Tuesday 18 June 2024

UK General Election - party manifestos on sport compared


Anyone living in the UK won't have failed to notice that a General Election is taking place, as well as the Euros!  Politicians are increasingly likely to use football as a source of popularity and the governance of football has become a political issue, with the current government attempting to bring in financial regulation of the game.

In the name of public service we have gone through the manifestos of the five parties currently leading in the UK wide opinion polls to bring you a summary of their policies towards sport and football in England (for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland sport is a devolved issue).

We offer no support or endorsement of a specific party here but simply seek to summarize the facts out of public service.  So here are their policies presented in alphabetical order with a brief comment:

Conservative
Introduce Independent Football Regulator
Stop clubs joining breakaway leagues
Implement Carney Review of Women’s Football and support participation of women and girls
Continue Multi-Sport Grassroots Facilities Programme

The Conservatives essentially envisage continuing as they are - the Independent Regulator legislation ran out of time.

Green
Invest £5bn in local sports, arts and culture
Keep local sports facilities open
End VAT on 'cultural activities'

The Greens have few policies on sport and focus on the grass roots side rather than the populist potential of the elite game.

Labour
Introduce Independent Football Regulator
Stop clubs joining breakaway leagues
Support grassroots clubs to expand access to sport
Introduce consumer protection to stop ticket touts
'deliver international events with pride and seek opportunities where we can'

Labour are adopting the Conservative approach but interestingly with an interest in stopping ticket touts and a minimal promise to host mega-events where it might be relevant - but deliberately avoiding naming any specific event.

Liberal Democrat
Introduce Independent Regulator but with powers to impose 'a fairer financial flow to well run clubs', include human rights questions in propriety tests for owners and directors, and require clubs to have EDI action plans
Boost participation in sports and physical activity by investing in leisure centres, swimming pools and other grassroots facilities and supporting community sports clubs.'
Protect sports and arts funding via National Lottery
Introduce consumer protection to stop ticket touts
Place levy on gambling companies
Expand free-to-air coverage to include more football as well as rugby, cricket, golf and tennis
Generally support and encourage EDI in sport

The Liberal Democrats are the most interventionist of any major party - they also progress the Independent Regulator but with a much bigger footprint by adding human rights and EDI factors as well as looking at participation.  They want to regulate gambling, a big sports-related product more, and more sport on telly, too.

Reform
'protect country sports'

Reform have kept their sporting policy simple - defend hunting which they say helps the environment. Tally-ho!

So we can say that where parties consider elite sport they generally offer more regulation of it - but to different extents - for the Greens and Reform, presumably the status quo would continue, and professional football would be left to regulate itself.  All except Reform consider grassroots sports with its broader community and health impacts important in some way - but again there are subtle differences in policy.

We hope that this has helped those with an interest in sport and football policy in England to decide who to vote for come July 4th!

Thursday 13 June 2024

Celebrating Ten Years of Soccer Mad Boffins with a Euro 2024 Tournament Prediction

It was June 2014 when we founded this blog. The launch coincided not only with our FIFA scholarship to research the business and administrative history of the 1966 FIFA World Cup, but also with the start of that years FIFA World Cup, the 20th edition of the tournament hosted in Brazil.

We followed the tournament with various comments and fun posts and who could predict that we would still be going strong in 2024!?

Speaking of predictions, the first time that we attempted to predict the scores and outcomes of a football tournament was the following edition, Russia 2018.  Which leads us nicely to the present.



Today, Friday 14th June, is the start of the UEFA European Championship. Of the British teams, Scotland face Germany on the opening evening, whilst England play Serbia on Sunday 16th.

BBC pundits generally favour England or France to win the cup which can you read by.following this link.

Sky Sports report betting odds also favour the cross-channel rivals but show that Germany and Portugal are close behind, see here.

The NY Times in collaboration with The Athletic has a more statistical approach, showing Germany as having a squad 'built to win', Portugal as 'having worked the goalkeeeper more than any other team' and Belgium's Lokaku as being a top striker.  England, they sneer dismissively, will be heavily reliant on Harry Kane's goals. See here.

Being free thinkers, we make our own predictions, as well as randomly rolling a dice as a control test.  Using our football knowledge and gut instinct, we have some interesting ideas:

On the group games for Scotland and England:

Scotland

Game

AG

KT

Dice

Germany v Scotland

0-2

1-1

0-3

Scotland v Switzerland

3-2

0-1

1-4

Scotland v Hungary

1-0

2-1

3-0

 

England

Game

AG

KT

Dice

Serbia v England

0-3

1-1

1-0

Denmark v England

0-2

0-2

2-6

England v Slovenia

5-0

1-1

2-0

 

Regarding tournament progress, both Alex and Kevin see the Brits as qualifying from their respective groups, itself a huge achievement for the Scottish bravehearts, but are less confident in England than the professional pundits or bookmakers, predicting a Quarter Final exit.  The dice rolled that both nations will crash out in the Round of 16.

Progress

Team

AG

KT

Dice

Scotland

R16

R16

R16

England

QF

QF

R16

The UK General Election will be held just days after the round of 16. As we reported in our 2021 chapter on sport and populism Harold Wilson lost the 1970 General Election just days after England crashed out of the 1970 World Cup to Germany. Rishi Sunak must be pretty confident that England will progress to the Quarter Finals too!

In terms of who will win the tournament:


Winners


Alex (AG) : France (winners), Portugal (runner-up)

Kevin (KT): Portugal (winners), Croatia (runner-up)

Dice: Croatia (winners), Ukraine (runner-up)


Over to YOU


Who do YOU think will win? How far do YOU think that England or Scotland can go? Please leave us a comment below.


PS: We hope that you enjoy the Euro 2024 tournament and in celebrating 2014-2024 of Soccer Mad Boffins.  Please read the above article for fun, we offer no advice nor encouragement for betting/gambling on the tournament and do this prediction exercise solely for entertainment and to see if we can be more accurate than the pundits!

Wednesday 12 June 2024

Latest Publication: 'Conceptualising historical project studies – A complementary partnership' in the International Journal of Project Management



We are pleased to announce our latest paper, in a Special Issue of the International Journal of Project Management Issue 42 (May 2024) on the topic 'Essays on Projects and Their Organisation' edited by Graham Winch of Alliance Business School, Manchester.


Highlights

  • The history of projects together with the interdisciplinary focus of project studies provides an opportunity for the utilization of historical research

  • Existing project histories tend to be teleological in focus and lack historical context

  • We provide a framework for the application of historical research methods based on archives

  • Thinking historically unlocks the meso study of project context

  • A process is explicated to demonstrate how historical investigation can contribute to theoretical novelty


The paper is available to those with access to the journal, from: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijproman.2024.102601

Monday 10 June 2024

York Festival of Ideas 2024: Rediscovering Lost Football Grounds and Terraces with Dr Tosh Warwick

On Sunday 9th June 2024, we presented at York Festival of Ideas, University of York, with Dr Tosh Warwick of Sheffield University on the topic 'rediscovering lost football grounds and terraces.'

A packed room heard Tosh present a short slide show about his research on the topic and announce his new book, that he is currently researching.

Alex and Kevin then began a panel conversation by asking Tosh a couple of questions, before opening to the questioning to the attendees.  All three of us then answered questions relating to football in England and Scotland, the business of football, Barcelona's new stadium development, and Darlington's infamous Reynolds Arena. 

After the event we joined Tosh for a pizza in York city centre and were joined by Rob Nichols, editor of Middlesbrough FC fanzine 'Fly Me To The Moon' who also attended the event.



Alex, Tosh and Kevin


The previous day was notable for an interview with Kevin on BBC Radio York to promote the event at which he discussed what to expect and answered questions from DJ Freya Cox, famous for appearing on the 2021 edition of Great British Bake-Off, about her home town teams of Scarborough and their stadium history.