www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

The Inside Word: Greg Dyke’s FA must give up on England team and focus on the grass roots

Football is becoming a game to be experienced on a computer rather than played on a pitch or watched in a sanitised, over-priced stadium

Greg Dyke and Richard Scudamore allow themselves to be portrayed as men of vision and principle. At a moment of maximum opportunity, they resemble two fleas arguing over ownership of the particularly mangy dog on which they exist.

Dyke’s ill-conceived Football Association Commission attempted to set the agenda on Friday evening by announcing imaginative plans to revitalise grassroots football through a nationwide network of community hubs, without offering a credible explanation of who will pay the wish-list price, £230 million.

Premier League functionaries immediately issued a self-defensive statement in which Scudamore, as chief executive, used a range of statistics to support meticulously massaged assertions of a “long held commitment” to better facilities, more educated coaches and the sustenance of schools football.

The veneer of corporate concern, and the preposterous notion of football pleading poverty, merely allowed Helen Grant, the Sports Minister, to spout platitudes about sport’s social importance and issue vague promises about “considering” a viable funding scheme.

Read more: Dyke proposes grassroots overhaul
Comment: Bright ideas from Dyke deserve praise and scrutiny

Let’s get real here. Sport is so far down the Westminster agenda approaching election year, it is irrelevant beyond being the source of the occasional soundbite or photo opportunity. Football is becoming a game to be experienced on a computer rather than played on a pitch or watched in a sanitised, over-priced stadium.

As FA chairman Dyke is powerless, a pauper pitched against a plutocrat. The revolution of which he speaks is untenable unless the landscape of the game is changed, irrevocably. That means unthinkable compromise, unfeasible trust and unprecedented audacity.

The current round of navel-gazing may satisfy the naïve, but the debate should be shaped by a simple concept: if English football was redrawn on a clean sheet of paper, without pandering to its arcane power structure, what would it look like?

The FA are commercially inept and unfit for purpose. Their construction is archaic and counter-productive. County FAs must be scrapped, the FA Council dissolved. A streamlined executive should concentrate on a core duty, the development of the game at grassroots level.

This could be funded, in part, by a levy on Premier League TV income and Exchequer funding, channelled through the Sport England quango. Wembley should be sold to venture capitalists and Scudamore invited to invest in St George’s Park as part of a restructure which gives his organisation primary responsibility for football at elite level.

Premier League chief executive Richard Scudamore Premier League chief executive Richard Scudamore There will need to be bureaucratic fudges, to ensure the FA satisfy Fifa and Uefa by retaining nominal control of the national team. But Scudamore, elevated to the position of Football Commissioner, would appoint the England manager, employ age-group staff and oversee a reinforced coaching structure.

It is not Dyke’s job to set such specious targets as winning the World Cup by 2022. He should be called to account because the FA abuse their authority by using coach education as a cash cow. Their courses are inhibitively expensive and offer no access to a realistically rewarded career.

Equally, it is time to call Scudamore’s bluff. The wealth of the Premier League is stunting the development of home-grown players despite hints he is open to squad quotas. Artfully timed suggestions of a round of games being exported were more insidious than the notorious 39th game proposal, which was shouted down in 2008.

The inference, that the Premier League has outgrown England and its traditional values, was unmistakable. It signalled an ideological commitment to globalisation at the expense of football’s founding spirit, as a community-based game in which local clubs aspire and inspire.

The money is guaranteed – the soaring value of sports rights was confirmed when the NBA struck a $24 billion (£15bn) media rights deal in the US this week – but the will to force through change is weak. Shamefully, it is easier to talk a good game than act for the common good.

Watch out, here comes Dave

Footballers were hailed as “engineers of excitement.” Sharp-suited executives, blessed with such titles as “chief envisioning officer”, wibbled on about “telling a brand story through sport”.

The great unwashed were deemed unworthy of an invitation to the Leaders in Sport Conference. Held at Chelsea’s Stamford Bridge, it actually belonged in the seventh circle of hell.

Assorted androids, one of whom was identified as Christian Purlsow, the heroically smug former managing director of Liverpool FC, gathered to cut the occasional deal and indulge in some vigorous mutual back-scratching.

They nodded sagely when Milan director Umberto Gandini suggested big clubs, like Manchester United and (surprise, surprise) Milan, should be admitted to the Champions League on a wildcard basis for old time’s sake  when they fail to qualify.

Intriguingly, though, they sat in rapt attention as Sir Dave Brailsford outlined the secrets of his trade as cycling guru. Confronted by cricket’s incompetence, he was supportive of Andy Flower and dismissive of the perceived impossibility of dealing effectively with a dilettante like Kevin Pietersen.

Sir Dave Brailsford is made for football Sir Dave Brailsford is made for football Not for the first time, the thought crystallised: this is a man who is wasted in cycling, a sport which he has effectively outgrown. Cricket is too small for him, but football awaits…

Sol for Ministry of Defence?

Some people are suited perfectly to the job to which they aspire. Step forward Sol Campbell, wannabe politician.

Since he is patronising, insensitive, self-obsessed and consumed by an illogical sense of entitlement, he comes straight from central casting.

Former England defender Sol Campbell Former England defender Sol Campbell His other ambition, managing England’s football team, does not do justice to his human qualities.

From Russia with misgivings

Sochi, the Olympic ghost town, is staging the Russian Grand Prix, a race humanised by the tragic aftermath of last Sunday’s accident involving Jules Bianchi.

The presence of the Russian president Vladimir Putin demands an unprecedented security operation and reminds us of an uncomfortable truth.

Russian president Vladimir Putin Russian president Vladimir Putin Russia will stage the 2018 World Cup despite institutionalised racism, military aggression and deep misgivings about the manner in which they won the right to host the tournament.

News
Michael Schumacher in 2010. The seven-times Formula One world champion has now emerged from his coma
peopleTeenage son of F1 star says his dad is 'still fighting'
Voices
Kim Jong-un visits the remodeling site of the May Day Stadium in Pyongyang
voices
News
news
News
Bono and Apple CEO Tim Cook announced U2's surprise new album at the iPhone 6 launch
people... because it helps 'little countries like Ireland'
PROMOTED VIDEO
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition apps?
News
Muhammad Ali pictured in better health in 2006
peopleExtent of boxing legend's debilitating battle with Parkinson's revealed by his brother
Arts and Entertainment
Roger Daltrey (left) and Pete Townshend are working on new material
music
Arts and Entertainment
Stephen Collins at a Screen Actor's Guild Women's Committee event in 2009
peopleCompany severs links after child molestation accusations
Arts and Entertainment
David Bowie as Jareth, the Goblin King in 'Labyrinth'
Sequel to the fantasy cult classic reportedly in progress
News
Beckham visited Makeni in Sierra Leone in 2008
people
Sport
rugby league
News
Daniel Radcliffe in Horns
peopleThe former boy wizard talks about loosening up and heading to the dark side in new film 'Horns'
Sport
Lewis Hamilton charges to the finish line in Sochi
sportBriton edges closer to championship as Mercedes clinch constructors title
News
i100
News
i100
Arts and Entertainment
The Doctor faces a Mummy on board the galactic Orient Express
tvReview: It may have been Clara and the Doctor's 'last hurrah' but it was the guest stars who really stood out
News
people
Caption competition
Caption competition
Latest stories from i100
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition apps?
Daily Quiz
Independent Dating
and  

By clicking 'Search' you
are agreeing to our
Terms of Use.

Day In a Page

War against Isis: US strategy in tatters as militants march on

US strategy in tatters as Isis marches on

American-led air attacks are failing. Jihadis are close to taking Kobani, in Syria – and in Iraq western Baghdad is now under serious threat, says Patrick Cockburn
Nigel Farage undressed: The Ukip leader's fuddy-duddy look is a calculated harking-back to post-war patriotism

Nigel Farage undressed

The Ukip leader's fuddy-duddy look is a calculated harking-back to post-war patriotism
Ruby Tandoh on freestyle baking, being gobby and having a go at Twitter trolls

Ruby Tandoh: 'I don't regret having a go at people who were really nasty to me on Twitter'

The 'Bake Off' contestant on freestyle baking, being gobby and having a go at trolls
We found Dick, now let's find Harry: After Richard III's remains were found in a Leicester car park, the hunt is on for King Harold's body

We found Dick, now let's find Harry

One man's hopes of proving that Harold II did not die at Hastings would be one in the eye for the Normans
Daniel Radcliffe interview: 'Never trust a man with no vices'

Daniel Radcliffe: 'Never trust a man with no vices'

The former boy wizard talks about loosening up and heading to the dark side in new film 'Horns'
Natalie Bennett: Green on the outside but red in the centre

Natalie Bennett: Green on the outside but red in the centre

The leader of the Green Party is happy to be called a watermelon. Just don't mention Nigel Farage
John Lydon: Former Sex Pistols vocalist reveals the fate of Never Mind the B****cks II

John Lydon reveals the fate of Never Mind the B****cks II

The follow-up to the Sex Pistols' punk classic will never be released – because it was 'hideously dull'
The power of political memoirs: Barack Obama skewered by the pens of insiders

Obama skewered by the pens of insiders

Memoirs by two former secretaries of defense and directors of the CIA give a depressing impression of a flagging presidency, says Rupert Cornwell
Diana Nammi on women's rights: 'We should not use culture to justify murdering women'

Diana Nammi: 'We should not use culture to justify murdering women'

As she picks up a Barclays achievement award, the activist tells of her lifelong struggle to stop honour killings
Fools' gold: Using the precious metel in food is 'pointless and outdated'

Fools' gold

'Ultimate' dishes with opulent ingredients are on the rise - but they aren't worth trying, says Paul Bignell
Literary culture: From Super Thursday to the book dump bin is not that far

From Super Thursday to the book dump bin is not that far

But away from the hype, serious readers seem to be surviving remarkably well, says DJ Taylor
The grocer’s secrets: How to spice up your larder

The grocer’s secrets

How to spice up your larder
Terry Venables column: Roy Hodgson must take a chance on his untested players against Estonia

Terry Venables column

Roy Hodgson must take a chance on his untested players against Estonia
The Inside Word: Greg Dyke’s FA must give up on England team and focus on the grass roots

Michael Calvin's Inside Word

Greg Dyke’s FA must give up on England team and focus on the grass roots
Andy Burnham: 'Labour will do whatever it takes for a free health service'

Andy Burnham: ‘Labour will do whatever it takes for a free health service’

The shadow Health Secretary outlines his vision for a new national care and health service