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Money and Soccer

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Money and Soccer

A Soccernomics Guide

Nation Books,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

Many soccer clubs never win anything and can’t pay their bills, but professional soccer has never been in better shape.


Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Innovative

Recommendation

Each year, the same soccer teams win their league championships, and many soccer clubs operate in the red. Fans fret about the future of their beloved sport. How can soccer survive if most teams can’t pay their bills and never win? Sports economist Stefan Szymanski argues that soccer has a brilliant future. An amateur sports historian, he has assembled and analyzed business data on professional soccer since the 1980s. He examines the business of soccer and discusses how the fiscal realities affect the clubs, the players, the owners, the stadiums and everything else. He also details how 19th-century Britain shaped modern-day soccer. His bottom-line message is that soccer is in great shape today, and will be in better shape in the future. getAbstract recommends Szymanski’s in-depth analysis to soccer fans around the globe, and to anyone interested in how professional sports make and lose money.

Summary

No Economic Downturn

When the global economic catastrophe decimated financial markets in 2008 – Europe’s most serious economic crisis since World War II – many thought the recession would cripple professional soccer. According to Michel Platini, president of the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA), half of Europe’s professional soccer teams experienced financial problems of some kind. He believed a prolonged crisis would drive even the top clubs to close.

Even though many sports industry experts who follow soccer agreed, professional soccer clubs seldom die, and not one went under during or after the global recession. However, some smaller clubs temporarily went out of business, including UD Salamanca, Lorca Deportiva and CD Badajoz in Spain; HFC Haarlem, SC Veendam, AGOVV and RBC Roosendaal in the Netherlands; Beerschot in Belgium; Gretna in Scotland; FC Arsenal Kyiv in Ukraine; and Unirea Urziceni in Romania. Almost immediately, though, many of these clubs started up again under different auspices. Some soccer clubs may spend some time groping for survival, but they almost always survive and continue to compete.

Two financial truths rule professional...

About the Author

Co-author of the bestseller Soccernomics, Stefan Szymanski is the Stephen J. Galetti professor of sport management at the University of Michigan.


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    N. A. 6 years ago
    Interesting - piece that jumps out at me is the suggestion that the elite clubs creating their own would be good for soccer. Personally i feel it would be the opposite, creating a disengagement with the regular football fan, but would benefit the "tourist supporter". Being involved in lower league football personally, i think it would have a detrimental effect, further widening the gap no only in the elitism of football, but widen the gap between the fan and the sport.