Accountancy firm BDO reports that global interest in domestic game continues to grow with record-breaking revenues of £6.4bn in the Premier League in 2024, rising club valuations and a surge in interest in women’s football. Clubs face persistent high costs, with wages representing 63% of revenues in the Premier League and 93% in the Championship, and over 90% expect to incur pre-tax losses in 2025, with the nearly the same proportion stating that they will require shareholder funding in the near future Player transfers hit record highs in 2025, but separate analysis from Twenty First Group highlights that the correlation between spend and on-field results is surprisingly low (just 57%, and a mere 35% when you exclude ‘superclubs’) Despite financial challenges, investor interest in clubs remains high with two-thirds of clubs saying they have received an approach from prospective investors in the last 12 months There is widening financial disparity both ...
Henry Mance of the FT provides a balanced assessment of the debate about VAR. For me, it confirms that most fans are conservative technophobes at heart. Back in the 1950s many of them opposed the introduction of floodlights. It does need tweaking and Mance has some useful suggestions. Moreover, if the VAR team can't reach a decision in three minutes, the on field decision should stand. But so much is at stake financially in modern football that mistakes by officials can't simply be shrugged off. Here’s some good news about the world in 2026: football refereeing is more accurate than ever. If you don’t believe me, look at the English Premier League’s list of recent wrong decisions. Most of the mistakes are marginal. Thanks to technology, glaring errors are now even rarer than successful Manchester United signings. It is basically impossible that England will be knocked out of this year’s World Cup by an equivalent of Diego Maradona’s 1986 Hand of God (they will ...