Anyone with a remote interest in how Chelsea are funded by Ares, please put aside 10 minutes to read this. Probably the most in depth analysis I have done. Frankly, it's scary... #Chelseafc#CFC https://t.co/1YjdIRUJAK
The one I have been waiting for. Big Nev @NevilleSouthall. Brilliant video and commentary from @markthablue38 and Ben. Thanks lads
https://t.co/Krcfs8lfHY
The Analysis Series has looked at a number of significant legal cases in World Football, here's the latest in the numerous challenges to the global transfer market.. https://t.co/iHPlI5OXTH
In case you missed it. My first article for @FootBizNews. Looking forward there'll be a minimum of one article a week from me, exclusive to FootBiz. Enjoy!
https://t.co/quFSYee3MS
And so it starts.....
Wrong doing should always be punished but the systemic risk to football of clubs suing each other is huge.
https://t.co/uR6lT3N1Md
With more revenue flowing through the English game by multiples of other nations, for more than three decades, how is it that our national team & those that organise it, are not streets ahead of the competition?
The problem is not tactical, not the coach or the players - it is systemic
Very interesting and detailed breakdown of the “Political Interference and the Trump–Balogun Red Card Intervention”👇
Here’s another perspective to add to the The Chairperson of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee, Mohammad Al-Kamali and his many roles 👉 https://t.co/DTsPgofbQz
The only other time a player avoided a World Cup suspension after a red card was Garrincha in 1962. That case also involved a head of state making phone calls to officials.
FIFA's statutes commit the organisation to political neutrality. Its ethics code prohibits officials from political interference. It has applied those rules against member associations on strict-liability grounds for far less direct interference than lobbying a live disciplinary decision.
Whether Trump's call caused the outcome cannot be proven from the public record. But the appearance of political capture is now an established fact, and it is the appearance that FIFA's own rules exist to prevent. @FootBizNews
https://t.co/aEgNVCbtLm
My first article for @FootBizNews FootBiz Special Edition: FIFA, Political Interference and the Trump–Balogun Red Card Intervention https://t.co/fb8YzNZYJR
My first article for @FootBizNews FootBiz Special Edition: FIFA, Political Interference and the Trump–Balogun Red Card Intervention https://t.co/fb8YzNZYJR
The latest from The Analysis Series: @andyburnham is due to speak in parliament today re the new “Hillsborough law” as a model of redistributing power.
Well done all involved
https://t.co/QCEbriXkGb