leicester and I wanted to be a part of it."

Konchesky, who had his best game in a Leicester shirt against Saints, sounded relaxed and confident as he discussed Leicester's prospects of promotion.

"With 46 league games in the Championship it is very long but with the cup competitions as well we want to be playing a lot more games than that," he added.

Konchesky, who became a father for the third time last week, has clearly put a difficult year behind him and is keen to use his experience positively. He is also hopeful that Liverpool fans have not seen the last of him.

Next season the left-back would like to be back at Anfield, as part of a Leicester team playing in the top flight for the first time since 2004.{jcomments on}

 
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