Is There Any Loyalty In Football Anymore?

27 Jan 2012 02:39 pm, by MOTForum

Article submitted by Ben Crampton

I have experienced many wonderful things in the past 32 years that I have supported Leeds United. In recent years the sight of Jonny Howson bearing down on goal to score the winner in the Play Off Semi-final at Carlisle will live long into the memory. Howson epitomised everything that is Leeds United.

So it came as a complete shock to myself and Leeds fans the world over that the current Captain signalled his intentions to jump to a Premier League Club at the first opportunity rather than stay and lead this battle weary crew back up the league.

This has led fans to cry out in anger at the reasons for this sudden transfer but little of the anger has been focused on the players themselves. So here lies my question is it time that fans reassessed who they are angry with. Should we actually start to focus on players who lack the understanding of what their decisions means to thousands of hard working fans.

Country in a mess
It is difficult to look at any media outlet and not recognise that the country is steering against difficult economic times. Unemployment is at a 10 year high and pensions and pay is being eroded in an attempt for businesses to get back on a level again.

However, in the world of Football this could never be so different. Money continues to be bandied about like confetti. Players receive massive salaries and clubs demand large transfer fees for players that are sat in reserve teams with no chance of playing for the club they represent. This is then coupled with increased ticket prices and merchandise that will have no doubt left most families having to make a tough decision about whether to buy a turkey or a football shirt at Christmas!

Captains Role
All jesting aside, I have to start to question the credibility of professional footballers. Howson is a prime example. A local Leeds lad born and raised on the doorstep of the club he watched as a boy. After progressing through the youth teams he made his big break with Leeds in League 1 and became a fans favourite. Forward to beginning of the 2011-12 season Simon Grayson appoints Howson as Team Captain following a great tradition of captains such as Billy Bremner, Gordon Strachan and Gary McAllister to name a few. This moved Howson into a different type of player one who fans look to as the driving force for all their ambition and desire for the club. Someone to move the team towards the ultimate ambitions, but this change has changed the man. Suddenly, he deserves more money, suddenly he is deserves Premier League football.

Don’t get me wrong ambition is good – in fact it is great! But here is where I have a problem. Howson and many other footballers are well paid. Yes, perhaps not the £50,000 per week that some players get but well paid. Even at £4,000 a week they are well paid.

If a player earns £4000 per week they gross £208,000 a year before tax and also before sponsorship deals, add ons etc. If they only took home half of this pay they would still take home £100,000 plus. Now like most people I earn nothing like that amount of money in a year. In fact, the Head Teacher of a school might struggle and so might the Prime Minister. So when contract talks stall and a player starts to demand double wages this essentially means the following. I should earn double the amount, so either get rid of someone else from the club and give me their wages or charge the fools that pay to shout and cheer double to get me my money!

This is the cycle that has lost footballers identifying with the fans. Surely, the riches will come if the player is good enough. Surely, on £100,000 a year a player who plays for 10 years can earn upwards of £1 million. More than enough to sustain themselves after football when they have retired and we fans continue to work towards 68. With the next set of talented upstarts ready to come and demand their bumper wage.

So, for Mr. Howson the privilege of having the ultimate position that 30,000+ dream of achieving each week is not enough. He will leave for extra money and the potential disappointment of having maybe nearly made it. Whilst Leeds fans will be left to lick there wounds and remember the days when players were really committed to a team. Thinking back on a player who could have driven us to greater things but essentially jumped ship for greater riches!

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West Stand Rebel wrote on 28 Jan 2012 01:02 pm

I am sorry to disagree with you but loyalty to any employer comes in many different guises. Salary is important. Job satisfaction is another and so is ambition. Add to this the very short career of a professional footballer especially one who is at his peak in terms of age and you can see that loyalty can easily be bought and sold. In the seven years under our current chairman the club has gone absolutely nowhere and in reality is probably worse off than when he took over. Howson has seen his colleagues leave for better pay and better clubs. Look at Delph,Johnson,Beckford , Smeichel, and Gradel. A few years ago we let go Milner,Lennon, and Smith and many more. These are generally replaced by inferior loanees or freebies. I never want to live the dream again but we are sure living the nightmare now!

Tor I, Norway wrote on 27 Jan 2012 08:11 pm

Very good article, spot on, and so free of Mr Chairman talk. I think you have been modest in your example. Howson has been offered a lot more than 4 grand a week.

And no, not much loyalty in football left. Sorry

Not keen on ken wrote on 27 Jan 2012 04:39 pm

Thank god, a sensible article on the Howson transfer at last, having previously posted on this (and other) sites finally someone has "hit the nail on the head" ..... Greedy, overpaid, unrealistic players and agents who have lost sight of why and what makes football so great ..... Gone are the days of players spending a career at a club, players like Garry Kelly, they now follow and believe in one thing ... Money, these mercenaries are nothing more than guns for hire, available to the highest bidder, they'll even kiss the badge and tell the fans they supported the club as a boy if the purse is full enough (Robbie Keane's a good example of this, I think he was a supporter of wolves, Leeds, liverpool and spurs when he signed up, he probably had a galaxy poster on his wall too) ..... As fans Its time to wake up! Seriously, does anyone actually think players (even the ones grown on the terraces) actually treats football as anything other than an "extremely well paid job" anymore ... I dont, the loves gone, what made me support this wonderfull club for as long as i can remember has faded .... Perhaps we needs to do a Wimbledon and start again, discover that love of football all over again.

USLeeds wrote on 27 Jan 2012 03:39 pm

Great article. I have supported the lads for >45 years and I share the general feeling that the club is at a crucial turning point in its history. I too would like to see us back in the PL, but at what cost? I live in the US now and earn a good salary but it is nothing compared to the salary that Andy O'Brian is earning while he sits at home and does nothing. Whatever his grievance is with the club he is holding them hostage and pulling in a hefty paycheck at the same time. One reason why we are unable to sign up players that we need to make the push towards the playoffs rests squarely on the shoulders of players like him, who profess to be Leeds supporters. I am staggered at the greed of the current crop of young footballers. For many their only loyalty is to their bank accounts. Give me someone like Snods any day. He should have the captaincy in my books, he looks like he would truly fight for the Leeds shirt.

Rubbers wrote on 27 Jan 2012 03:30 pm

It's not really the fact that Howson wants to go, it's more the fact that he sees no hope at Leeds. The way the club is structured shows absolutely no ambition. It's now Jan 27, and yet again we have failed to solve the problems we have in the team, particularly in defence. We supposedly have money to spend, yet don't spend it. This is the third transfer window that we hear lame excuses from the men at the top. Be honest, if we were not all so committed to our team, we would go elsewhere, as Howson has done.