What the Premier League and its 'soulless embrace of capitalism' can learn from Aussie rules

By The Crowd / Roar Guru

In this extract from his new book Now That’s What I Call Football: What the Premier League can learn from Aussie Rules Robert Moore argues whether it’s too much to ask for professional sporting institutions to make honest endeavours to meet and beat their opponents on a level playing field and show integrity and dignity on and off the pitch?

A meritocracy within an egalitarian framework where teams triumph over adversity through a combination of talent, planning, cunning and character is surely the bedrock of sporting fulfilment.

With measures in place to regulate and equalise spending on players and coaching staff, allow access to talent via a draft based on need and share central revenue to address any imbalance based on size, support, geography or historical achievements, a premium is placed on running AFL clubs in the shrewdest and most imaginative way possible.

Clubs understand the importance of a long-term recruitment strategy and make a commitment to develop their own talent. Those that are able to establish cultures based on honesty, selflessness and courage tend to succeed where their indisciplined, profligate and timid foes fail.

The AFL’s system protects and promotes the idea of an old-fashioned club which serves members and supporters rather than the commercial interests of whoever may have purchased a related holding company. With very few exceptions, people pay reasonable prices to attend matches feeling safe and free to express passion for their club, with unsegregated rival fans interacting free from the fear of unrest, hooliganism and lawlessness.

(Photo by James Elsby/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

In a league set up for no poorly performing club to have any excuse for long-term failure, purposefully utilising resources to transform an ailing club’s fortunes and attain success while living within their means is never unattainable.

By contrast, English football has travelled so far down the road to ruin that young children supporting any club outside the top six cannot realistically believe that their team will one day reach the top of the mountain. Meanwhile, fans of football’s upper classes are no longer cheering on a team of sportsmen, but the brand identity of a global entertainment industry corporation.

The Premier League’s soulless embrace of hyper-capitalism has destroyed the inherent unpredictability of sport. A small group of super-clubs who have benefited from billionaire benefactors or being mortgaged to the eyeballs are so financially insulated that they are winning more games by more goals than ever before, often without having to get out of second gear. This has caused the entire sport to transform and shift into a painfully routine spectacle of sterile domination where wealth now dictates the game to an unprecedented extent.

The norms and systems in relation to the distribution of TV rights windfalls and prize money as well as unlimited transfers, wages and squad sizes all serve to make the rich and powerful more rich and powerful. Loyalty and patience are laughable concepts to the majority of players, managers and even clubs that can be sold to the highest bidder on a whim. Rather than being challenged, the advantages of those who are already winning are amplified.

Not so in the AFL. The success of a vibrant competition, in which anything is possible, has been built on a solid conviction that the wider it grows the base of the pyramid, the higher the top of the pyramid will be.

(Photo by Daniel Carson/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

The league’s firm but fair governance of all its clubs means that although there are obviously financial powerhouses and fiscal minnows, every club has an equal opportunity to thrive on the field. The successful clubs are not necessarily rich, or even economically stable and secure, but they have been able to harness the commitment and skill of administrators, coaches, players and every other individual at the club from the president to the press officer to build an inclusive and positive culture of excellence.

The primary role of the AFL Commission is to ensure competitive balance across all 18 clubs while also developing the pathways of future stars, overseeing the game’s grassroots and retaining a commitment to being an inclusive social leader.

The Premier League is happy to sit back, negotiate record-breaking TV deals and leave the rest to cut-throat capitalism. The idea that broadcast revenue should trickle – or, more accurately, cascade – down football’s treasured eco-system to maintain the overall health of the game is something the Premier League and its clubs have no real interest in and the gutless FA are unwilling and/or unable to fight for.

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However, in following this approach you get insolvent clubs like Portsmouth, Blackpool, Bradford, Bolton and dozens more who left to their own devices were destroyed from the inside out with no measures in place to protect the number one cultural asset that each town or city possesses.

Organised correctly, football is the social glue that brings together communities regardless of class, religion, politics or ethnicity, providing endless intrigue, controversy and conjecture. Undying supporter loyalty means that clubs are figuratively owned by a far wider group of people than the shareholders who have their names on the legal paperwork at any given point in time. But parasitic owners are allowed to make a mockery of this idealism by treating clubs as their fleeting plaything and fans as mere commodities to be exploited.

Boosted by Champions League riches and protected by the misnomer that is Financial Fair Play from competitors emerging from outside of the established elite, big six owners defy financial gravity while others face clear and insurmountable barriers to success. Every Premier League club has benefited from multi-billion pound TV deals but it just means that the disparity between rich and poor has changed to a similar sized chasm between rich and super-rich. Owners meetings no longer involve the haves and have-nots, rather the haves and have-yachts.

(Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)

As money has grown more and more central to a club’s success, conversations between fans have gone from discussing a left winger’s crossing or a manager’s formation to intrigue over a club’s net spend or an overseas owner’s debt financing plans.

Perhaps if newspapers printed the wage bills of teams next to their scoreline then it would help to persuade the public how polarised and patently unfair the ‘competition’ they are watching really is. Manchester United 1, Burnley 0 would become Manchester United (£352m) 1, Burnley (£87m) 0 and suddenly the league table would make a whole lot more sense.

The intrinsic value of a league can only be enhanced by more uncertainty and suspense relating to the outcome of its matches. Expensively assembled teams of superstars continually and inevitably beating outclassed rivals is not a genuine competition, it’s a glorified pageant.

Take away the unpredictability and all we are left with is 22 players running around the same old grounds which serve as a reassuring but staid TV set for a series which will never be cancelled yet features the same old storylines and stultified fans serving as extras.

Sadly, the genie cannot be put back in the bottle.

Sport at its best gives you feelings of awe and wonder that are so hard to find in any other area of life. It is a refreshing antidote to the often crushing inanity of existence. Even when fans experience the lowest lows and are beaten down by years of incompetence, the ability to cling on to hope that some day soon you will be the pigeon and not the statue sustains you through your darkest days.

This hope exists in the AFL.

In the Premier League, this hope has been crushed.

Money talks. Sometimes you wish it would just shut up.

This is an extract from Now That’s What I Call Football: What the Premier League can learn from Aussie Rules, available to purchase through this link.

The Crowd Says:

2021-10-19T04:46:48+00:00

Republican

Guest


No accounting for taste Punter Soccer is certainly a global phenomenon - as is Macca's. I simply rejoice in an indigenous code that is not only passionately supported domestically but espouses a cultural affinity for many, moreso than any global generic product i.e. the rooond ball game.

2021-10-19T04:35:24+00:00

Republican

Guest


A tad sanctimonious re the US Brains. We are not far behind them and while we like to believe we are somehow a more egalitarian society our culture devolves akin to theirs at an alarming pace at our convenient denial. We are a nation seduced by the excesses of obscene consumerism, our culture dumbed down by decades of affluence while our political narrative is written by a plutocracy dictated by the media mogul Murdoch. How much more American can we get? This is 'Austerica'.

2021-10-11T03:47:31+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


Gallop from what I heard was on less than Buckley, GM is earning more than Buckley who was more then Gallop. Demetriou however was the big winner ended up on over double what GM is earning now. Demetriou definetly the biggest winner out of AFL and used to propell himself into lucrative positions. He was on the Crown board most noted for his not to Packer they are too concerned over morality issues and regulation. If your telling Packer not to be concerned about these issues the bar must be very low. Womens has earnt AFL billions in government funding and they put very little into it. AFL spends a lot of money in NSW and QLD, and what about their massive contingent they flew to QLD for the grand final. A lot of places at the trough.

2021-10-07T22:49:15+00:00

clipper

Roar Rookie


Please elaborate instead of attacking Maximus. What was deluded? The AFL spending large amounds on game development, grass roots, women's football? Contributing to sports infrastructure? Money going to GWS and Suns paying players and coaches? Gallop earning as much at FFA as AFL?

2021-10-07T09:21:32+00:00

peterm070@yahoo.com

Guest


''Sport should be about more than just money.'' No offence, but it that were the case, the Olympics would still be amateur and cricketers and AFL players would still have day jobs. The people who really suffer are the players... most of them are in the system for 3 years chewed up then spat out... they have to move back to their home state then start their lives again... dont they have the right to earn as much as they can while they are in the AFL system? I dont know what your job is, but how would you feel if the Govt said nobody is allowed to make more than McDonalds workers... Id guess you wouldnt be too happy with that right?

2021-10-07T09:17:46+00:00

trilby

Roar Rookie


Maybe due to covid and no pubs, but yes it was ver muted this year

2021-10-07T03:20:01+00:00

clipper

Roar Rookie


As the author pointed out, the genie is out of the bottle. There is no way Football could have a draft system unless every country where it was played (ie, the world) agreed to the same limit. Until then, any country that imposed a limit would lose players to another part of the world. AFL and NRL players on the other hand have no where else to go if the want more money, so therefore it is so much easier to set salary caps.

2021-10-07T03:17:07+00:00

clipper

Roar Rookie


I think it would be detrimental if the AFL ever did try to go global - you would end up having a world cup comprised of ex Aussies whose only link to the country they played for would be they once ate a kebab or had a deep fried mars bar - how pathetic would that be.

2021-10-07T03:08:44+00:00

clipper

Roar Rookie


Don't know where in Sydney you were punter, but I didn't hear or see anything about the NRL GF last week - stangley enough, I saw one house festooned with Melbourne colours, but of course little else about the AFL GF. But when the Football World cup was on, you wouldn't go a day without seeing merchandise or clothing from a persons favourite country.

2021-10-06T23:30:44+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Did you type that with your fingers crossed?

2021-10-06T21:33:37+00:00

A League Fan

Guest


As a politician, it would make sense to appease 2 million Australians playing football.

2021-10-06T21:32:26+00:00

A League Fan

Guest


Victory had around 25k members which is more than a quarter of 80k. So one gets their own facility in prime real estate that surprise surprise isn't in Collingwood but Victory train in the park? Also when did Collingwood have 25k members, in 1892? What about teams like gws or other recent afl teams, why do they get training facilities and A League teams are left behind?

2021-10-06T21:24:23+00:00

Now21

Roar Rookie


Couldn’t agree more, salary caps/drafts are impossible in elite football without some sort of unthinkable revolution. That’s why I also watch more international than club football these days. Money is put to one side and eleven of our lot battle eleven of your lot. It doesn’t get simpler, better, or purer than that. Cheers, Rob

2021-10-06T21:18:06+00:00

Now21

Roar Rookie


I would be very interested to see how much time you have spent in Britain, Bludger!

2021-10-06T21:05:07+00:00

Now21

Roar Rookie


Imposing a salary cap and draft system on the EPL would not work and therefore have not been proposed. There are thousands of words in the book about how governance of the world game works - the mere existence of the ill-fated Super League surely proves that there is room for improvement.

2021-10-06T21:00:16+00:00

Now21

Roar Rookie


Fun fact: I have never lived in Melbourne! I have made a living writing about football for the majority of my adult life and know more about the game than is healthy! It is just becoming harder and harder to love. Cheers, Rob

2021-10-06T17:01:28+00:00

Now21

Roar Rookie


Couldn’t agree more. The broken system of elite club football is only really solvable if you get buy-in from 200+ countries. Yes, the two sports are very difficult to compare for various cultural, economic, geographical and historical reasons but it was a fun exercise trying to do so. Sadly, without the kind of revolution that those with vested interests would never allow to happen, top level football will keep moving further and further away from inequality. Over the last decade, I have probably watched more matches in a month-long international football tournament than I would in an entire league season. The corrupting influence of money is set aside and it’s just eleven of your lot versus eleven of our lot. Doesn’t get any better, or purer, than that. Cheers, Rob

2021-10-06T16:50:15+00:00

Now21

Roar Rookie


Yup!

2021-10-06T16:49:13+00:00

Now21

Roar Rookie


Would love to hear more about what you mean, Seymore. As you can probably imagine, I have read Moneyball and am aware who the Boston Red Sox are. Are you referring to MLB’s luxury tax in contrast to the salary cap system or the general concept of analytics? Cheers, Rob.

2021-10-06T04:45:47+00:00

Donmac

Roar Rookie


If the Soccer in general didn't have so many shady/crooked types involved, as in FIFA etc., it would undoubtedly be better for all concerned, particularly those involved at the junior/development levels.

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