The Isthmian League logo |
In 1973, the league became the first to be sponsored. Prize
money was offered to successful clubs, but in an attempt to improve
sportsmanship, there were deductions for cautions. The League was the first to
adopt 3 points for a win, and also the first to use goal difference instead of
goal average. The league's first sponsors were the tobacco company, Rothmans of Pall Mall, who were
also sponsors of the British Olympic team in 1992, and of a highly successful
football reference book. Today, tobacco company sponsorship in the UK is no
more - it was banned in 2005 - and the number of smokers in England has
consistently declined in recent years, while just this week, the government
published a green paper in which it pledged to end smoking by 2030. That is an
ambitious target since, despite incontrovertible evidence that smoking is
detrimental to health, there are still over fourteen million people smokers in
the country. Rothmans' sponsorship of the Isthmian League ceased in 1977, but this
summer the league announced a sponsorship deal with a company from another
somewhat controversial sector of the UK leisure industry, as we will see.
The number of people smoking in England shows a consistent decline over recent years. |
The advertising of alcohol and the sponsorship of sporting
events and teams, while not banned in the same way as tobacco, has seen
constraints and decline in recent years. The UK's regulations on the
advertising of alcohol are among the strictest in the world, and the
sponsorship of English football clubs by drinks companies, once so prodigious,
has declined to the point that by 2017, not one Premier League club had a
sponsorship deal with a brewery or other drinks company.
Liverpool's sponsorship deal with Carlsberg was one of the last between a football club and a brewer. |
While the sponsorship of football teams and competitions by
tobacco companies and alcohol companies has declined, through legislation or
otherwise, companies involved in a third major vice - gambling - are becoming
increasingly involved in sports sponsorship. In 2018, nine Premier League clubs
and seventeen Championship clubs were sponsored by bookmakers. The English
Football League's three divisions are sponsored by a bookmaker - Skybet - and
this summer, the Southern League, the Isthmian League, and the Northern Premier
League announced a sponsorship deal with BetVictor.
For those of you unfamiliar with the structure of English
football, the Southern, Isthmian, and Northern Premier leagues cover the
seventh and eighth tiers of the game - that's 228 clubs - and the sponsorship
deal with BetVictor is strictly regulated; in fact, that strict regulation has
been the subject of much comment and debate. While I have no information on the
value of the deal, I imagine that it is a lucrative one for the three leagues,
and no doubt BetVictor believe it will be beneficial to them. They are ranked
twenty-third among online bookmakers in the country, and presumably, this deal
is about increasing brand awareness. As with tobacco companies and brewers,
such advertising as is allowed is less about getting people to enter the
market, more about getting them to buy your product rather than that of your
competitors. Most people who smoke, or drink alcohol, or gamble, don't generally
start because of advertising, but once they are consumers, it is advertising
that plays a significant role in which company's product they use. Hence
BetVictor are probably banking on the thousands of players, officials and
supporters of those 228 clubs using their company rather than Coral, William
Hill, or Bet365.
Among the restrictions that relate to bookmaker's
sponsorship is CAP Code, or to give it its full name, The UK Code of
Non-broadcast Advertising, Sales Promotion and Direct Marketing, written and
maintained by the Committee of Advertising Practice (CAP) and administered by
the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA). This prevents anyone under the age
of twenty-five featuring in marketing communications for a gambling brand
(unless they are the subject of a bet being offered). Hence, earlier this year
Spurs and William Hill found themselves in hot water for a tweet that featured
a Spurs team line-up that included two under 25 year-olds, alongside a link to
a page offering odds from the bookmaker.
A tweet like this saw Spurs fall foul of the CAP Code |
Apart from the similar restrictions that will be imposed on
the clubs in the three leagues now sponsored by BetVictor, the leagues have
decided - possibly after some negative publicity - not to require clubs to
feature adverts for the sponsors either in their programmes nor around their
grounds, nor will clubs wear the sponsor's logo on their shirts, as was the
case with Evo-Stik, Bostik or Ryman, who sponsored the various leagues in
recent years. And - like Spurs - clubs cannot feature players who are under
twenty-five on their websites, or on social media, on pages that include links
to the sponsor's website.
Paul Dipre, chairman of Isthmian League side Carshalton
Athletic, strongly disagrees with the sponsorship deal (you can read his
statement here)
and many supporters of clubs in the leagues have expressed their disquiet over it,
especially since it is estimated by the Gambling Commission that in 2017 there
were more than 2 million people addicted to gambling or at risk of developing a
problem. Furthermore, the charity GambleAware found that problem gamblers face
significant risks of suicidal thoughts, depression, substance abuse and
financial problems. In 2013, Headingley AFC lost one of their players to
suicide due to his gambling issues and the club are now sponsored by an
anti-gambling charity. AFC Headingley play in the West Yorkshire League, so not
one of the leagues sponsored by BetVictor. If they were, I imagine the league
would be having an awkward conversation with the club over a conflict of
interest.
Headingley AFC in shirts sponsored by the charity, Gambling With Lives. |
Players, management, and officials of English football clubs
in the top eight levels of the game are expressly prohibited from betting on
football in any form; this means that a voluntary committee member at a club
playing in English football's eighth tier cannot put a small bet on the outcome
of the World Cup Final. While that may appear Draconian, it at least removes
room for doubt; there are no grey areas, no loopholes, but for many people it
smacks of double standards. Is it morally right for a sport that prohibits
participants from betting on it, to be so intimately linked with the gambling
industry?
A Twitter poll showed the disquiet many people feel about bookmakers sponsorship in non-League football. |
Or, since money-spinning sponsorship deals don't grow on
trees - not for teams and leagues below the highest echelons in any sport - is
the disquiet and criticism that the deal with BetVictor has occasioned a little
unfair - ungrateful, even - especially since, at present, bookmaking firms are
sponsoring football to such a degree that it is becoming the norm, rather than
the exception. And, just as tobacco sponsorship was outlawed, and just as
alcohol sponsorship has waned, the day may come when through legislation or
because the industry no longer sees it as worth its while, bookmakers stop
sponsoring football. Who can blame these leagues for taking advantage before
it's too late?
Bookies sponsoring football is now so commonplace that Huddersfield Town and Paddy Power mocked up shirts that contravened FA regulations on the size of sponsor's logos for some extra publicity. |
Despite the moral and ethical qualms that people may have,
sponsorship from bookmakers is legal, heavily regulated, and lucrative. The
fact that BetVictor are sponsoring all three leagues at this level could work
against the sponsors, as supporters may drop the sponsor's name entirely. BetVictor
could find that awareness of their brand
is spread less than they hoped. That said, any publicity - even controversial,
slightly adverse publicity - gets a brand's name in the public eye, like
Huddersfield Town's prank Paddy Power sponsored kit, so I doubt that
BetVictor's executives will be losing too much sleep over it.
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