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The English FA are not fit for purpose;

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Eggs

Player Valuation: £120m
5 former FA executives have written to the chair of the Parliamentary Culture, Media and Sports Committee asking them to propose legislation to force reform of the FA because it's no longer fit fit for purpose.

The letter suggests the English FA is 'outdated and held back by elderly white men'. It also says those in power are under qualified to meet the demands of the modern game.
 

The FA under attack, but will it make a blind bit of difference ?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38274152

FA reform: Former chiefs say 'elderly white men' block change.

The Football Association is outdated, held back by "elderly white men", and unable to counter the power of the Premier League, say five former executives of the governing body.

David Bernstein, David Davies, Greg Duke, Alex Horne and David Triesman say the FA have failed to "self reform". The five have asked Parliament's Culture, Media and Sport committee for legislation to reform the FA.

Committee chairman Damian Collins MP has said "time has run out" for the FA.

"It may well move us to redressing the woeful lack of English players or managers and the embarrassing failures of our national team for the past 50 years," the five conclude in a letter to MP Damian Collins, chairman of the committee.

Among the points made by the five former FA executives are:

  • The Premier League's financial power has a knock-on effect "right through the football pyramid".
  • The FA is compelled to contribute tens of millions of pounds to the Premier League, rather than the grassroots of the game.
  • The majority of those in senior positions are under-qualified to deal with the complexities of the FA structures.
  • The FA Board is neither an independent board nor an independent regulator.
Collins responded by saying the committee "shares your concern" and confirmed a draft bill to deliver the necessary reform was being prepared.

Greg Dyke, who ended his tenure as FA chairman in August, is among the signatories.
But in an interview with the BBC, the committee chairman went a step further.

"We feel now that time has run out," said Collins. "We no longer have any confidence that the FA can or will reform itself.

"We now have an invitation from former chairmen of the FA to act in the best interests of football and to legislate to restructure the FA and in many ways give the power back to people who play football."

Who are the five?
Dyke is the most recent of the five to have held a position at the FA, which they say has an "inability to reform and modernise in a fast-changing world".

Triesman became the FA's first independent chairman in January 2008 but resigned in 2010, later saying it was "impossible" to make the changes he wanted during his time in the role.

Bernstein spent three years in the same role before stepping down in 2013 and being succeeded by Dyke, who left the position in August before being replaced by Greg Clarke.

Davies is a former executive director, while Horne was finance director, managing director of Wembley Stadium, chief operating officer and general secretary at the FA, before leaving in January 2015 after 11 years at the organisation.

'Elderly white men'
In their letter, they highlighted the domination of the Premier League (EPL) because of its "financial might", and added that "worse still, there are some 25 life vice-presidents on the FA Council - all elderly white men - who do not represent anyone but block even the most minor of changes".

They said: "It is little wonder that English football is out of balance. The FA has neither the modernity of approach nor independence required to counter the EPL juggernaut, or to modernise its own governance."

The quintet agreed with the findings of the Culture, Media and Sport committee's reports on football governance in 2011 and 2013, which concluded that the FA needed urgent reform.


Governance Code for Sport, which was released in October.

"The FA welcomes the new Code as a means of ensuring that sports organisations in receipt of public money are operating in an effective and transparent manner that best supports their sports," the governing body said in a statement.

"We will continue to work with the appropriate bodies, DCMS [Department for Culture, Media and Sport] and Sport England, to achieve this joint ambition."

The Premier League says it has "kept patience when past chairmen and chief executives have failed to deliver" and has supported the FA's reforms.

"We will keep working hard‎ to ensure standards are maintained and bettered," it said in a statement. "Others in the game have a responsibility to do the same."

Analysis
Dan Roan, BBC sports editor

For years, the FA has stubbornly resisted mounting pressure from fans and politicians to modernise and break the stranglehold of the vested interests on its Board.

But this blistering attack on the way football is run - and the Premier League's dominance of power and wealth - could prove harder to ignore.

At a time when football is already under intense scrutiny over the child sex abuse scandal, these former FA executives - along with the Culture, Sport and Media committee - have thrown down a gauntlet; the demand for legislation, a regulator and even a vote of no confidence in the FA will horrify a sport that fiercely guards its autonomy, and insists it has made recent progress.

However, while the government has threatened the FA with funding cuts unless reforms happen soon, its appetite to get even tougher is far from certain.
 

*cough stereotyping.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tyne-38275894

Girls give FA red card over advice to get them into football

Pupils at a County Durham primary school have shown the red card to the Football Association over its advice to try and get more girls into the sport.

A document on its website included suggestions girls should be offered "colourful, nice smelling" bibs and pink whistles.

Football is popular with girls at Lumley Primary School and some wrote to the FA taking issue with the tips.

The FA said the document was created after research and feedback.

The opening suggestion is to: "Advertise in places where girls go i.e. coffee shops or on the back of toilet doors."

Deputy head Carol Hughes came across the document while researching resources to use in writing week.

"I was absolutely horrified, and actually laughed out loud at some of the suggestions," she said.

"I took it to another teacher and she had the same response."

'Not Barbie dolls'
Some of her year six pupils wrote to the FA, saying although the document was done with the best of intentions, they found it insulting.

"We aren't brainless Barbie dolls. We don't all like the same colour - pink," one of the pupils said. Another added: "We don't need pink whistles and we don't have big mouths, so why do we need a big mouth water bottle."

A spokesman for the FA said: "The FA is committed to doubling female football participation by 2020 and to growing the women's game at all levels, from elite to grassroots.

"The document was created following research into women and girls playing football, with feedback from both participants and non-participants.

"We're very pleased to see how many girls at the school play football and the passion for the game that they clearly have."
 
5 former FA executives have written to the chair of the Parliamentary Culture, Media and Sports Committee asking them to propose legislation to force reform of the FA because it's no longer fit fit for purpose.

The letter suggests the English FA is 'outdated and held back by elderly white men'. It also says those in power are under qualified to meet the demands of the modern game.

Always have been - no new news here
 
Lol at all the comments on the BBC article. My god do some white people love to cry "anti white" racism at every chance. It's like I stumbled upon the daily mail website.

Imagine what it would be like if we as a demographic actually suffered proper life effecting racism...
 
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5 former FA executives have written to the chair of the Parliamentary Culture, Media and Sports Committee asking them to propose legislation to force reform of the FA because it's no longer fit fit for purpose.

The letter suggests the English FA is 'outdated and held back by elderly white men'. It also says those in power are under qualified to meet the demands of the modern game.

Whilst governance and perfromance in the FA is shockingly bad I can't help be amused by the idea of the government legislating for FA reform when they consider EU reform and exit not worthy of legislation lol
 

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