Snoop Dog’s appearance at the Swansea v. Preston North End midweek match is one of the most surprising, if not bizarre, events of the Championship season. Indeed, the only thing that surprised me more was when one of my granddaughters told me she had discovered her inner Welsh woman and was moving to Swansea (Abertawe) despite not speaking a word of Cymraeg. Swansea City do not seem to particularly emphasise their Welshness as much as Wrexham. Paradoxically, I did some consultancy for a Swansea client. They were happy with what I did, and asked me to do more, but I didn’t get paid until I got one of my Welsh speaking nephews to draft an email in Cymraeg. In some ways, it’s hard to make sense of the Swansea and Snoop Dogg story. But maybe this is just how the Championship rolls these days. Wrexham have their Hollywood owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac, the seven-time Super Bowl winner Tom Brady is a minority investor in Birmingham City, and if Snoop had hu...
One group of beneficiaries from modern big business football are the legal profession. West Ham United are considering launching an appeal at the Supreme Court after being ordered to pay £3.6million ($4.86m) to their landlords at the London Stadium. As part of West Ham’s rental agreement with the London Stadium, which has been their home ground since leaving Upton Park in 2016, an ‘anti-embarrassment clause’ required the club to pay their landlords a share of any profit they received from selling shares. The clause has been active after Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky bought a 27 per cent stake in 2021, which made him the second-largest shareholder at West Ham, after David Sullivan, the majority shareholder who owns 38.8 per cent. In 2021, West Ham’s landlords informed the club that share transactions within their company meant the London Stadium was owed a significant payment. The club paid £2.6m but challenged the additional £3.6m. The matter was referred to expert determina...