A Pointless Penalty
Jamie Barnard on how the latest points deduction imposed upon Portsmouth is an injustice...
It was late April 2003 and irony was dripping
from the walls deep down in the bowels of Leicester City’s Walkers Stadium.
Chairmen of the Football League’s seventy-two clubs had just voted on a
proposal to impose points deductions on clubs entering administration.
Seventy-one had assented, one objector. To the host, and Leicester City Chairman,
the solitary demurring hand belonged.
If the Football League’s Annual General
Meeting was close to home, the subject matter was even closer. Just six months
prior Leicester City had themselves been placed in administration, riddled with
debt. Adjacent to the threshold those seventy-one other chairmen had crossed
upon arrival at the Walkers Stadium, collection tins had found parity with
those holding them; shaken, rattled.
For Leicester City fans an additional outlay
to add to the match day expenditure; contributions to funds to save their club.
A supporter’s trust sprung into existence. No points deductions, but plenty
lost. The punch that administration packed was being felt on the terraces.
Fast forward nine years and the same scene has
been played out at football grounds up and down the country, however on these
stages a new protagonist now resides. The points deduction.
In the midst of what are crucial days for
Portsmouth in the fight for their survival, the Football League dealt another
blow to the club earlier this month with the announcement that they will begin
their campaign in League One with a penalty of ten points. Pay up Pompey,
Pompey pay up. But the cost to Portsmouth will be in points as well as pounds.
From Premiership to stricken ship in three
seasons, right now Fratton Park bears the resemblance of a rudderless ship.
Above the Pompey chimes, alarm bells sound loudest and with the Football League’s
latest penalty there’s every chance that next May Day will bring with it
another relegation for the two-time FA Cup winners.
Concluding a season with fewer points than
those won on football pitches up and down the country stinks of familiarity for
Pompey. A points deduction for financial reasons is no novel burden for the
football club hailing from Charles Dickens’ city. Deductions in both the Premier League and the
Championship aided their relegation from each of English football’s top two
tiers. Great Expectations dashed, Hard Times, Fratton Park a very, very Bleak
House.
Relegation and insolvency have history when it
comes to football clubs. And some would claim it’s vicious and circular.
Relegation and the decreased revenue streams such a plunge brings has many
times before been the catalyst for a club’s entering into administration.
Groundhog Day. Portsmouth Football Club is
spiralling.
With
nails already in the Pompey coffin there are several parties vying to be the
one to hammer the final one in place. The Football League appear to be one.
Hope for Pompey came in the form of prospective buyers Portpin, and former
owner Balram Chainrai, but administrator Trevor Birch has already admitted that
sanctions, of which a points deduction was one, have left the prospective new
owners ‘reeling’.
Another of the parties is a collective of
eight current Portsmouth players who are refusing to renege on lucrative
contracts. The principles, legality and morality of such a stance is no black
and white issue, the consequences of this stance being maintained an extremely
blue and white one, with specs of crimson.
There may well be valid reasons as to why these
eight players should refuse proposals intended to save the club, but for
supporters faced with the prospect of losing that club, understanding why Tal
Ben Haim won’t surrender the final year of his reported £35,000 per week
contract is, to put it simply, difficult.
The conflict between a contract given and
contract earned thus becomes a bone of contention. But these are the contracts
handed out by owners who arrived at Portsmouth long after that fateful day at
the Walkers Stadium, long after the Football League began talking of ‘fit and
proper’. Now washed, how fit and proper were the hands of those who once held
Portsmouth Football Club?
Justified it would be that Portsmouth fans bemoaned
the hypocrisy of a governing body which has imposed sanctions to supposedly
solve ‘the problem’ of administration, whilst simultaneously failing to
regulate the ‘fit and proper’ owners that have been allowed to get clubs such
as Portsmouth into such difficulties. After all, these sanctions were born of
the same era.
And the great intention of introducing the
points deduction? Deterrence.
Back in 2003, chairman of the Football League
Sir Brian Mawhinney, who proposed the points penalty, said: "My own view
is that after this has been in a few years you'll see less clubs going into
administration because they will see it as an incentive. I would expect the
number of clubs going into administration to decrease."
Since then, over twenty football clubs have
been in administration.
If there is one thing that English football
should take from the Portsmouth fable, it is that the points deduction hits
hardest in all of the wrong places. When the horse has bolted, when the
villains have exited stage, the points deduction comes into its element.
Righteous and noble, it preaches to the wrong crowd.
For what do fans, players and staff have to
learn from misjudgements and mistakes made by powers beyond all of their
control?
If,
and hopefully when, Portsmouth kick off their League One campaign against
neighbours AFC Bournemouth in mid-August, the supporters that used to pack the
Fratton End so vociferously in better times will be the ones feeling the
pointless points deduction. As Birch said when a further deduction was
announced: “"The fans, players and staff have suffered enough for
something for which they weren't responsible. We feel it is unjustified for the
club to be punished further.”
The
Football League has persevered with a sanction for nine years which has long
proved unfit for purpose. Clearly no deterrent, a hindrance to clubs intentions
of achieving financial stability by handicapping them to the degree that they
often fall further down the footballing ladder, punishment for those clearing
up the mess left by their predecessors.
Were
there a vote taken on the issue now, there would surely be more than just the one
lone objector. More empathetic hands would likely be raised; Pompey’s pain has
been felt by others. Whether the hand belonging to Portsmouth Football Club
would be seen as the votes were cast around the table is a different matter.
Pompey
are on their knees.
Credit Tal Ben Haim photo 'the-e' via Flickr
Credit fans photo 'ca1951rr' via Flickr
Credit Fratton Park photo 'beefy_n1' via Flickr
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