Printer-friendly copy Email this topic to a friend
Lobby Okay Sports topic #2759609

Subject: "Wilson on Abramovich." Previous topic | Next topic
Buck
Member since Feb 15th 2005
16173 posts
Thu Mar-03-22 03:05 PM

Click to send private message to this authorClick to view this author's profileClick to add this author to your buddy list
11. "Wilson on Abramovich."
In response to In response to 0


  

          

https://www.si.com/soccer/2022/03/03/roman-abramovich-chelsea-owner-era-premier-league

Roman Abramovich’s Complex, Successful, Transformative Chelsea Reign
An end of a nearly two-decade era is coming for Chelsea, one marked by big spending, trophies and an owner who ushered in a new age—not entirely for the better.
On the final day of the 2003–04 season, Arsenal’s players danced the can-can on the pitch at Highbury after completing its Invincibles season with a 2–0 win. Even in the moment of celebration, success can be tinged with a sense that the path is likely to lead only downward, but there was no reason then to anticipate decline, far from it. Three months earlier, building work had finally begun on the club’s new stadium, which would increase capacity by more than 50% and lead to a wide range of commercial opportunities.

Seven miles to the southwest, at Stamford Bridge, Claudio Ranieri performed a tearful lap of the pitch after Chelsea’s 1–0 win over Leeds. He hadn’t formally been sacked then, but everybody knew that after failing to mount a serious title challenge despite vast investment in new players, Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich would replace him, probably with the exciting young manager of Porto, José Mourinho.

Even now, when it is more shaped by money than it has ever been, football retains its capacity for mischief. The next time Ranieri visited Stamford Bridge would be 12 years later, when he was presented with the Premier League trophy—not as manager of Chelsea but of the team who had lost at Highbury as he had said farewell, Leicester. Earlier in the season it had been at Leicester that Chelsea had suffered the defeat that led to Mourinho's being dismissed by Abramovich for the second time. But mostly, money wins out, and, in that regard, Abramovich took football into a new age.

For Arsenal in 2004, the new stadium was a logical step. The limitations of Highbury compared to Old Trafford left Arsenal at a disadvantage compared to its obvious rival at the head of the English game, Manchester United. But when Abramovich bought Chelsea from Ken Bates for £140 million in ’03, a third force entered the fray and, more than that, changed the rules of the game. Abramovich’s takeover paved the way not only for the Abu Dhabi takeover of Manchester City and the Saudi takeover of Newcastle but also for the Glazer takeover of Manchester United.

abramovich3
Imago/PA Images

Before Abramovich, the only Premier League club not in British hands was Fulham, and it was owned by Mohamed Al-Fayed, the Egyptian owner of Harrods whose son had died in the car crash that killed Princess Diana and who coveted British citizenship. Today, only five Premier League clubs are majority-British owned.

Perhaps that doesn’t much matter. The days when businessmen invested in their local clubs because they supported them or to give something back to the community (or to gain status; that has been happening since the beginnings of the game) have long gone. The Premier League is a global league with players, managers and fans from all around the world. Overseas broadcast rights now outstrip domestic deals.

But inevitably that detaches clubs from the communities that bore them and that at one time they represented. And once foreign states get involved, it can lead to absurd situations such as Monday’s when it felt that there would be ramifications in the Premier League from how Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE voted on a United Nations motion condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

More generally, when a megarich investor gets involved, it decouples finance from success on the pitch or from the size of a fan base. That has always happened. When Jack Walker bought Blackburn, it was able to buy players on a scale out of keeping with a town of 115,000 population. But there was a difference: His investment allowed Blackburn to compete with the likes of Manchester United and Liverpool; it didn’t mean it could outstrip them. By the time Arsenal finished building the Emirates, though, Chelsea was already out of sight.

In Abramovich’s first year, Chelsea spent £153 million on players. To put that in context, the other nine teams who finished in the top half the previous season spent £164 million between them. These were unprecedented sums. In his second year, he spent another £150 million. By then it didn’t really matter how big Arsenal’s new stadium was: The club couldn’t compete with an oligarch.

Chelsea fans, of course, relished it. Before Abramovich, Chelsea had won the league only once, in 1954–55. Its reputation for a long time was as a team of flashy mavericks who couldn’t play consistently well. Raquel Welch or Henry Kissinger would turn up in the crowd, as befitted Stamford Bridge’s position just off the King’s Road, but it was hard to square that stylishness or sense of celebrity with the club’s underachievement, and still less its reputation for hooliganism. That had begun to change by the late ’90s, when it became home to a raft of (largely aging) high-level foreign players, but it was Abramovich who brought success: five league titles, two Champions Leagues, five FA Cups and three League Cups in his 19 years.

Roman Abramovich and Chelsea after winning the Champions League title
Rebecca Naden/PA Images/Imago Images

Perhaps he would have had more had he accepted earlier that football is a game that cannot entirely be controlled. Sacking Carlo Ancelotti for finishing second the season after he had done the double, in particular, seems a move borne out of unhelpful impatience. Mourinho’s first dismissal came after months of wrangling, but only eight games into the 2007–08 season, and Chelsea had lost just once.

As a result, Chelsea never really developed the sort of identity Abramovich seems to have craved and so was always dependent on his wealth. Thomas Tuchel, perhaps, could provide that: Certainly it seems he is being treated with a longer-term view than many previous managers. There is a piquancy both in that, and in the fact that Abramovich will relinquish control of the club a couple of months after completing the full set of available trophies by winning the FIFA Club World Cup.

Abramovich has changed the club in other ways and many initiatives have clearly been laudable. A mural at Stamford Bridge commemorates the Holocaust and Chelsea pays tribute on Holocaust Remembrance Day each year, while there were donations to the NHS during the early days of the pandemic.

SI Recommends
But he cannot be judged on football alone. Abramovich is somebody who made a lot of money amid the Wild West capitalism of Russia in the 1990s. He has always denied close links to Vladimir Putin or the Kremlin, often taking legal action against anybody who has hinted at it. But in the House of Commons this week, Conservative MP David Davis described Abramovich as “the man who manages President Putin’s private economic affairs, according to the Spanish national intelligence committee. This is a man who was refused a Swiss residency permit, due to suspected involvement in money laundering and contacts with criminal organizations. Abramovich was also deemed a danger to public security and a reputational risk to Switzerland.”

Davis also made specific reference to football. “When he bought Chelsea FC,” Davis said, “Abramovich was the governor of the Chukotka region of Russia. It was alleged by associates of his that the purchase was done at the behest of the Kremlin. As a result of the purchase, he now has enormous soft power and influence in the U.K. I ask the House to come to its own conclusion about whether this man is acting at the behest of the Kremlin or Putin’s Government.”

Vladimir Putin and Roman Abramovich
ZUMA Wire/Imago Images

Again, it should be reiterated that Abramovich has always denied that, insisting he bought Chelsea because of his love of football and with no political end in mind. And it should also be remembered that Davis is a former Brexit minister for a Conservative party that has accepted millions in pounds in donations from Russians and has essentially looked the other way as Russian money has flowed into London’s financial and legal institutions while buying up swathes of property. In that sense, English football is no different from anything else in England: up for sale to the highest bidder and worry about the potential consequences later.

Quite what those consequences are will become clearer over the coming months. Abramovich’s statement announcing the sale—which came four days after he said he was handing over “stewardship and care” to the club Trustees—was vague. He said he was writing off the £1.5 billion he has loaned the club, but it’s not clear what that means or whether he actually can. Is that write-off factored in the overall price? And if not, wouldn’t an effective gift of that magnitude incur a tax liability, probably of around £400 million, which would not only be a burden on a new owner (although obviously less than a £1.5 billion debt), but would hammer the club in terms of Financial Fair Play?

And when he refers to donating the “net proceeds” to a charitable foundation set up to support the “victims” of the war, what exactly does he mean? Victims, it turns out, means from both sides; there is a sense in which young Russian soldiers are also victims of Putin’s aggression, but greater clarity on exactly how that will be arranged is probably required. A level of obfuscation is perhaps only natural given the difficult political game Abramovich is having to play, but that brings us back to the basic point. Once clubs—these community institutions—are sold to states or oligarchs, or even hedge funds, they become directly subject to events and tides that have nothing to do with football.

The assumption is that Abramovich will find a willing billionaire to buy Chelsea. But what if he doesn’t? And what if the new billionaire is not so generous? So far, the British government has been slow to impose sanctions, but pressure is mounting. Three Labour MPs, including the opposition leader Keir Starmer, have raised questions in parliament. France and Germany have both confiscated yachts belonging to oligarchs. Why not the U.K.? And if assets are seized before a sale can be concluded, what then?

Instinctively it may feel unfair for Chelsea fans to suffer, but then they have benefited from Abramovich’s wealth over the last 19 years. It was unfair that Bury went bankrupt because of the actions of its owner. It’s unfair that Derby has been docked 21 points and is facing liquidation. Those are just the rules of business ownership, and that’s why football clubs shouldn’t be regarded as straightforward businesses.

chelsea1
Imago/PA Images

Manchester City and Newcastle fans have, by and large, been happy to welcome their owners, and a small percentage have become effectively human bot farms, attacking critics not just of their clubs but of the owners. But is it impossible that a situation arises in which the UAE or Saudi Arabia end up being sanctioned? Clearly not, and some would argue that the war in Yemen is cause enough already. That’s the world into which Abramovich has led English football.

And the truth is, it’s still not clear why he did it. The story at the time went that he had been so gripped by Manchester United’s 4–3 win over Real Madrid (a game that was never quite as exciting as has often subsequently been suggested given Madrid was 3–1 up from the home leg and 6–3 up on aggregate with an away goal advantage from the 58th minute) in April 2003 that he decided he had to buy a football club.

Back then, there was perhaps a vague sense that he was doing it to raise his profile outside of Russia, to secure himself against Putin, but that was a different world. If there was a moral dimension to discussion of his takeover it was perhaps slightly that it wasn’t clear—as it still isn’t—how he had managed to control quite so much of Russia’s natural resources, but mainly that he was going to buy success. Mostly though, for his first game as owner, a Champions League qualifier against MSK in the pretty northwest Slovakian market town of Žilina, all churches and squares and fine views of the mountains, the sense was of excitement at just how many good players he was signing.

There was none of the cynicism that surrounded the Saudi takeover of Newcastle; the word “sportswashing” was only popularized in 2018. And they are different. Javier Tebas, the president of the Spanish league, may have described Abramovich as “half a state” on Thursday, but he is still an individual. Sheikh Mansour and the Saudi PIF are clearly acting for political ends; Abramovich’s motives remain opaque.

But what is certain is that he ushered in this modern age in which football is a side stage, one for greater geopolitical games. Whatever Chelsea fans have to be grateful for, it’s hard to see how football as a whole can thank him for that.

  

Printer-friendly copy | Reply | Reply with quote


March futbol: fall of the Roman empire [View all] , benny, Thu Mar-03-22 08:31 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
Screw you and your wack ass title.
Mar 03rd 2022
1
🤣
Mar 03rd 2022
2
LMAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.
Mar 03rd 2022
4
EAD
Mar 03rd 2022
6
      U MAD!!!
Mar 03rd 2022
7
👏🏾
Mar 03rd 2022
5
Rage rising like a Kepa spot kick
Mar 03rd 2022
8
or a John Terry PK played in the rain in Moscow
Mar 03rd 2022
9
LMAO
Mar 03rd 2022
10
Everton v. Boreham Wood. Who ya got?
Mar 03rd 2022
3
Fock that. We ain’t going nowhere.
Mar 05th 2022
12
Yeah, way to hammer...*checks notes*...18th place Burnley.
Mar 05th 2022
13
      Go sit in the corner somewhere and put your thumb in
Mar 05th 2022
14
So Pogba is basically playing striker?
Mar 06th 2022
15
yeah. guessing bc it's the place of least liability for him
Mar 06th 2022
16
      Kinda worked for a while.
Mar 06th 2022
17
           there's no hope w/ Maguire and Lindelof
Mar 06th 2022
18
                When's the last time Maguire's played really well?
Mar 06th 2022
19
                     2020 probably. definitely not since the Euro for sure
Mar 06th 2022
21
MU is a trash can of a club due to management.
Mar 06th 2022
20
I'm not saying Madrid were asking for that goal
Mar 09th 2022
22
Right
Mar 09th 2022
23
Typical goal for psg to concede tho
Mar 09th 2022
24
      probably a foul on Donnaruma but yeah
Mar 09th 2022
25
PSG: Back to the Future
Mar 09th 2022
26
PSG going on their face rn smh
Mar 09th 2022
27
what an epic collapse
Mar 09th 2022
28
it's what we do 😎
Mar 09th 2022
29
Neymar and Donnarumma had to be separated in the dressing room
Mar 10th 2022
35
      Neymar was way worse.
Mar 10th 2022
37
i wasnt paying rapt attention all 90 minutes, but...
Mar 09th 2022
30
props to Benzema, what a year he's having
Mar 09th 2022
31
Roman sanctioned; assets frozen; can't sell Chelsea w/o approval.
Mar 10th 2022
32
hahahaha
Mar 10th 2022
33
Rudiger, Christensen, and Azpilicueta cannot be renewed
Mar 10th 2022
34
That could be worse, though.
Mar 10th 2022
36
Right, because your wack ass club have to leech because
Mar 10th 2022
40
      We can't build or develop players? LMAO
Mar 10th 2022
45
      Please list the great players you have developed into elite
Mar 10th 2022
48
           no problem (edit)
Mar 10th 2022
49
                I’m still waiting.
Mar 10th 2022
52
                     i listed four currently on the team
Mar 10th 2022
54
                     any CL titles?
Mar 10th 2022
59
                          lol goalpost shift ACTIVATED
Mar 11th 2022
68
                     Lol! Aka you don't know shit
Mar 10th 2022
56
      also, fun fact:
Mar 10th 2022
51
           ?
Mar 10th 2022
58
           if youre putting any of them over Pedri, you're insane
Mar 11th 2022
69
                Pedri has not won or done shit yet.
Mar 11th 2022
70
                     LMFAO, Pedri was on the shortlist too, you absolute clown
Mar 11th 2022
71
                     Barca ain’t winning anything, and you know it
Mar 11th 2022
72
                          YOU SO MAD. HAHAHAHA.
Mar 11th 2022
73
                          You have zero to do with this topic. You’re not
Mar 11th 2022
74
                               MAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAD.
Mar 11th 2022
75
                                    Maybe if you, your players, and management
Mar 11th 2022
76
                                         maybe?
Mar 11th 2022
77
                                              Okay, then.
Mar 11th 2022
79
                                                   wait, your team needs to be good to "pipe off?"
Mar 11th 2022
81
                          LMAO! this dude talking like Chelsea isn't just a distant 3rd in the EPL...
Mar 12th 2022
82
                          Chelsea are Champions of Europe and Champions of the
Mar 12th 2022
83
                               this dude is celebrating the club world cup
Mar 12th 2022
86
                                    You god damn right I’m celebrating the CWC
Mar 12th 2022
87
                          i didnt' say barca was winning shit this season
Mar 12th 2022
84
                     the 12th man on Burnley's bench plays in the toughest league too
Mar 11th 2022
78
                          You calling him a try hard is utterly ridiculous and degrading.
Mar 11th 2022
80
                               the truth doesnt require you to believe it
Mar 12th 2022
85
           My bad. You were referring to the players
Mar 10th 2022
60
lovely stuff
Mar 10th 2022
38
allstah somewhere crying into his Cream Of Wheat.
Mar 10th 2022
39
This absolutely makes no sense, all because he wouldn’t speak
Mar 10th 2022
41
      Of course you cheer for Chelsea and Real.
Mar 10th 2022
42
      Communism?
Mar 10th 2022
43
      Buck please sit this one out and go away.
Mar 10th 2022
44
      seriously tho. what does that even mean?
Mar 10th 2022
46
      What that means is that the U.K Democratic government is a joke
Mar 10th 2022
50
      I'm unsure whether a political/economic structure in and of itself...
Mar 10th 2022
55
           No.
Mar 10th 2022
61
                Lots of fascinating information in this post.
Mar 10th 2022
62
      Right?!
Mar 10th 2022
47
           all over a futbol club in a country he doesn't live in
Mar 10th 2022
53
                Plus the fellating of the club's OWNERSHIP is something I've
Mar 10th 2022
57
                     How mentally aloof can you be?
Mar 10th 2022
63
                          Lakers fans don't fellate Jerry Bus they way you do Roman
Mar 10th 2022
64
      indeed they should
Mar 10th 2022
66
           TBH, I'm hopeful for relegation eventually, & Marina leaving.
Mar 10th 2022
67
CALUM CHAMBERS. TOP FUCKING BINS
Mar 10th 2022
65
The Barclays just suspended Chelsea’s corporate
Mar 12th 2022
88
Get a fucking grip.
Mar 12th 2022
89
You get a grip.
Mar 12th 2022
93
DARE TO DREAM.
Mar 12th 2022
101
Actually starting to feel bad for Maguire.
Mar 12th 2022
90
Nah it’s still funny
Mar 12th 2022
91
      Fair enough.
Mar 12th 2022
94
      worst CB ever
Mar 12th 2022
95
           Uh, no. Mustafi.
Mar 12th 2022
98
                lol ok thats fair. mustafi was unreal
Mar 12th 2022
99
Ronaldo came to play today. Sancho too
Mar 12th 2022
92
Props to the greatest football player of this generation.
Mar 12th 2022
96
cdot put on a show for Brady today
Mar 12th 2022
97
glad he's not on citeh...
Mar 12th 2022
100
this Palace-City game felt like a Cup tie (with Palace as the non-league...
Mar 14th 2022
102
Massive result for Liverpool.
Mar 14th 2022
103
      Arsenal isn't ready yet, they still rely on Xhaka, Not to mention Cedric...
Mar 14th 2022
104
           Maybe. Just feels like a trap.
Mar 16th 2022
109
                Well, at least nobody got sent off, or hurt.
Mar 16th 2022
110
                     They were ferocious in the first half.
Mar 16th 2022
112
Damn, was hoping United could stick around in CL for another round
Mar 15th 2022
105
why? yall have already locked up 4th
Mar 15th 2022
106
      yeah, that's not true.
Mar 15th 2022
107
           breh its done lol
Mar 15th 2022
108
Even with all the sanctions and financially limitations
Mar 16th 2022
111
Whew, that was a good win
Mar 17th 2022
113
memphis slows the attack, tho
Mar 18th 2022
116
we're gonna find out how much allstah really cares about Madrid
Mar 18th 2022
114
Pep vs. Cholo . . . tasty!
Mar 18th 2022
115
This isn't last year's Cholo
Mar 18th 2022
117
Chelsea comes first.
Mar 18th 2022
118
big win for the arsenal over villa
Mar 19th 2022
119
We offered you NO fight for at least an hour
Mar 19th 2022
120
No Benzema for El Clasico. I’m not sure who will get the start
Mar 20th 2022
121
good to see ajax/feyenoord back in front of fans
Mar 20th 2022
122
meanwhile, a pathetic performance by madrid today (also good to see)
Mar 20th 2022
123
looked horrible
Mar 20th 2022
126
man RM getting piped up
Mar 20th 2022
124
No Benzema.
Mar 20th 2022
125
      Lmao! You so mad!
Mar 20th 2022
128
Man we fucking shredded Madrid!
Mar 20th 2022
127
From the neutral seats, glad they're on back on the up.
Mar 20th 2022
129
Women's Champions League Quarterfinals start today
Mar 22nd 2022
130
damn I didn't think the post title would apply to WC qualies too
Mar 24th 2022
131
hahahaha
Mar 24th 2022
133
what's the historical significance here?
Mar 24th 2022
138
      they haven't played a WC knock-out game since they won in 2006
Mar 25th 2022
143
Donnarumma battered and frying up nicely.
Mar 24th 2022
132
i mean...someone has to score.
Mar 25th 2022
140
      Him and Spinazzola make that thing go
Mar 25th 2022
141
           Yeah theres significant dropoff to Emerson
Mar 25th 2022
145
Egypt vs. Senegal WC Qualifier - Friday, 3pm EST
Mar 24th 2022
134
no offsense to Salah but 100% would suck for Senegal to miss out
Mar 25th 2022
144
      Outside of Salah, this Egypt squad is a bunch of goons.
Mar 25th 2022
147
           how do you say catenaccio in Egyptian?
Mar 25th 2022
152
                That would be giving these dudes some sheen that they don't deserve
Mar 25th 2022
153
                     fair enough
Mar 25th 2022
154
                     I mean that's Quierozball, is it not?
Mar 27th 2022
157
                          It dimishes the matches they are in...Senegal, Cote D'Ivoire
Mar 30th 2022
169
lol @ Bale remind the world he still plays
Mar 24th 2022
135
good point for the US, but damn that should have been a W in Azteca
Mar 24th 2022
136
what in the Lord's name was that touch by Pefok
Mar 24th 2022
137
Right, but pulisic shoulda scored
Mar 25th 2022
139
definite fail. not only did the US miss two sitters...
Mar 25th 2022
142
looked like he couldnt decide btwn shooting and flicking it back to Gio
Mar 25th 2022
146
      like every striker i've ever seen...
Mar 25th 2022
148
what REALLY pissed me off MOST this match?
Mar 25th 2022
149
      That is really poor. Really, really poor.
Mar 25th 2022
151
      Pefok was truly something special in his time out there
Mar 25th 2022
155
I assume no one here watched Costa Rica - Canada last night
Mar 25th 2022
150
I did watch it, I'm up here too :)
Mar 25th 2022
156
USA (basically) in the cup. Canada in fully
Mar 27th 2022
158
van Gaal: ten Hag should join "a football club"
Mar 28th 2022
159
Technically that makes no sense, and it also makes perfect sense.
Mar 28th 2022
160
He ain’t saying nothing new but that shouldn’t scare ETH off
Mar 28th 2022
161
Someone poisoned abramovich (link):
Mar 28th 2022
162
this SEN-EGY PK session is wiiiild
Mar 29th 2022
163
now I kinda want to see every PK session feature endless lasers
Mar 29th 2022
164
      Right, that was ridiculous. Still, glad to see Senegal make WC
Mar 29th 2022
165
      yup, dare I say they should be on the list of semi-favorites?
Mar 29th 2022
166
      yeah, that was fucked up, and I am Team Senegal all the way.
Mar 30th 2022
168
Salah lucky Mane is a nice guy
Mar 29th 2022
167

Lobby Okay Sports topic #2759609 Previous topic | Next topic
Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.25
Copyright © DCScripts.com