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La Liga Loca

A sideways look at Spanish football


Tim Stannard and Simon Talbot

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Actually, Spanish fans DON'T own their clubs


Wednesday 06 February 2008 14:53

So a group of Liverpool fans furious with Hicks and Gillette have decided to join forces and try to buy the club themselves.100,000 fans paying £5,000 would be enough to raise the €500m they think they need to gain control.

So far, so good – and we’re with them all the way. But when will people stop using Spain as the example?

“The majority of clubs in Spain are owned by their fans,” a spokesman said. No, they’re not.

To cut a very long, very complex and very boring story short, the SAD (sporting PLC) law obliged all clubs in Spain to float back in 1999, imposing certain financial restrictions on the way the clubs were run. Most were privately owned already; all were made available to potential, private shareholders.

Only four clubs were exempted. Osasuna because of its special status as a sporting (not just a football) institution with links to a “foral” (semi-autonomous) region. And the member-owned, supposedly non-profit institutions of Athletic Bilbao, Barcelona and Real Madrid.

As founder members of the league and the only three clubs never relegated from the first division (although Athletic have been mighty close of late), they may be the most significant clubs in Spain. But there are still only three of them.

The Barça and Madrid model, maybe. But member-ownership is not “the Spanish model.”

Want proof in the shape of barmy owners sinking their clubs? Just look at Betis. Or Alavés. Or Valencia. Or ....



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About Tim Stannard and Simon Talbot

When he isn't fighting the evil forces of flamenco or attracting libel actions for La Liga Loca, Tim Stannard is building his media empire in Madrid. As well as contributing to Football365 and doing odd jobs elsewhere, Tim also works in the glamorous world of television as a producer, script writer, news editor, coffee boy and stand-in fluffer.

Simon Talbot? Well, he's a man of mystery.

Comments

  February 6, 2008 17:33

Gonzalo said:

And let's not get into the nitty gritty of what exactly is wrong with a model such as Real Madrid's, with the lack of transparency in all financial dealings, the nepotism, etc...

However, I'd live with all the faults rather than give the club over to a Malcolm Glazer

  February 6, 2008 20:45

Paul said:

Well they get to vote on a president every four years,but the supporters of these clubs get shat upon like the rest of us. Don't think any of them believe for a second that they own their club.

  February 7, 2008 07:58

Er Guiri said:

Isn't that just soooo typical of Spain.....one set of rules for Real Madrid, Barcelona, another set for the rest (meaning the rest of the world have to suffer their presidential "elections" every few years, and all the disturbance the candidate's promises of signings cause).

  February 7, 2008 14:31

Kirkabir said:

Well Real and Barca are not exactly doing bad ! (lets forget Bilbao for for their regional patriotism is their biggest enemy).

  February 7, 2008 16:20

Mont said:

One and only Piterman!

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