2min chapter

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Football: a moral force for good?

Moral Maze

CHAPTER

The Moral Price of Ownership in English Football

The clubs are making 26 times as much money as they did in 1992. It's been very generative from the taxation point of view. The downside is that perhaps you're losing your local identity because you are now part of an overseas entity. And if you're not one of the ultra wealthy clubs, you're not going to win any trophies for the rest of your life. Understood, Arastaka? In my more romantic moments, I think of football as the people's game. I think of it as democratic and I think about it as universal and grassroots. Is that just a delusion? It is universal for many of the stakeholders. If we take the players, the vast majority

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