Patrick Collins: Premier League 5bn deal – what"s the point

What's the point of a 5bn league if England can't make it to the World Cup

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UPDATED:

22:51 GMT, 17 November 2012

When the last contract is sealed and the last hand is shaken, the Premier League’s new television deal will burst through the 5billion barrier.

The landmark will be celebrated in boardrooms up and down the land. Backs will be slapped, corks will explode and club owners will flash beatific beams as they settle into their seats on the gravy train.

And who will blame them The Premier League is an extraordinary commercial success. /11/17/article-2234562-1613F848000005DC-756_634x393.jpg” width=”634″ height=”393″ alt=”Everyone's invited: The Premier League continues to draw the big money, with a 5bn deal due” class=”blkBorder” />

Everyone's invited: The Premier League continues to draw the big money, with a 5bn deal due

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Small wonder the owners are beaming, for fortunes await them at every turn. Never in the history of British sport has a venture proved quite so profitable. So it’s trebles all round, and the toast is ‘To English football!’.

Which is probably an inconvenient time to bring up events in Stockholm the other evening.

Ah, Stockholm! The Friends Arena. When we hear the name, we shall replay in our minds that peerless goal, the one which Zlatan Ibrahimovic executed with such wit, agility and dramatic imagination. And as we remember the goal, the fact that England were beaten 4-2 will somehow pass us by.

It’s happened several times before, of course. Historically, Sweden and England are almost level pegging, so one more defeat came as no great surprise. But rarely have English expectations been quite so muted.

Fielding six debutants had something to do with it: Leon Osman, Raheem Sterling and Steven Caulker starting, with Carl Jenkinson, Ryan Shawcross and Wilfried Zaha arriving from the bench. It was a patent gamble, the football version of running up a flag to see if somebody might salute it.

Add Tom Cleverley, Jack Wilshere, Daniel Sturridge and Tom Huddlestone – all relatively untested – and the nature of the experiment becomes clear.

Consider those 10 players. Two, hopefully three, are likely to enjoy extended international careers, three or four will almost certainly fade, and the jury is out on the rest. Roy Hodgson will handle them with sympathetic skill, but he recognises reality and he knows how shallow is England’s pool of talent.

And a major reason for the perilous shortage may be found on that 5bn gravy train.

Currently, around 30 per cent of players starting matches in the Premier League are qualified to play for England. But as their numbers decrease, so their influence diminishes.

Once, they could benefit from the foreign players around them; now, increasingly, they are crowded out, allotted walk-on parts, fortunate to find a place in the average squad. For English football has become a kind of offshore haven, like Jersey or the Cayman Islands.

Outclassed: The beating England suffered in Sweden was met with a shrug of acceptance by fans

Outclassed: The beating England suffered in Sweden was met with a shrug of acceptance by fans

Outclassed: The beating England suffered in Sweden was met with a shrug of acceptance by fans

It offers its television paymasters compelling, custom-tailored entertainment. It strikes a bargain with the global game: you give us the stars, and we’ll give you passionate crowds, imposing stadia, illustrious tradition and weekends full of Super Saturdays or Soaraway Sundays.

No longer genuine contenders, England are reduced to the role of promoters; no longer a major football nation, merely a desirable venue. And the chickens may be hurrying home to roost.

In a week’s time, Hodgson will attend a football conference in Rio. While there, he will take the chance to look at hotels, training facilities, the places which the manager of a prospective World Cup finalist has to inspect.

But we know, beyond any doubt, that a fear lurks in a recess of his mind. Suppose the planning is rendered redundant Suppose it all goes calamitously wrong Suppose England should fail to qualify for Brazil

This week, they dropped into second place, two points behind Montenegro, who they still must play at home and away.

Their other four remaining fixtures include a trip to Ukraine and a home game with Poland. Nothing is certain, yet failure feels almost unthinkable.

Hodgson knows, though he cannot say,
that the 2014 World Cup trophy lies far beyond England’s reach, that the
likes of Brazil and Argentina, Spain and Germany do not consider them
serious contenders. But pride demands that England should at least
attend the party.

Should
the worst come to pass, there would be the usual search for scapegoats.
The manager would fall on his sword, while the players would express
their sincere regrets while sidestepping the consequences.

Generation game: Of the youngsters being given a chance, will Tom Cleverley and Jack Wilshere be among those to enjoy long and fruitful England careers

Generation game: Of the youngsters being given a chance, will Tom Cleverley and Jack Wilshere be among those to enjoy long and fruitful England careers

But somehow I doubt that the old hysteria would rage through the public at large. Not this time. Sure, the phone-ins would fulminate and the tweeters would wear their thumbs to the bone, but international failure no longer produces the same extremes of emotion, for they have seen too much and come too far.

The farce of World Cup 2010, with the surrender of Fabio Capello’s hapless crew, was possibly a step too far. Dear old Hodgson and his fuzzy-cheeked tyros seem unable to engage them.

Instead, they want what the Premier League has been providing these past 20 years: cosmopolitan slickness and choreographed conflict. Not so much a sport, more a media-friendly ‘product’.

They want tribal warfare waged by mercenaries, clad in the livery of United or City, Liverpool or Chelsea. In short, they want the kind of spectacle which sets the whole world watching at the cost of 5bn.

And unless the charmless confraternity of grasping players, greedy agents and megalomaniac owners should bring the whole edifice crashing around its ears, that is precisely what they will be given.

Wenger deserves this moment of high-wire success

Arsene Wenger enjoyed his dinner last night. Nobody insulted his ability or screamed for his head. Instead, he was treated like a man who knows his business. That is what happens when you win the North London derby.

Wenger would not have been impressed; he has never indulged fools, flatterers or fair-weather friends.

Instead, he would have thought about the next game, the next month, the next challenge to be negotiated in his ceaselessly challenging profession.

Just deserves: Arsene Wenger was, at last, the toast of north London once again

Just deserves: Arsene Wenger was, at last, the toast of north London once again

North London is red: Arsenal thrashed Tottenham

North London is red: Arsenal thrashed Tottenham

The Arsenal manager knows how it works. He knows that his team can be surprisingly attractive and miserably feeble. And he knows that, for much of this season, consistency has been a distant dream.

But if anybody deserves some indulgence from the fans, then Wenger is that man. For he produces football as we want to watch it. He embraces adventure and abhors cynicism. As such, he tends to walk the high wire, a stumble away from the next onslaught.

And those onslaughts have arrived at distasteful intervals this season.

Of course, the Arsenal fans have opinions to offer, especially when they pay the highest ticket prices in the land. But Wenger should have been spared the tedious yelping for ‘silverware’, the mindless prattle of self-publicists.

For the old chap has given the game and the club some service. Without benefit of sheik or oligarch, he is creating a team which could be on the verge of something interesting.

Above all, he has given Arsenal Champions League football for 15 straight seasons. Fifteen seasons!

It is a staggering achievement. Wenger deserves respect for that feat. He also deserved to enjoy his dinner last night.

[related

Arsenal"s Champions League rivals Montpellier charged by UEFA

UEFA charge Arsenal's Champions League rivals following disturbance in Greece

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UPDATED:

16:44 GMT, 8 November 2012

Arsenal's Champions League rivals Montpellier have been charged by UEFA following violent disturbances by fans at Tuesday's clash with Olympiakos.

Around 100 fans from the Ligue 1 outfit clashed with riot police at Karaiskakis Stadium in Athens before the match, which was won by 3-1.

UEFA said their disciplinary panel will review the case on November 22, the day after they play the Gunners in London.

Flared up: There was trouble before and after Olympiakos' Champions League clash with French side Montpellier, a thrilling match won 3-1 by the Greeks

Flared up: There was trouble before and after Olympiakos' Champions League clash with French side Montpellier, a thrilling match won 3-1 by the Greeks

Flared up: There was trouble before and after Olympiakos' Champions League clash with Montpellier, a thrilling match won 3-1 by the Greeks

European football's governing body also charged the Greeks for 'insufficient organisation' at the match, with an additional notice for fans throwing missiles and aiming laser-pen beams at players.

Olympiakos face a further mandatory fine after five players were shown yellow cards.

Arsenal beat the Greeks at Emirates stadium on matchday two, following a 2-1 win in France, but have since mustered just one point from back-to-back games against German side Schalke.

London 2012 Olympics: Michael Phelps wins 21st medal in 100m butterfly

Make that 21 medals: Phelps romps to ANOTHER gold… and he still has one more shot at glory!

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UPDATED:

20:53 GMT, 3 August 2012

Michael Phelps won the 17th Olympic gold medal of his career, and his 21st overall, when he produced a majestic performance in the 100m butterfly.

It was the final individual race of the 27-year-old's career which will end on Saturday night in the medley relay.

Unstoppable: Michael Phelps beams after winning gold in the men's 100m butterfly final

Unstoppable: Michael Phelps beams after winning gold in the men's 100m butterfly final

The Baltimore swimmer was seventh at halfway, with nemesis Milorad Cavic first, before the American produced a customary storming final length to touch in 51.21secs.

Chad le Clos, who had relegated Phelps to second in the 200m butterfly earlier this week, was second. The crowd rose as one to applaud the most successful Olympian of all time.

The Americans are huge favorites for the relay in a race they rarely lose, and it's difficult to see the Phelps era ending with anything less than a performance that puts him top of the podium one last time.

Too good: Phelps leads South Africa's Chad le Clos (right) at the Aquatics Centre

Too good: Phelps leads South Africa's Chad le Clos (right) at the Aquatics Centre

He said: 'I am just happy that the last one was a win, that is all I wanted coming into tonight. I thought it would hit me harder than it is right now, a lot of those emotions haven't gone through my brain over the last week.

'Once I am done and once tomorrow is over, I think a lot more emotion will come out. I am in meet mode at the moment, you start and it's over.

'My start of the meet wasn't what we wanted but I picked up some steam and was able to finish with two individual golds. You can't really finish much better, so I am really pleased about how it ended.'

Top that: Evegnu Korotyshkin, Phelps and Chad le Clos

Top that: Evegnu Korotyshkin, Phelps and Chad le Clos