Money is the name of the game
First take a handful of power, money, sex and football, cover the
dish with a good dollop of hypocrisy and there you go - the perfect
recipe for a red-top tabloid journalists dream. Front and
back pages sorted, and off to the boozer. Only a few weeks ago it
was David Beckham who got the treatment, in case anyone remembers.
Now it is the turn of Sven-Goran Eriksson, the England manager.
Or perhaps we should call him dirty Sven (get the allusion
to East Enders?) or just Sven the love-rat? Suddenly
Soho Square is a brand new soap opera centred on the
grey men in grey suits who comprise the Football Association, the
pitiful ruling body of a game that arose from the people and is
for the people.
Why, I hear you ask, does a communist paper like the Weekly Worker
trouble itself to write about such a subject? Simple. Forget the
bollocks about the beautiful game and all the advertising
hype. Whether you love it or loathe it (and I can already hear the
collective groans of some dear Welsh comrades who have this strange
obsession with the oval ball), football is the peoples game
in this country: it is our game. Football belongs to the working
class. Many thousands of us play it on a Saturday or Sunday morning
in the local park or playing field. Thousands of others likewise
follow their own clubs (local or adopted) at home and
away, spending money hard-earned in the factory or office to get
there. Millions watch the game on TV and derive great pleasure from
it. There are even people like this writer who think that Stoke
City will make it into the premiership this year - sad, perhaps,
but well see.
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So, what has been going on? For those readers who have been on
holiday at the North Pole or wherever you cannot get a copy of the
News of the World, let us first give a very brief summary. Eriksson
and his colleague, the since resigned chief executive of the FA,
Mark Palios (£400,000 pa), who had a not bad career with Tranmere
Rovers and Crewe Alexander and then turned to accountancy) were
allegedly sleeping (not simultaneously,
one gathers) with a certain lady called Faria Alam (£35,000
pa), personal assistant to FA director David Davies. None of the
people involved was married. They were consenting adults.
So far so ordinary. Office romances are not exactly
unknown, even in Fleet Street. But the word was put about and, given
the background motivation and the silly season, the usual media
circus began. Soho Square first issued a blanket denial, but then
had to recant in the case of their doomed chief executive. Adios
Palios, as one of the rags put it. But worse than this was
the fact that Soho Squares (also now departed) communications
guru Colin Gibson had earlier tried with ultimate naivety to do
a deal with the News of the World along the lines of spare
Palios and well give you all the dirt you need to nail Sven.
Erikssons own case is more complex. Not a man who normally
discusses his private life (you know, things like his tabloid-reported
liaison with Ulrika Jonsson a couple of years ago), he was distressed
and issued the following statement: I wish to state unequivocally
that ... I have at no time either categorically confirmed or denied
or any relationship with Faria Alam. Lawyers can make a lot
of money out of that. But the key question is not whether he did
the dirty deed itself (as if anyone cares), but whether
he subsequently lied about it. Meanwhile there are reportedly two
other uncomfortable senior executives of the FA likely to be named
as Ms Alams bedmates. Asking price for the whole story? Perhaps
£1 million and rising.
By the time this paper goes to bed, England may well be without
a manager and the tawdriness of the whole tale will soon be forgotten.
But let us take a moment or two to reflect on the real facts about
the story, which has nothing to do with bonking but
everything to do with the politics and economics of football, and
with the nature of sport in capitalist society.
In the first place, as one FA insider put it, If Sven had
won us the European Championship, no one would have cared a jot
about this. That is the reality. So you can forget about all
the moralistic crap from journalists such as those on the Daily
Mail who condemn Eriksson as a serial womaniser of the most
sordid order and warn us that the FA must take drastic
action to restore decent values and exemplary leadership to the
game that has become the passion of almost every man, woman and,
most importantly, child in this country. If England had lifted
the European Cup, none of this would have mattered. But they didnt,
and that is what the politics of Svens situation is all about.
How do you assess his record? Correct me if Im wrong, but
in their last 23 fixtures, England have lost only three times. After
his recruitment by Adam Crozier (now busy rationalising
the Royal Mail), who brought in tons of fresh revenue to the FA
but also presided over a spiralling of costs, Eriksson appeared
vindicated by Englands smashing of Germany 5-1 in Munich.
But what about the 2002 World Cup in Japan, where England could
not manage to beat a 10-man Brazilian side in the quarter finals?
They have managed to reach the quarter-finals of the World Cup and
the European Championships. Most recently, they dropped out after
a penalty shoot-out against Portugal in Euro 2004. On one level,
you cant blame the manager for the fact that some of his players
cannot put penalties away. But on the other hand, how did England
get into such a position? By tactical ineptitude, excessive cautiousness;
defending far too deeply in a forlorn effort to hold on to advantage,
a generally negative and passive attitude - all strategic errors
that are finally the managers responsibility. Yet if you listen
to the team, players like Beckham himself and Frank Lampard, to
name only a couple, they know better than us about the value of
Svens leadership and his ability, contrary to the ice-man
image, to galvanise the squad. A very complex equation.
At Thursdays emergency meeting of the FAs ruling committee
all this will be secondary, if indeed mentioned at all. What these
pin-striped apparatchiks of the peoples game are concerned
with is money, especially the money derived from Sky TV. Money will
be the unspoken but ever present item at the top of the agenda.
For remember that Erikssons dalliance with Chelsea (cosy chats
with Abramovich and Peter Kenyon) led the FA to dissuade Sven from
defecting to club management by renewing his contract on improved
terms until 2008. The man earns something like £4
million a year and the bill he could extract for constructive dismissal
could therefore amount to somewhere around £14 million, maybe
bankrupting the FA in the process.
According to the celebs favourite publicist, Max Clifford,
Ms Alam stands to make around £1 million by telling us just
who she slept with and when. Sexist headline writers
are already calling her the real FA trophy. Pathetic.
The latest issue of Now magazine finds it timely to produce a double-page
spread about the style gaffes of Svens reportedly
ex-partner Nancy DellOlio. If only she had worn something
different.
Such are the decadent, sickening times we live in. Times when in
the darkness of the night you ask yourself: why do I go on struggling
for socialism in a world that appears to be drowning itself in a
self-made mire of mindless trivia? But that is exactly the point.
Where does alienation come from? From the internal recognition -
leave aside all ideology to begin with - that we are divorced from
what we make, that our labour-power is exercised not in our own
interest but in that of the boss. This makes our free time even
more precious, a time when we can not only relax from the labours
of the working day but begin to express and define ourselves as
individual human beings.
And sport, whether you play it yourself or just derive pleasure
from watching it (live or on the box), is an important part of our
experience as human beings - as a collectivity. It need hardly be
said that under capitalism sport in general and football especially
amounts to no more than a great generator of profit. Think of Manchester
United (though I try not to): the income derived from season ticket
sales (it takes longer to get one than the current 15-year waiting
list for MCC membership) runs into millions. Then theres the
huge take from merchandise, such as club replica kit, which changes
surprisingly often and the kids, naturally enough, want the latest.
Parents can tell me exactly how much that costs, but I am sure it
is a good deal of money.
The fact is that we, the working class, actually pay through the
nose for our big sports to continue. Without us paying punters there
would be no premiership, no Sky near-monopoly. So am I proposing,
like a good old anarchist, that we vote with our feet on this question?
No. The whole transitory saga of Sven, for example, will be gone
in a short while, whatever the outcome. The gigantic cash nexus
we call football will remain. Forget the idea that a recession will
bring things back to the Halcyon days when cloth-capped workers
stood and watched Stan Matthews take on all opposition for a few
bob and a packet of fags. Those days will obviously never come back.
Football, like every other aspect of our lives, has been devoured
by that Moloch we call the market and changed for ever.
Until, that is, we decide that enough is enough. Until we struggle
for a society where people say that work - yes, work - creative
labour is humankinds greatest need, work as a means of self-expression
and self-fulfilment. And afterwards recreation of all kinds, and
among it sport - football, of course, included and probably near
the top of the list; whether as a player or spectator you derive
joy from a game that is played not for £50,000 a week, as
happens in the current market, but from the simple joy of the sport
itself. It may seem a long way off. It is. But that is our socialist
vision and we live for it.
Patrick Presland
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