Soccer-Fair Game proposes plan to reform English football finances


FILE PHOTO: General view of a Premier League branded match ball before the match. Elland Road, Leeds, Britain - March 3, 2026. Action Images via Reuters/Lee Smith/File Photo

MANCHESTER, England, March 19 (Reuters) - Fair Game have ⁠released a "ready‑made solution" for the incoming Independent Football Regulator (IFR), the culmination of a year-long project focused ⁠on devising a way to overhaul the financial foundations of English football.

Their 89-page report entitled "The Four ‌Pot Solution: Redrawing Football's Finances" and released on Thursday sets out a redistribution model they said is designed to curb reckless spending, reduce club insolvencies, and restore competitive balance across the leagues.

Fair Game, a band of clubs campaigning to improve football governance, made three main recommendations: Introducing ​a four-pot distribution model; shrinking parachute payments and rebalancing divisional distribution.

The ⁠group argue that their plan provides an answer ⁠to the long-running stalemate between the Premier League and the English Football League over how to share the game's ⁠3.2 ‌billion pounds ($4.26 billion) annual broadcast revenue.

Meanwhile, the number of clubs across the top four divisions that are technically insolvent has climbed to 62%, average losses in every league have surged, and competitive balance both ⁠within and between divisions continues to deteriorate.

The new Independent Football Regulator, a ​government-backed body created in 2025 to ‌enforce financial sustainability, tighten ownership rules and protect fans' interests, is expected to release its first State ⁠of the Game ​report later this year.

Fair Game's proposal divides central revenues into four distinct pots, each aimed at tackling a different structural weakness.

Pot 1, "The Lights-On Pot," would be for core funding to cover essential staff and infrastructure needed simply to keep clubs operating safely;

Pot 2, "The ⁠Don't-Be-a-Numpty Pot," would be a reward system paying out only to ​clubs that demonstrate responsible financial management, fan engagement, and good governance;

Pot 3, "The Future Pot," would be ring-fenced money for long-term investments such as stadium upgrades, training facilities and community assets, but barred from being used on wages;

Pot 4, "The Safety-Net ⁠Pot," would be mandatory escrow reserve to shield clubs from sudden financial shocks, including abrupt ownership collapses.

Fair Game's CEO Niall Couper said football has been "built on hope, handouts and blind faith" for too long.

"The Four-Pot Solution gives the game a financial system that rewards responsibility, protects communities, and stops clubs gambling with their own futures," said Couper. "This is ​the moment to fix the foundations of our national game – and the Regulator ⁠now has both the power and the obligation to act."

Fair Game believe their model would reduce wage inflation, ease dependence ​on wealthy owners, improve competitive balance, and support clubs across every division, ‌including the National League.

Couper said he hopes the paper "sparks ​a much-needed debate in football that leads to a realistic solution for the entire football community, one that works for every club at every level, and for every fan."

($1 = 0.7515 pounds)

(Reporting by Lori Ewing)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Football

Soccer-Iran continuing World Cup preparations but will not play in US, says soccer chief
Soccer-Numbers speak for themselves, says Simeone, as Atletico reach last eight again
Soccer-Bayern showed no complacency, ready for Real says Kane
Soccer-Atletico survive scare at Tottenham to reach quarter-finals
Soccer-Kane reaches 50 Champions League goals as Bayern beat Atalanta to book last eight spot
Soccer-Liverpool turn on the style to dismantle Galatasaray in Champions League
Soccer-Under pressure, Van Persie gets another vote of confidence
Soccer-Cup of Nations decision hammer blow for African football
Soccer-CAF president admits African football struggling with trust issues
Soccer-Leeds striker Piroe gets chance to play at World Cup

Others Also Read