TV rights chaos in France should serve as a warning to the Premier League

Killing the golden goose is far from unprecedented, as the fall from grace of Serie A and La Liga can attest

The triumphalism of the Premier League is unlikely to disperse any time soon, even during a chastening 2024. Performances in last season’s Uefa club competitions were disappointing. Though Rodri was named player of the tournament, Euro 2024 struggled for Premier League stardust. In its final, a Spanish team backboned by Real Sociedad and Athletic Bilbao deservedly beat a team of English top-tier all-stars.

As a content provider, the Premier League can still be boastful without too much censure. The £5bn received for domestic rights and the £5.05bn from 2022 to 2025 for international rights dwarfs its competitors, though compared with the £7.7bn a season the NFL receives, the body headed by Richard Masters must still bow.

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Premier League, FA, EFL and WSL agree code of conduct over gambling deals

  • Campaigners have criticised clubs over betting sponsors
  • Voluntary framework to be implemented this season

The Premier League, together with the Football Association, English Football League and Women’s Super League, have released a code of conduct for gambling deals, less than 24 hours after campaigners accused top-flight clubs of milking cash from betting firms before a ban on front-of-shirt sponsors is introduced for the 2026-27 season.

The Premier League, alongside the aforementioned stakeholders, say they have drafted a voluntary framework to be implemented before the start of this season. Last year, Premier League clubs agreed to withdraw betting companies from the front of shirts from the end of the 2025-26 campaign.

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Premier League clubs accused of greed as total with gambling sponsors hits 11

  • Bournemouth the latest with front-of-shirt gambling logo
  • The Big Step says: ‘Desperate deals for a few extra quid’

Premier League clubs have been accused of greed for signing “desperate deals for a few extra quid”, after Bournemouth took to 11 the contingent with a gambling company as their front-of-shirt sponsor for at least the coming season. A ban kicks in for the 2026-27 campaign.

Bournemouth’s move, announced on Tuesday, means more than half of England’s top-flight teams will have a betting company on the front of their shirt, up from eight last season. Chelsea are the only Premier League club yet to announce a front-of-shirt sponsor. They began last season without one after supporters lobbied against a deal with an online casino.

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Chelsea sign USMNT left-back Caleb Wiley from Atlanta United for reported £8.5m fee

  • 19-year-old joins Premier League club on six-year contract
  • Teenager is expected to join Strasbourg on loan

Chelsea have completed a deal to sign US national team left-back Caleb Wiley for a reported £8.5m.

The 19-year-old will join Chelsea from Atlanta United on a six-year contract. Wiley is expected to join Strasbourg, the Ligue 1 club who are part of the same Blueco ownership group as Chelsea, on loan for a season.

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Drive to increase diversity of football match officials picks up momentum

BAMREF, which helps give voice to black, Asian and mixed heritage referees, made real breakthroughs last season

For Joel Mannix, witnessing Sam Allison becoming the first black Premier League referee for 15 years when he took charge of Sheffield United against Luton in December was just the start. A founder member of BAMREF – an organisation that seeks to give a voice and support to all officials from black, Asian and mixed heritage communities – Mannix has devoted the past three years to helping others overcome the barriers he faced. “I knew I would never see the promised land as a referee,” he recalls. “I was getting bored with the same old negative words from observers. Sometimes when doors keep closing on you it can get disheartening …”

But with Sunny Gill having made history in March when he became the first British Asian referee to officiate in the English top flight, some progress appears to have been made after more than a decade in the wilderness since the retirement of Uriah Rennie in 2008. However, Mannix – who is preparing for the third BAMREF conference on Sunday at Anfield – believes there is still plenty of work required to recruit the next generation of referees from diverse backgrounds.

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Philadelphia’s Cavan Sullivan, 14, breaks Freddy Adu’s youngest MLS player mark

  • Sullivan, 14, is considered future USMNT star
  • Expected to join City at 18 in pre-arranged transfer

Cavan Sullivan became the youngest player to appear in an MLS match, Tai Baribo had his first career hat trick and Kai Wagner added three assists to help the Philadelphia Union end a 10-match winless streak with a 5-1 romp over the New England Revolution on Wednesday night.

Sullivan – at 14 years, 293 days – replaced Baribo in the 85th minute, topping the record by 13 days. Freddy Adu set the previous mark at 14-306 when he debuted for DC United in 2004.

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