Football clubs are best advised to avoid identification with any one political party as their fans are likely to hold a range of views. Ipswich Town appear to have been unaware of the way in which a private tour of Portman Road by Nigel Farage might then be exploited by Reform. The club may just have been naive, but it is something of a PR disaster which has upset many Tractors fans and led to some merriment in Norwich. Of course, sport cannot be kept out of politics, but partisanship, even if inadvertent, is best avoided.
Portsmouth owner Michael Eisner has warned of the risk of financial collapse in the Championship. Coventry, Oxford, West Brom and Charlton have all chalked up big losses. Eisner said: ‘No club can survive for long in this system and if that continues, catastrophe will happen.’ Negotiations to secure a bigger share of Premier League revenues have made little progress with top flight clubs questioning the extent of their obligation to less successful rivals. In most sectors of the economy stronger businesses are not expected to subsidise weaker ones. Supermarkets do not subsidise corner shops, but the latter have their own market niche. The regulator is looking at the distorting effect of parachute payments in the Championship, but an early intervention is not anticipated. The Swiss Ramble has provided a forensic analysis of Portsmouth’s accounts for 2024/25 from his Zurich fastness and some highlights follow. The full in depth analysis is avai...