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Government should not intervene over FA reforms - Wenger

Monday, December 12, 2016

Government should not intervene over FA reforms - Wenger

Wenger
Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger has insisted English football is not in crisis amid calls for control of the game to be taken out of the hands of the Football Association.

Five former FA chiefs to have written to Damian Collins, chairman of the Culture, Media and Sport Committee, claiming that the “well-meaning individuals” who currently run the game are “collectively unrepresentative of English society” and “under-qualified” to deal with the FA’s role in modern football.

However, Gunners’ manager Wenger is adamant that sport and politics should not mix.

He said: “Football and politics should not deal together. Football is a very special activity that should be ruled by football people.

“Our target is to be adult enough to rule our own activity, and I don’t agree with that.”

Asked if the government should step in to address the ongoing failure of the England team to make an impact at major tournaments at a time when the game finds itself under the microscope amid allegations of abuse, Wenger replied: “No, no, because when you look at the history of sport being linked with politics, it was not always for the benefit of sport.

“I don’t know what their frustration is. What we want is that the values of our sport are respected.

“I’m not involved in how to manage a federation on a daily basis, I don’t know how difficult it is. Apart from the fact England has not won the World Cup or the European Championships, I don’t see that football is in a crisis in this country.”

Wenger’s comments came after Lord Triesman, David Bernstein, David Davies, Greg Dyke and Alex Horne called for legislation to be passed, pointing out the FA’s “inability to reform and modernise in a fast-changing world”.

Speaking on BBC Breakfast, former FA chairman Lord Triesman said: “”I think that the only options – and everything else has been tried – the only option is for the Government to insist that the governing body of our biggest and most prestigious sport should be independent, should be capable of moving with the modern age, should be much, much more reflective of what England is like.

“(The Government) is going to have to say to the FA, ‘Sorry guys, you have been promising reform for probably the best part of 50 years. Nothing has happened, time’s up’.”

Greg Dyke, who left his post as FA chairman earlier this year after failing to instigate the change he felt was necessary, described the current situation as “ridiculous”.

He told Radio 4’s Today programme: “The issue is that football needs to be independently run.

“It needs a majority of independent members on it’s board, it needs to radically change its ridiculous council as it exists at the moment, where 10 per cent of the members are over 80 and 80 per cent are over 60. This is for a game largely played by young people.

“I was white, male and ageing and I decided that that ought to be changed, and the reason I left the FA after three years as chairman last year was because I could not get that change through.”

Dyke’s comments were supported by Women in Sport.

A statement said: “Sadly, the lack of women involved at the highest levels of decision making in the FA is not a unique situation. Across sport, we see Governing Bodies run by men, with out-dated governance structures preventing women from reaching the top.

“The glass ceiling in sport continues to be made of reinforced glass.”

Responding to the letter, Collins wrote: “The select committee shares your concern that the current structure of the FA makes it impossible for it to reform itself.

“As such, there is currently no effective governing body for football in England that is capable of responding to the challenges that face the modern game.”

However, the FA vowed to continue to work on ongoing reform as it looks for a way forward.

In a statement, it said: “The FA is currently working on governance reforms to adhere to Sport England and UK Sport’s Governance Code for Sport which was released in October this year.

“The FA welcomes the new code as a means of ensuring that sports organisations in receipt of public money are operating in an effective and transparent manner that best supports their sports. We will continue to work with the appropriate bodies, DCMS and Sport England, to achieve this joint ambition.”

Source: Football365
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