Wednesday 27th of November 2024

nice little earners .....

nice little earners .....

Melbourne delivers a perfect storm .....

As Tiger Woods returns to golf, not all his affairs are salacious headlines. The Tiger Woods Golf Course in Dubai is costing $100million to build. Dubai relies on cheap third world labour, as do certain consumer brands that have helped make Woods a billionaire. Nike workers in Thailand wrote to Woods, expressing their "utmost respect for your skill and perseverance as an athlete" but pointing out that they would need to work 72,000 years "to receive what you will earn from [your Nike] contract".

The American sports writer, Dave Zirin, is one of the few to break media silence on the corporate distortion and corruption of sport. His forthcoming book Bad Sports: How Owners Are Ruining the Games We Love (Scribner) blows a long whistle on what money power has done to the people's pleasure, its heroes like Woods and the communities it once served. He describes the impact of the Texan Tom Hicks's half-ownership of Liverpool Football Club, which followed another rich and bored American Malcolm Glazer's "leveraged takeover" of Manchester United in 2005. As a result, England's most successful club (with Liverpool) is now 716.5 million pounds in debt.

How long has this been going on? In 1983, you could buy a ticket to a first division game for 75 pence. Today, the average at Old Trafford is around 34 pounds. Watch the latest crop of parents on morose queues to buy overpriced club strips and insignia, also made with cheap and often sweated labour, with the brand of a failed multinational emblazoned on it. Profiteering is now an incandescent presence across top-class sport. Sven-Goran Eriksson will trouser up to two million pounds for just three months' work in Ivory Coast, where half the population has barely enough to survive. Australia's finest, most boorish cricketers are collecting their bundles for a few months' cavorting in the Indian franchises. The attitude is entitlement, the kind that less talented "celebrities" flaunt. It was in no way remarkable that in 2007-8 a number of the heirs to Don Bradman's Invincibles achieved what was once nigh on impossible; they were disliked in their own country. Those high fives and air-punching fists have become salutes not to "everyone working for each other, everyone having a share of the rewards" (Bill Shankly), but to the voracious sponsor and the forensic camera.

Why Sharks Should Not Own Sport

sport fraud...

League's imperfect Storm


THE biggest fraud in Australia's professional sporting history was hatched under an innocuous marquee used for corporate entertainment at the Melbourne Storm's home ground.

For five years the Storm, fully owned by News Ltd, paid twice for the marquee, booking a superfluous $20,000 payment for each game for something they already received as part of their ground-hire contract.

That money, which amounted to $1.7 million, didn't go to waste, being channelled to the Test and Origin stars the club accumulated and buying the Storm NRL titles in 2007 and 2009.

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Gus: winning alla News Limited style?... It's difficult not to believe that the honchos at News Limited did not know they were paying too much for the club's finances... But having the trophy cabinet full of silverware may have been too tempting after the Super League debacle... Who knows...

May be News Limited "leaked" so they could deflate the Storm club (they had their glory — despite the winning being stripped, the newspaper men would know that such former glory would stick, even with cheating — remember the Agasi and other sports on drugs) and after having paid the fine and reinbursed the prize moneys, News Limited would end up paying far less from now on... and be in front...

at the home office...

Owners of the Melbourne Storm have confirmed new documents have been handed over to investigators which show the NRL club guaranteed third-party payments to three of its players.

There are three letters detailing payments for three players. Two of those three letters were signed by the players and their agents; all three were signed by former Storm chief executive Brian Waldron.

The letters detail payments from third parties for the players, which the club would guarantee. That is entirely in breach of the NRL's salary cap rules.

News Limited spokesman Greg Baxter says the letters were handed over by the former acting chief executive Matt Hanson and have now been passed onto the NRL's salary cap auditor Ian Schubert.

The documents were being kept at the home of Hanson who it is believed to have received them from Waldron, who in turn had kept them at his home rather than the office.

It is unclear if more documents are still being held by current or former club officials.

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