For those of
you who listen to the Non League
Show on Radio 5Live, you may
have heard and an article in
which people said that they felt
offended by the term
‘non-league’. It was suggested
that this term should be
replaced by the phrase
‘semi-professional’.
Back in 1974
the FA decided to make everyone
‘players’. Since then, the
‘non-league’ community appear to
adopt whatever label suits their
purpose best eg.part-timers,
minnows (for FA Cup purposes) or
even occasionally re-vamping the
term ‘amateurs’.
But it is no
longer an FA Cup surprise when a
non league team eliminates
another from the lower divisions
of the Football League, because,
increasingly, the non league
outfit are as almost, if not, as
well paid as their supposed
‘betters’.
One solution
might be to return to the
distinction between full time
professional, semi-pro and
amateur players.
In my view
the FA Trophy should be the
prize for semi-pro teams,
whether they pay £10 a game or
have players on contract. There
is no difference, the players
are all copping money out of the
game and are ‘professional
footballers’, though in many
non-league cases, on a part time
basis. (semi-pro)
The Vase
should be the competition for
the small clubs, the amateur
clubs, of which there are many
in and around the country.
Clubs for whom players play
without sticking their hand out
for money. It’s been a long
time since a team without a
‘wage structure’ has won the FA
Vase and, unfortunately has
become the competition for the
semi-pro clubs who wish to continue
to pay players but can’t pay
enough to do well in the Trophy.
If the FA
cannot spare the Vase for
amateur clubs, then they should
consider resurrecting the FA
Amateur Cup. "A return to
shamateursim" I hear you say. It
doesn't have to be that way. All
it needs is proper governance
from the powers that be, but
that might be asking too much.
Sadly,
‘Amateur’ is sometimes seen as
an old fashioned, even
derogatory term but not in my
book. To my mind, a return and
recognition of this code within
‘non-league football’ would not
only be refreshing in a sporting
sense but would also recognise
those who are the ‘real
minnows’.
By the same
example, those who are happy to
‘imitate’ the professional ranks
and are earning money from their
talent or otherwise, in addition
to their daily work, are welcome
to the term, ‘semi-pro’.
Finally,
there is regular reference on
the programme that if a club
comes into money they can
‘extend the budget and get
better players in’. Since 1974
one can make a list of clubs and
grounds that have been lost
through financial mismanagement
which has included paying
ridiculous wages to players in
the pursuit of silverware. For
example, trophies may have been
won at Leytonstone Ilford /
Redbridge Forest but that’s all
now forgotten, and the football
grounds at Lynn Road, Granleigh
Road and Green Pond Road, which
were all sold and financed these
teams, are all now housing
estates. At the same time, East
London lost three senior
football clubs.
The boom and
bust scenario for clubs chasing
success on the field is a
regular occurrence in non league
football and whilst one
eventually reform and call your
club AFC “this or that”, I am
sure it can never be the same.
This is the
reason why I fully support the
efforts of the Clapton
supporters in wresting control
of the club from Mr Vince McBean
and returning it to the
members. But they need act
before it’s too late. So
come on real Clapton FC, jump to
it before he sells the club and
the lease ! (He’s tried to do
that already, even though he
doesn’t own either).
The non league show is on at some unearthly hour on Sunday mornings so, those of us with a tender disposition, tend to listen to it or download it from the BBC website as a podcast during the week. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01m5gsx. It’s a great show and the contributors do a great job, so thanks to them.
LEW LISTZ
30th October 2014
email Lew Listz
Back to Clapton stuff in my next missive. Just had to get this off my chest.