So we are all just over half way through the annual limbo zone. Off season. Close season. The window. Whatever. No football basically, and millions of us get a kind of detached feeling at the weekends when things just don’t quite feel right somehow. For almost three eerie months of summer, quarter to five on a Saturday afternoon becomes a meaningless number rather than stoppage time up and down the land.
Instead of fixtures we live of the scraps of rumour and
raging propaganda from the club.
One by one, the manager and headline stars are wheeled out
into press conferences which are as closely managed as anything the Soviets
ever came up with. Everyone is on message. The lads are ready and raring for a
genuine push for the Champions League – the uber-hyped Promised Land we were
driven out of four years ago. To get back there our great leaders are signing
up a selection of very young players who nobody has ever heard of and all seem
to speak Spanish as a first language. We dive onto Youtube and watch carefully edited
clips of guys who look like they are due to be back at school on Monday morning
doing their tricky stuff in tiny stadiums with lots of empty seats.
So here is the new dream team. Our new merry band of
gladiators who will carry us back to the top table and help us to achieve our
great dream….
Of finishing fourth.
And with a splash of Arctic cold water in the face, we
arrive at the new reality.
Liverpool Football Club with its 18 league titles and five
European Cups now dreams and yearns to finish fourth care of a bunch of kids
from hot places where they grow olives.
When you take a step back from the frantic Goebbels spin
a very different picture can just about be made out.
Some stark facts.
This year Liverpool Football club will get an extra £35
million care on the new TV deal.
This year Liverpool Football Club will pay out £25 million
less on wages.
This year Liverpool Football Club will get another £10
million or so from sponsorship deals.
The most recent accounts basically show that the club has been
more or less breaking even, so all this extra dough should mean a profit of
somewhere approaching £70 million a year. Not a bad return for the lads who
bought us for £300 million a couple of years ago.
Which begs a question or two. Are they really all that
bothered about getting back into the Champions League and challenging for the
title again? To make a genuine attempt to take the club and get it back to
where it once was would mean upping the wage bill by £20 million a year instead
of cutting it by more than that amount. It would also mean shelling out
wheelbarrow loads of borrowed cash to buy the players. It all has the look of
two birds in the bush to me and my gut tells me that our boys from Boston are much more
interested in the bird in hand.
In the cold calculating light of day, it is hard not to
conclude that Fenway Sports are in fact perfectly happy for us to stay rooted
sixth or seventh in the league and to keep on sucking in the cash. Oh of course they won’t
say that. They will carry on peddling all the right lines. And all the while
they will seek out promising Spanish speakers and get them into the global shop
window that Liverpool FC offers. Buy cheap and sell dear and stay seventh and
rake it in.
And what message do these guys peddle around the world in
the pursuit of ever more shirt sales in Asia ?
They hawk the Liverpool dream with all the
desperate enthusiasm of a double glazing salesman. They run and re-run the archive images from
the great nights of Anfield when it seemed like the roof might come unbolted with
the raging sound. Liverpool and the Kop.
Liverpool and the 12th Man. Istanbul and Rome and the dream long ago kick started by
Bill Shankly.
They never tire of telling us how important we all are to
them. Well they would, wouldn’t they? Is it true? It is buggery. Were it true
they might have stepped down from their Ivy league Ivory Towers and clocked on
to the fact that things are bloody hard right now in the north of England .
Coppering up to raise the cash for a £800 season ticket is stretching the 12th
Man all ways. Had they given even the tiniest shit about us, they might have
decided to use 10% of their extra income to acknowledge the fact that the
recession is kicking the 12th Man squarely in the teeth.
10% of £70 million is £7 million.
£7 million would mean they could drop the price of every
season ticket by £200.
Instead they have raised prices by 5%.
Bastards.
And slowly but surely, they are pricing out the ones who
once filled the air with that same barrage of sound that the Bostonians now use
to flog their tawdry shirts in Asia. And every time an old school Koppite finally
gives up the ghost and hands in his or her season ticket, the men from Massachusetts punch the
air. They have no interest in this particular band of dinosaurs. In no way do
we even begin to fit the fan profile they aspire to filling the stadium with.
We go to the pub, turn up ten minutes before the kick off and never spend a
penny in the ground. They want the guys from Scandinavia who shell out for
weekend packages from Thomas Cook including a match ticket which weighs in at
double the cost of a season ticket seat. These lads turn up for the match at
noon and give their plastic a complete hammering in the club shop and then they
go through the turnstiles early and spend even more in the bars inside the
ground.
No doubt Ian Ayre’s laptop is loaded up with sort of stuff
in graphic detail. When I go along to a match with my dad or one of my sons,
the club gets £80 out of it. If a Norwegian dad were to go along with his son,
they would look like a much more attractive option.
Seats - £150.
Museum Tour - £20.
Club Shop - £200.
Cafes - £20
Programme - £4.
Total £394.
No wonder they don’t want the old guard any more. Every time
we renew our season tickets, they see it as blot on their beloved bottom line.
We are not stupid of course. We all know full well that we
are being conned and ripped blind. But can you do? If football is in the blood,
it stays in the blood. They have us hook, line and sinker and don’t they ever
know it. This is why we look at Germany
and turn green with envy. We look at the carnival of a Dortmund home game and dream of being like
them. We dream of our club being our own. We dream of affordable seats. We
dream of being more important than a set of accounts for a few super rich guys
who live at the far side of a deep, grey ocean.
Have you ever harboured such thoughts?
Of course it is a pipe dream and it could never, ever happen
because we live in a world where the 1% gets ever more bloated whist the 99%
get quietly screwed.
‘You may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one…’
Wasn’t it a Scouser who once said that? In fact, didn’t we
name an airport after him?
Well I’ve had my own little dream. It is a dream where King
Kenny Dalglish is persuaded to head up a worldwide campaign to turn his beloved
Liverpool Football Club into a Dortmund :
a club owned lock, stock and barrel by the fans where match tickets cost a
tenner each.
A dream? Duh.
An impossible dream? Almost certainly, but things didn’t
look so clever on the night of nights on the Bosphorus when we were 3-0 down to
AC Milan.
The result of my dreaming is ‘King Kenny’s Revolution’ and
for the next five days it is available absolutely free of charge in the Kindle
Store. You can have a copy by clicking the link below and take some time out to
wonder how things could be so very different.
So download and enjoy and if you approve of this particular
pipedream, please share it around.
To get a free copy of 'King Kenny's Revolution' click the link below
YOU MIGHT ALSO BE INTERESTED IN OTHER MARK FRANKLAND NOVELS ABOUT LIVERPOOL FOOTBALL CLUB
'The Long and Winding Road to Istanbul'
http://is.gd/trXH06
'The Drums of Anfield'
http://is.gd/U5azf1
'Quiet Desperation'
http://is.gd/MLFrTC
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