Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
Post
27 May 2011
3 minute(s) read
Recent Posts
How Will AI Change The World? (Ep 1)
How will AI reshape the way we live, earn, and design our lifestyles over the next decade? With investment in AI increasing a billion fold the last 12 years – is this a gold mine or a class... Continue12 December 2025
Posted by Alastair Campbell
478. Farage’s Crypto Megadonor and the Graduate Jobs Disaster (Question Time)
Why has a crypto billionaire living in Thailand donated £9 million to Nigel Farage's party, Reform UK? With a graduate jobs crisis in full swing and rising debt, what are the prospects for y... Continue11 December 2025
Posted by Alastair Campbell
477. How Trump’s Security Strategy Destroys The Old World Order
Has Trump's 2025 National Security Strategy officially upended 80 years of American foreign policy? Why does it warn of Europe's "civilisational erasure" while downplaying threats from its tr... Continue10 December 2025
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Alastair Campbell’s diary: Our politicians should be more like Peter Malinauskas
On political funding and social media, Malinauskas has shown real leadership. Our government should take note... Continue10 December 2025
165. Anna Wintour: Culture, Influence, and the Power of Decisive Leadership
Why should everybody get fired at least once? As the former Editor-in-chief of American Vogue, how does Anna Wintour use fashion as a cultural and economic force? Why is Anna’s leadership s... Continue8 December 2025
Posted by Alastair Campbell
4 December 2025
Posted by Alastair Campbell
475. The Budget Backlash – and Trump’s Plan to Profit from Peace in Ukraine
Is the media too negative about Reeves and Starmer, or are they simply out of ideas? What has the relentless Budget turmoil and fallout done to already low levels of trust in the Government? ... Continue3 December 2025
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Alastair Campbell’s diary: Where is Reform’s money coming from?
Real journalists would want to know whether any of the party's finances came in rouble form... Continue3 December 2025
I agree, that for some peculiar reason Blatter will be re-elected.Controversy is the by-word of his presidency.Also to award the 2022 games to Qatar smells rather badly.I think few would trust Blatter’s internal investigation.Surely if he wanted to root out any alleged corruption he would want an outside body.
It does not help that the FA here appears to get through leaders as quicky as Chelsea get through managers
If it emerged that half of them had been paid by Russia and Qatar, would anyone be very surprised? … Rhetorical q
The grandiosity of the people at the top of football is nauseating. It is supposed to be the people’s game
Ally, will the the supposed protectors of the game, namely the FA then look in their own back yard?
The two biggest clubs in the land allowed to be taken over by leveraged debt.
The unsustainable debt levels of most top clubs
The “fit and proper person” test, now an absolute joke.
The lack of home grown talent
The Burton on Trent academy, over 10 yrs late
Outrageous ticket prices and footballers wages
Working class people forced out of the game due to cost
Kick off times moved to suit TV
A new national stadium, moved from Manchester to London that has cost £787m.
FA cup semi finals now at Wembley
FIFA seems to be run like a banana republic. It is that sort of “nation”.
I think I read somewhere that the new Wembley Stadium was the first billion dollar sports stadium in the world. And it came in well over budget. Whoever managed its build must have been, frankly, useless. They must have burnt money.
Manchester won the competition for the English national Football Stadium in 1995, subsequently it was stolen from them, the “reason” being that London didn’t have time to enter their bid.
After the dark deeds had been done it was decided to build the new London stadium on the site of the old twin towers in the middle of an industrial estate. No new light rail system, no new motorway links, no new parking system to enable fans to get there and arive quickly.
As you rightly say it cost around £787m and the FA still owe around £350m in loans, that’s why they have moved FA cup semi final matches to Wembley, that’s why they have dimwit American football there, concerts there and that’s why the FA whore themselves to the corporate “fan”. (Look at the middle of the stadium as the second half kicks off, it’s empty as the corporates still haven’t exited the bar.)
Because of this gross mismanagement the FA’s academy which was meant to rival the French one at Clairefontaine is over 10 yrs late.Man United were beaten 3-1 by mostly home grown Spanish (or Catalan) talent. Where’s our talented kids? Consider this though;
Manchester’s Commonwealth Stadium (now City’s home) cost £90m. Built on time on cost.
Millenium Stadium, Cardiff cost £120m.Built on time on cost.
Stade de France cost £250m
Sydney Olympic Stadium cost £250m
All the above don’t add up to one Wembley which was built late too.
The FA allowed human rights abusers to own clubs (Shinwatra at Man City), they allow racketeers to bid for clubs saying that they have the money to bid themselves when they don’t (man Utd and Liverpool). They subsequently transfer the debt to the club (ie the fans). The fit and proper person test is not worth the paper it’s written as spiv after spiv wants to own a PL club, not for the benefit of the club or the community or the fans but to fleece it of money. The money that is meant to go to grass roots football from the FA television deal hasn’t gone through at the rate as was promised. Our kids have to pee in bushes as the dads clear the pitches of dog mess before kids football games start. Elsewhere in Europe they have lovely community grounds.
They allowed Portsmouth to be owed by five owners in one year They allow unsustaiable levels of debt to be built up, player’s, manager’s and agents money to go to ridiculous levels and the rest of the family of league clubs have to fend for themselves. David Conn the Guardian journalist normally writes on the state of the game on a Wednesday, it makes grim reading sometimes if you love football.
One of the few decent people ever to run the FA was forced out and that was Lord Triesman. Why not have an interview with him Ally?
Good info Quinney. Two sports stadiums near to me were built around the same time to Wembley for more comparison on costs, even if they are titchier;
Liberty Stadium, Swansea, capacity 20 thou (Swans AFC/Ospreys rugby) – £27mill
Parc y Scarlets, Llanelli, capacity 15 thou (Scarlets rugby/Llanelli RFC/Llanelli AFC) – 23 mill
As I said, Wembleywas a money pit in construction, a total financial disgrace in how not to build a stadium. And further agree it should have been built somewhere else, maybe in the East Midlands area, as a halfway point.