Author Archive: admin

Supporters Direct join Co-operative Congress event

Co-operatives and Mutuals Wales in partnership with Supporters Direct and Sport Wales are organising a free event as part of the Co-operative Congress in Cardiff on June 29th. The event is free to attend, and is also open to all full Congress delegates.     

In the UK Spectator Sport of all kinds was once owned by its fans. Where business people were involved it was often out of a desire to return something to the community, and most people reckoned that a town football club was a money pit   from which investors would never get a return.

In 1900 a maximum wage of £4 per week was set by the FA to limit the “horse trading” of players by clubs and keep excessive commercialism out of the sport. The lifting of the maximum wage for players in 1961 was a pivotal moment in the history of professional football in this country. The campaign that preceded it caught the imagination of people in a way that no other such football battle had before, or has since, with a great deal of the attention centring on Jimmy Hill, the successor to Jimmy Guthrie as the Professional Footballers Association Chairman.

With the increased television coverage that had started in 1938 and increased steadily from then on, football became more and more commercial. From the first formal deal in 1960 the price of the TV contracts rose to £2.6m per year in 1983 and to £11m per year by 1988. The price today is close to £1bn.

Slowly ownership of football has been moved to the private sector and today has become in many cases a vehicle not for community benefit but for private land value speculation. Stadia that had been built at the edge of town after the First World War were slowly surrounded by new developments and became prime real estate, and TV rights now account for far more income than gate receipts.

Many sports grounds have been, and are still being turned into shopping malls with a sports stadium attached. Many clubs are now so focussed on TV rights they have forgotten the fans who turn out week after week to support them.

The grass roots movement, led by Supporters Direct has reversed this process.

Football is not unique in this drift to private ownership and commercialisation. Other spectator sports have followed suit, with increasing corporatisation in both codes of Rugby Football.

Now, Spectator Sport is returning to its roots and the pace of change is accelerating.

At the same time, much work is being done by Sport Wales and others to build participatory sports clubs from the ground up, developing their sustainability, bringing in a business focus, strengthening their governance, and encouraging them to build consortia to work together. Where appropriate clubs are developing and operating shared facilities such as gyms, sports halls and sports fields.

Come and find out what has changed in the world of spectator and participatory sports, and how you can get involved.

Celebrate success in community owned sport and hear about:-

§  The story of a Welsh football club that has been taken back 100% by its fans, Merthyr Tydfil

§  The story of the campaign to take back a Rugby Union club into community ownership

§  The work being done at grass-roots in Wales to strengthen and develop all types of community owned sports clubs, focussing especially on community based participatory sport

Speakers include:-

§  Alex Bird – Co-operatives & Mutuals Wales (Chair)

§  Tom Hall – Head of Policy and Development, Supporters Direct

§  Owen Smith MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Wales + Pontypridd RFU

§  Mark Evans, Merthyr Town Football Club

§  Mark Frost, Corporate Director, Sport Wales

Come along to this free event run as part of the Co-operatives UK Congress and find out what has changed and how you can get involved.

Book tickets at https://communityownershipofsport.eventbrite.co.uk/

Game ON! Gaining skills and making friends – through football.

Pictured are Ali Abdi; Jarred Harvey and Jason Webber

Pictured are Ali Abdi; Jarred Harvey and Jason Webber

The Supporters’ Trust has helped 30young people from across the South Wales come together to promote friendship and understanding through football.

The 14-16 year-olds from Merthyr Tydfil and Pontypridd joined colleagues from the Butetown, Riverside and Grangetown areas of Cardiff at the University Fields in Treforest to develop their footballing skills and to discuss issues which are important to them.
The day kicked off with a session from Show Racism the Red Card. The players then had skills coaching sessions and a talk on the use of legal and illegal drugs. The day ended with a friendly football tournament.The event was organised by Game On and Dynamic Sports Development who engage young people through football and the event was sponsored by the Supporters’  Trust.Trust Chair, Tim Hartley, said, “These young people come from very different backgrounds and some of them will have rarely ventured either out of their own communities. This event was such a success we will be organising a return fixture at Cardiff’s House of Sport next month.”

Dane Facey from Game On Wales said, “We are encouraging young people from a variety of Communities First areas to come together and develop positive personal experiences that can increase interaction and social development between young people.”

Ali Abdi from Dynamic Sports Development said, “This session was a fantastic opportunity for our young people to engage with others of the same age and learn, understand and appreciate similarities and respect differences.  It created a real opportunity to foster and encourage new and lasting friendships between young players from across South Wales”

Trust and Supporters Club urge Bluebirds fans to keep faith with blue

Cardiff City Supporters’ Trust and Cardiff City Supporters Club today issued a joint Press statement:

As designs of the new red home kit were released this week, Cardiff City Supporters’ Trust and the Supporters Club have urged Bluebirds fans to keep faith with blue.

Tim Hartley, Trust chair, said: “We, of course, welcome the investment of Vincent Tan which has helped deliver the dream of Premier League football next season. But we firmly believe that the overwhelming majority of Cardiff City supporters would prefer to see the restoration of our traditional blue at home games.”

Vince Alm from the Supporters Club said: “We would like to know from the club when the alternative blue and, indeed, yellow kit will be available for purchase so those loyal supporters who don’t want to buy a red kit can still back their club. Fans have told us they would like to know when they can pre-order blue and they deserve a firm answer.”

Tim Hartley added: “We note that the club is promoting heavily the launch of the red home kit during the summer but we have not heard anything about the alternative blue kit for those fans who remain very supportive of the traditional colours of our beloved Bluebirds.”

Trust members made it clear in its recent fans’ survey that they want to return to blue and the Trust will continue to highlight the majority views of its members at every opportunity. As a result it is looking at innovative ways of ensuring a strong blue presence in the stadium.

Trust meeting with Chief Executive and his team

Trust board members will be meeting the club’s Chairman and Chief Executive, Simon Lim, and his team on Friday, June 14. We have been told Vincent Tan will not be available to meet with supporters’ representatives until August when he is back in the UK

If Trust members would like us to raise any questions with the club please contact help@ccfctrust.org as soon as possible with your contribution.