Football fans in the UK have long lamented the increasingly corporate nature of our national game.
Certainly, the days of players clambering from the coal mines to play 90 minutes for their local team have been consigned to history.
Given the turnover and size of England's largest football clubs, it is remarkable that only a clutch of them have their own in-house lawyers. The range of work that could be done in-house is undoubtedly on the increase, so will the start of the new season next month see more general counsel appointed in the football world? Charlie Wright reports
July 06, 2005 at 08:03 PM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Legalweek
Football fans in the UK have long lamented the increasingly corporate nature of our national game.
Certainly, the days of players clambering from the coal mines to play 90 minutes for their local team have been consigned to history.
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