I get your idea and it sounds right, but giving much lower league clubs more money will just inflate the cost of players at the grass roots level wont it?
Also if there are too many incentives to spread the money about they might become targets for owners who love to syphon off money from clubs.
I think the clubs that need the money to survive are so far from money laundering the cash as to be preposterous. That said, EVERY CLUB’S BOOKS should be audited every season/every other season to ensure viability.
I hate to say it, but in the modern era, where BIG money talks, 4 large professional leagues, not to mention the numerous semi-pro levels of the game, might be too much for football in England to bear.
With disposable income becoming increasingly in demand, the escalating cost of football is creating a tipping point that, if we have not reached it yet, we are close.
The saturation of football on TV is almost complete, and the UEFA/FIFA plans for even more games seems like the straw that will break the camel’s back.
The rich will get even richer, and all on the backs of a few hundred players across the globe. In addition, I’m not sure where the oxygen that sustains football…$$$…comes from in the future IF WHOLESALE REDISTRIBUTION OF REVENUES isn’t the answer.
Coca Cola have no interest in Harrogate vs Hartlepool, nor does Heineken or the largest betting syndicates that fund football.
The grass roots game, for all the flowery, grandiose talk, is getting further and further behind where the big clubs want to be, and where UEFA/FIFA want to take the game, it should be scary.
There needs to be a ticket price fix for a significant portion of attendance
For example, all away tickets are £20 and ALL away fans receive a full 10% of capacity. Home team season cards are limited to 80% of home capacity and annual increases capped at inflation. The other 10% of tickets are affordable £20 tickets available only to Club Card holders with picture IDs. Change percentages to your liking, but something concrete needs doing.