Tuesday 2 October 2012

My Grievances with the FA

I know. I know. Here we are again. It's quite difficult to move on from such a ridiculous situation in which you've been outrageously treated. My attitude towards the Football Association is that of contempt and digust. I do not see how they can get away with some of the things they do, and then why people don't question it.

So here I am, questioning it. A few hours after the John Terry racism decision, I started a letter. This letter will probably make no difference to anything, but I feel I can't just sit back and watch. I had my customary Twitter rant on the situation, and now I'm trying to do something about it. I'm trying to back it up. Yes, I may sound like an old man, who complains way too much, but I feel it's important to stick up for what you believe in. And this is me, sticking up.


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Dear Mr.Bernstein,

I am a football fan like any other. I’ve been involved in every aspect of football since the age of 6, (I am now 21), and this sport has been around me for as long as I can remember. I played for 10 years, refereed for 7 years, and was briefly involved in coaching. I never reached any sort of top-class level, but played, officiated and coached at grass roots level because I loved the game. Football is a universal language.  It brings people together like nothing else can. Millions of people have the same passion for the game as I do, but the game as we know it is slowly becoming a joke.

I am writing this letter then to let you know, the chairman of the FA, that I am no longer in love with the game. And unfortunately, although I cannot speak for others, I fear others are getting fed up of what our sport of football has become in the UK. The same people I played with as a child, officiated games with and even the children I coached are growing into people who view the FA as an overpowering, inconsistent, disrespectful and frankly nonsensical organisation. I may not be Sir Alex Ferguson, Wayne Rooney or Howard Webb, but what I am is a lover of football like many people in this country. I implore you to listen and take in what I am about to say. I fully expect the result of this letter to amount to nothing, but I feel I cannot sit back and watch our beautiful game become more and more poisoned.

 There have been too many examples, in the past couple of years especially, where decisions by “independent panels” have been completely inconsistent with the messages that the FA are trying to communicate. The most important, and arguably most sensitive issue, is racism. I am typing this letter a few days after news reached me that John Terry had been found guilty of “using abusive and/or insulting words and/or behaviour” towards Anton Ferdinand, and there are three main questions that us, the British public, the majority of football fans, would like answers to:

1) Why, if the FA are attempting to “kick out” racism, are players receiving inconsistent bans and fines? In my eyes, and many other people’s eyes, racism is racism. So why has John Terry received a 4-game ban while Luis Suarez received an 8-game ban?


2) If a priority of the FA is to get racism out of our beautiful game, why are charges such as those brought on Joey Barton last year resulting in larger penalties than charges relating to racism? The message you are trying to convey is that “racism is our main focus”, yet you are handing out lower penalties for incidents involving it? Surely the only way to kick racism out is by punishing those responsible for being racist the most severely? By not doing so, you are simply contradicting your own views.

 3) Given that the FA are trying to rid racism from the game, shouldn’t the organisation begin by getting rid of racists from within your own organisation? Although I understand he has now retired, I am of course talking of Peter Brown, who was allowed to determine his own future at the FA despite sending racist images involving a black Scottish dog in September 2011, adorned with the FA badge. Am I the only person who thinks this is hugely hypocritical?

The anger from normal supporters and fans of the game is palpable and forever growing, yet the FA continues to ignore lovers of the game in pursuit of its own agenda of looking after themselves and no one else.

Another issue I would like to ask the FA about is their own system when it comes to discipline. Why is there no independent regulatory commission when it comes to discipline? By independent, I mean people who are not involved with the FA in any capacity. Before the John Terry case, 471 out of 473 cases ended in a prosecution in the last 12 months, meaning just 0.5% of cases have finished with a verdict of ‘Not Guilty’. As for the John Terry case specifically, why has the FA taken it upon themselves to undermine the judicial system of our country and hand John Terry a guilty verdict, despite being found not guilty in a court of law? I am as confused as every other fan in this country, and the FA are not doing themselves any favours in trying to build relationships with the British public when they ignore the ruling of a court of law.

- Does the FA think that if they find someone not guilty of something, they will be criticised for being too soft?

- Why does the FA not need “proof beyond reasonable doubt” when a court of law does?

-Criminal and civil courts make rigorous demands of their prosecutors. It seems FA hearings don’t even require any proof. Why?

 I am quite confident in saying that the FA merely goes by balance of probability on deciding a verdict. This is what happens when the people doing the prosecuting, get to appoint the judge. I do not see how the FA can expect people to just sit down and accept judgements that finish with a guilty verdict 99.5% of the time, and then not be regulated in any way shape or form by anyone independent. Do you not see the problem?

I would like to draw your attention to a quote from the General Secretary of the FA, Alex Horne:

“It’s something that happened in a match between QPR and Chelsea. ‘That’s a very different process, from my perspective, from our England procedures.”

Why then, did the FA go on to strip John Terry of the England captaincy? If you are trying to be consistent, at least pretend you are trying to be instead of trying to cover your own backs. By doing so, you are beginning to draw mounting criticisms from the people in this sport who matter the most. The fans and the normal, everyday people in this country who love the game.

This is before we reach the highly hypocritical practices that the FA completes in regards to bringing their own staff to task. As a referee, I was highly critical of my Chief Executive at my County FA, Peter Brown, when it came to light that he had been highly offensive whilst in a position at the FA. To let him decide his own future, after sending out racist messages the day before the FA complained to UEFA in regards to being the victims of racism in Bulgaria is just outrageous. I could not believe the hypocrisy involved. To then be fined and banned myself for criticising this on Twitter was the last straw for me personally. Since then, I have read story after story of inconsistencies from the FA and its “independent panels” in regards to issues involving racism, and I, along with many others, have simply had enough.

I do not expect to receive a reply to this letter, as I am led to understand that my views simply don’t matter. If you have it in your heart to stand up and be counted over these issues, providing at least a few answers to my grievances, my own personal view of the FA will not be forever tarnished. However, I cannot just sit back and ignore these problems any longer. For the sake of the sport, I urge you to at least provide answers to the millions of people who are becoming increasingly disillusioned with the management of the sport we love.

Regards,

Tom Carr


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