‘From Saudi to Sheffield: is football still the beautiful game?’ I will be one of the speakers at this debate at the exciting Battle of Ideas Festival 18-19 October 2025.
This debate will take place on Sunday 19 October, 11:00—12:30, Church House Café, Westminster, London. This is a link to the website for the debate: From Saudi to Sheffield: is football still the beautiful game?
Debate introduction:
‘I have the feeling that this competition is going to be as important, if not more important, than the Champions League’, said Chelsea manager, Enzo Maresca, after his team had won the inaugural FIFA Club World Cup. This summer’s competition was intended to showcase club football from all continents of the world. But many involved in the game derided the tournament as an unnecessary addition to an already overcrowded football calendar.
Saudi Arabia helped to bankroll the Club World Cup, and is fast developing into a powerhouse for club and international football. The country will host the 2034 World Cup and is planning to build 11 new futuristic stadiums. Saudi club sides are competing with top European teams to sign world-class players such as Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema and Sadio Mane. The Saudis have even greater financial muscle than the English Premier League or La Liga in Spain. On the world stage, it seems, money talks, while concerns about democracy and human rights are muted.
In the UK, the fate of football clubs, big and small, is rightly considered to be of enormous importance to local communities. The response from Westminster has been the passing of the Football Governance Act into law. The Act means a government-appointed regulator will be in place to check on the health of clubs and monitor negotiations within the English football ‘pyramid’. Currently Morecambe FC and Sheffield Wednesday are on the brink due to recalcitrant owners, and many people say that the football regulator cannot come soon enough. But would such a regulator be able to save these clubs anyway?
Another big change has been the rise of women’s football. The Lionesses’ victory in the Women’s Euros 2025 will provide a big boost to the women’s game in England – but it is also noticeable that the women’s game is growing in both quality and audience figures.
Are we entering a new age of football? Is football now conquering the globe? Or has the beautiful game finally become disconnected from its fans and roots with ever-more fanciful tournaments taking place in soulless arenas to satisfy a multi-billion-pound industry?
speakers

books and essays editor, spiked

editor, Gript Media

hospitality manager
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writer and commentator on risk and sport; professor, University of Iowa; author, Venice in Environmental Peril? Myth and reality
Chair

director, membership and events, Academy of Ideas; convenor, AoI Book Club
Producer
director, membership and events, Academy of Ideas; convenor, AoI Book Club



