premier league banning gambling sponsors from shirts

been thinking about this and its gonna absolutely destroy the finances of smaller clubs. brighton, brentford, fulham etc rely heavily on those sponsorship deals for their transfer budgets
meanwhile man city and chelsea dont give a fuck cos they have unlimited oil money. this basically ensures the big 6 stay on top forever
also weird that stake is still on evertons shirts even though theyre unlicensed in uk now. how is that even legal?
 
been thinking about this and its gonna absolutely destroy the finances of smaller clubs. brighton, brentford, fulham etc rely heavily on those sponsorship deals for their transfer budgets
meanwhile man city and chelsea dont give a fuck cos they have unlimited oil money. this basically ensures the big 6 stay on top forever
also weird that stake is still on evertons shirts even though theyre unlicensed in uk now. how is that even legal?
feel u on this one. smaller clubs are gonna get murdered by this. gambling companies pay way more than normal sponsors cos the advertising value is huge. brighton owner tony bloom literally made his money from gambling and even he said its hard to turn down those deals when they pay so much more
 
yeah i told bout it before and as much as i hate gambling ads everywhere this is gonna create massive competitive imbalance
clubs like west ham and crystal palace getting millions from betting sponsors while man city just gets more money from their "official tractor partner" or whatever fake deal they cook up
 
The everton/stake situation is bonkers. theyre essentially promoting unlicensed gambling to uk fans which should be prosecuted
but the premier league wont do anything cos they dont want to mess with the money. same reason city got away with financial doping for years
 
think the ban is necessary tbh. kids watching football shouldnt be bombarded with gambling ads
but they shouldve done it gradually or provided transition funding for smaller clubs. doing it all at once just benefits the already rich clubs
 
think the ban is necessary tbh. kids watching football shouldnt be bombarded with gambling ads
but they shouldve done it gradually or provided transition funding for smaller clubs. doing it all at once just benefits the already rich clubs
i get protecting kids but this feels like moral panic that only hurts smaller clubs
the big ones will just get more money from saudi airlines or crypto exchanges or whatever. meanwhile brentford loses £20mil a year and cant compete anymore
 
The everton/stake situation is bonkers. theyre essentially promoting unlicensed gambling to uk fans which should be prosecuted
but the premier league wont do anything cos they dont want to mess with the money. same reason city got away with financial doping for years
exactly! how is everton allowed to promote stake when uk players literally cant access it legally? makes no sense
 
the hypocrisy is ridiculou when you think about it. ban gambling sponsors but allow alcohol sponsors that kill way more people
or what about oil companies that are destroying the planet? but no lets go after the bookies cos they're an easy target
 
The shirt sponsorship ban reflects broader regulatory pressure on gambling advertising, but the implementation does create competitive imbalances.
From a regulatory perspective, the focus on gambling sponsors stems from specific concerns about harm potential and the demographic most likely to be influenced by sports-related gambling advertising - young male football fans who represent the highest-risk group for problem gambling development.
The Everton/Stake situation is particularly complex. While Stake lost their UK license, their existing sponsorship contract predates the license revocation. The UKGC has written to clubs warning about the risks of promoting unlicensed operators, but enforcement depends on whether UK consumers can actually access Stake services through the promotional material.

Financial Impact Analysis:
- Gambling sponsors typically pay 40-60% premiums over equivalent non-gambling deals
- Clubs like Brighton (£20m/year from American Express vs potential £30m+ from gambling) face significant revenue gaps
- Larger clubs have more diverse commercial appeal, making replacement sponsors easier to find

Alternative Options:
- Sleeve sponsorships remain permitted for gambling operators
- Stadium naming rights and other partnerships are unaffected
- Some clubs are exploring cryptocurrency and fintech sponsors as alternatives

The long-term risk is that this drives further financial polarization in football, where regulatory compliance costs disproportionately impact smaller clubs while larger clubs adapt through more sophisticated commercial structures.
 
The shirt sponsorship ban reflects broader regulatory pressure on gambling advertising, but the implementation does create competitive imbalances.
From a regulatory perspective, the focus on gambling sponsors stems from specific concerns about harm potential and the demographic most likely to be influenced by sports-related gambling advertising - young male football fans who represent the highest-risk group for problem gambling development.
The Everton/Stake situation is particularly complex. While Stake lost their UK license, their existing sponsorship contract predates the license revocation. The UKGC has written to clubs warning about the risks of promoting unlicensed operators, but enforcement depends on whether UK consumers can actually access Stake services through the promotional material.

Financial Impact Analysis:
- Gambling sponsors typically pay 40-60% premiums over equivalent non-gambling deals
- Clubs like Brighton (£20m/year from American Express vs potential £30m+ from gambling) face significant revenue gaps
- Larger clubs have more diverse commercial appeal, making replacement sponsors easier to find

Alternative Options:
- Sleeve sponsorships remain permitted for gambling operators
- Stadium naming rights and other partnerships are unaffected
- Some clubs are exploring cryptocurrency and fintech sponsors as alternatives

The long-term risk is that this drives further financial polarization in football, where regulatory compliance costs disproportionately impact smaller clubs while larger clubs adapt through more sophisticated commercial structures.
thanks bro. the 40-60% premium explains why smaller clubs are so screwed by this
the sleeve sponsorship loophole is interesting though. so we might see massive sleeve ads for betting sites while the main shirt is some random company paying half the money?
seems like the ban will just move gambling advertising to different parts of the shirt rather than actually reducing it
 
where are old days when footbal was just a sport, i mean i really do hate gambling adds but must admit that clubs will struggle to compete cos they cant get gambling money while oil clubs buy whoever they want. fans are the ones who suffer with higher ticket prices to make up the revenue
 
thanks bro. the 40-60% premium explains why smaller clubs are so screwed by this
the sleeve sponsorship loophole is interesting though. so we might see massive sleeve ads for betting sites while the main shirt is some random company paying half the money?
seems like the ban will just move gambling advertising to different parts of the shirt rather than actually reducing it
100% what will happen. you'll see tiny main sponsors paying peanuts and massive sleeve sponsors from bet365
the whole thing is performative bullshit to make politicians look good while not actually solving anything
 
where are old days when footbal was just a sport, i mean i really do hate gambling adds but must admit that clubs will struggle to compete cos they cant get gambling money while oil clubs buy whoever they want. fans are the ones who suffer with higher ticket prices to make up the revenue
spot on. this is just another way the game gets more unfair for working class clubs and fans
meanwhile sheikh mansour can sponsor city with another madeup company and nobody bats an eye. one rule for us and another for the oil money
 
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