Merseyside: football's 51st state?
Yesterday at 08:54 AM
It has been a momentous week for Everton, and for the region as a whole. The Friedkin Group's takeover means both of Merseyside's Premier League clubs are now controlled by Americans. Meanwhile, a third, League Two side Tranmere Rovers, could join them if the English Football League (EFL) ratifies a takeover by a consortium led by Donald Trump's former lawyer Joe Tacopina.
In football terms, Liverpool is on the verge of
becoming the USA's 51st state — the name of the 2001 movie starring Samuel L
Jackson and Robert Carlyle, which was filmed in the city and used Anfield, the
home of Liverpool FC, as a backdrop.
Everton is a club of contrasts. Much of their mainly local support comes
from some of the United Kingdom's most economically challenged districts in the
north end of Liverpool, near Walton where Goodison Park is located, and the
'People's Club' — as former manager David Moyes christened them — has long
taken pride in not being connected to big business, particularly in comparison
to their near-neighbours Liverpool.
Yet it hasn't always been this way. In the 1960s, it was
Everton — not Liverpool — who were the city's big spenders under their chairman
John Moores, the founder of Littlewoods Pools. Then, their nickname was the
'Mersey Millionaires' and the club's modus operandi was unapologetically
ruthless: one manager, Johnny Carey, was sacked in the back of a taxi.
Moores would detail several innovations that would grow the
sport, making it more attractive to business. They included the creation of a
European Super League (sound familiar?), the rise of television, as well as the
removal of the maximum wage, leaving a free market in which the best players
would go to the richest clubs.
When Liverpool started to dominate English football and
Goodison Park experienced a dip in gates, Moores tried to raise more cash. One
of his solutions was to bring corporate hospitality to Goodison, as well as
more advertising boards around the pitch but the move experienced pushback.
"Fans didn't like it," says Gavin Buckland, who recently
published a book entitled The End, which looks at some of the longer-term
causes of Everton's struggles. "They felt the boards intruded on their match
day routine — an in-your-face commercialism."
Attitudes haven't changed much since, in part because
successive Everton owners haven't been able to expand Goodison which is hemmed
into Walton's warren of terraced streets. Under Kenwright, Everton played on
that reputation of the plucky underdog punching above its weight; it was only
when Moshiri, a Monaco-based British-Iranian steel magnate, arrived as co-owner
in 2016 that the waters were muddied.
Will the new stadium become a shopping mall experience,
complete with hiked-up ticket prices? Buckland speaks of a "cliff edge", where
Everton are moving into a new home, necessitating new routines for matchgoing
fans, while a new foreign owner with a reputation for keeping his distance gets
his feet under the table. For some, all of this at once might be too much.
Metro mayor Steve Rotheram says football, especially, plays
a significant role in the visitor economy to the region, which in 2018 was
worth £6.2billion. A thriving Everton playing at a stadium that does a lot more
than host football matches every fortnight has the potential to add to that
pot. The site at Bramley-Moore promises to regenerate the area around it and,
currently, there are small signs of that change. Now Everton's immediate
financial concerns have gone away, perhaps businesses hoping to move in can
proceed with more confidence.
Tranmere Rovers
Tranmere Rovers area football club that returned to the Football
League in 2018, having fallen on hard times since the early 1990s when it
threatened to reach the Premier League.
There is a belief the takeover will be completed in early 2025.
While the source suggests it has taken longer than expected to reach this point
after an unnamed investor dropped out, The Athletic has been
told separately that an unnamed investor's application was rejected by the EFL.
This led to the buying group trying to source a replacement. The EFL declined
to comment.
Tacopina has been involved in Italian football for a decade,
with mixed success. He knows Tranmere is not a sexy name but neither was
Wrexham before they were taken over by the Hollywood actors Ryan Reynolds and
Rob McElhenney in 2021. While Tranmere has a fight this season to retain its
Football League status, Tacopina would be taking on a club that more or less
breaks even.
Palios is naturally cautious. For years, he's wanted to find
a minority partner but interested parties have tended to find there isn't much
up-side for such investment. Palios has since been able to convince Tacopina
that Tranmere has significant potential with a full takeover, that the club has
geography on its side and could become the region's third wheel.
More than 500,000 people live on the Wirral but the majority
cannot get tickets for Liverpool or Everton. There is an interest in Tranmere
but many Wirral residents are only would-be fans.
Tranmere is worth around £20million in assets. Even if the
club reached the Championship, the gateway to the Premier League, the value
would increase significantly, potentially leaving Tacopina with a profit if he
decided to sell. Importantly, the stadium is owned by the club and Tacopina
would be inheriting that. Tacopina takes confidence from the stories of clubs
like Bournemouth and Brentford, who are now established in the Premier
League despite playing in similar-sized stadiums to Prenton Park (Bournemouth's
is actually considerably smaller) and with little history of success at the top
level.
An Everton fan commented: 'the swell in popularity of the
Premier League with American (and global) fans is one of the worst things to
happen to the matchgoing English fan. Ticket prices are more expensive and
harder to get, the club is less of a community asset and more of a corporate
conglomerate. You can't book a hotel
room in Liverpool when Liverpool have a home game and while it brings tourist
revenue into the area, it separates the club from the place it exists in. None
of my Kopite friends or family actually go to games anymore and most people in
Liverpool claiming to be Liverpool fans have never been to one and may never go
to one. Foreign fans will simply never
have the same connection to the club that local fans do. I'm happy we're moving
to BMD but we are losing a part of our soul when we leave Goodison.'
Nevertheless, the globalisation (or Americanisation) of football continues as the US asserts its power in a number of dimensions from trade to sport. What one thinks of this is a matter for personal opinion, although there are clearly those who would like much closer ties between the UK and the US, building on those which already exist in the military and intelligence spheres.