Wednesday

April 23rd , 2025

FOLLOW US

FROM BEER TO BETTING - HOW HAVE FOOTBALL SHIRT SPONSORS CHANGED?

featured img
Sports

4 days ago

There was once a time when the shirts of English football's leading clubs were adorned with household brands - but those days are long gone.

 The Premier League's prestige and global audience is bigger than ever - and lots of the companies who now sponsor shirts don't even operate in the UK, and aren't really even trying to sell anything to fans.

 So how have shirts sponsorships in the Premier League changed over the decades, and why are gambling firms more prevalent?

 Who funds the teams in the Premier League? Who sponsors the Premier League clubs?

 24-25 sponsors of the Premier League jerseys Use the column header buttons to sort columns by ascending or descending order

 Currently not sorted

 Team Shirt sponsor Industry Headquarters

 Arsenal Emirates Air travel UAE

 Aston Villa Betano Gambling Greece

 Brentford Hollywoodbets Gambling South Africa

 Brighton American Express Financial services USA

 Bournemouth bj88 Gambling Philippines

 Chelsea nada nada nada Crystal Palace Net88 Gambling Vietnam

 Everton Stake Gambling Curaçao

 Philippines SBOTOP Gambling Fulham Ipswich +–=÷× Tour Entertainment N/A

 Before the 2026-27 season, Premier League clubs will impose a self-imposed ban on front-of-shirt gambling sponsors. However, as things stand, three more teams have a gambling sponsor on the front of their shirts than they did last year. GlobalData estimates that shirt sponsorship deals between Premier League clubs and gambling companies will total $135.43 million (£101.1 million) during the 2024–25 season. The other nine clubs are sponsored by companies from four industries - air travel, entertainment, financial services and technology.

 Why have football shirt sponsors changed?

 92-93: sponsors of the Premier League shirts Use the column header buttons to sort columns by ascending or descending order

 Currently not sorted

 Team Shirt sponsor Industry Headquarters

 Japan Arsenal JVC Technology Aston Villa Mita Copiers Technology Japan

 Alcohol from Blackburn McEwan's Lager America's Chelsea Commodore Technology Coventry Peugeot Automotive France

 Crystal Palace Tulip Computers Technology Netherlands

 Everton NEC Technology Japan

 UK-based Ipswich Fisons Pharmaceutical Leeds Admiral Clothing UK

 Carlsberg Alcohol Denmark Liverpool Japan Brother Technology Manchester City Rewind three decades to the foundation of the Premier League and none of its 22 clubs had a shirt sponsorship deal with a gambling company.

 Just over half of the companies which sponsored teams in the 1992-93 campaign were headquartered in the UK, and the majority sold physical products in Britain.

 Nowadays, none of the front-of-shirt sponsor companies are aiming to sell physical products that fans can buy directly, and only one is headquartered in the UK.  Even that one, Liverpool partner bank Standard Chartered, does not allow UK customers to open a current account with it.

 Industries such as technology, construction and clothing have almost completely disappeared from shirts.

 Five of the 1992-93 shirt sponsors - Commodore, Fisons, ICI, Mita Copiers and Tulip Computers - have since gone out of business.

 From JD Sports to American Express

 In the inaugural Premier League season, seven Premier League shirt sponsors companies were based within 100 miles of their club.  Four of them were within ten miles, and Sheffield United and Ipswich, two of them, were less than a mile away. Currently, only Liverpool is located within 1,000 miles of the primary headquarters of their shirt sponsor. The average distance between a club and their shirt sponsor's main office in 1992-93 was 1,859 miles.  Now it is 4,431 miles.

 12

 Globalisation and advances in technology have also played a role in shifting the dynamic of modern sponsorships - big business and wider influence is increasingly what sponsor companies are aiming for, rather than the cash from the pockets of the fans in the stands.

 "In the UK there around 70 million people, but worldwide you're talking about a marketplace of billions," says Dr Joe Piggin, senior lecturer in sports management and policy at the University of Loughborough.  "So the economic incentives are there for the companies."

 Companies in economies that were booming in the early 1990s but have since weakened, like Japan, have become less common shirt sponsors as the global financial picture has changed. Meanwhile, newer money in modern financial strongholds such as the Middle East is being spent on sponsorship deals.

 Sponsor companies gain far more from partnerships with clubs than just advertising – access to private boxes can be used to host clients, photoshoots with superstar players can be used in corporate material, and relationships can in some cases be used for political leverage.

 "The Premier League should look after itself," Piggin says.  "Not just in terms of the economic sustainability, but in terms of connecting with their local communities."

 12

 Premier League shirt sponsors 92/93

 Reith Sans

 Reith Sans

 Reith Serif Light

 Reith Serif Light

 What about gambling sponsors in other leagues?

 The Premier League itself does not have an official gambling partner, but Uefa announced its first formal gambling sponsor last summer.

 According to data from Uefa's European Club Finance and Investment Landscape report, gambling firms are also the most common sponsors of top division clubs in Belgium, Greece, Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, and Russia.

 The top industries for shirt sponsorships across top divisions in Europe are:

 * Gaming (15 percent) Commerce (12%) Air travel; automotive; financial services; food and drink (all 10%)

 In the Championship, gambling is also the most popular category of shirt sponsor with six clubs - Burnley, Middlesbrough, QPR, Stoke, Sunderland, and Watford.

 There are no gambling sponsors on shirts in League One and League Two.  The most common industries in those divisions are energy, automotive, and food and drink.

 Three Scottish Premiership clubs - Celtic, Dundee United and Rangers - are sponsored by gambling firms.

 Why are gambling companies sponsoring shirts?

 Research shows that gambling advertisements were shown more than 29,000 times in the UK during the first weekend of this Premier League season, almost trebling the previous campaign's figure.

 "Gambling advertising has become almost inextricably linked to football and the industry makes a concerted effort to target young men, which is the profile most likely to develop problems with gambling," says Matt Zarb-Cousin, co-founder of Gamban, software which aims to help users quit online gambling.

 "There's a generation that's growing up in an environment that associates watching football with betting - they've been conditioned to believe it's a normal thing to do as part of enjoying sport."

 According to the UK Gambling Commission's latest figures, gambling firms earned revenue of £15.1bn between April 2022 and March 2023.  That income has given them plenty to spend on advertising.  In addition, despite the imminent ban on the front of shirts, some people are of the opinion that they will expand the locations of their advertising, possibly expanding it to pitchside placards and even shirt sleeves. According to Piggin, "the front-of-shirt sponsorship withdrawal appears symbolic." "I'm quite sceptical about the significance of that move beyond public relations.

 Because under-18-year-olds are not permitted to wear shirts with gambling sponsors, young players have worn jerseys without sponsors in games. Leicester City's 15-year-old winger Jeremy Monga played wearing a shirt without the club's gambling sponsor on the front when he made his debut against Newcastle United earlier in April

 How is gambling sponsorship impacting football clubs and fans?

 None of the Premier League's six wealthiest clubs - Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur - feature a gambling firm on the front of their shirts.

 Targeting clubs lower down the league, who face a much higher threat of relegation and the potential economic insecurity that comes with that, is a way for gambling firms to associate themselves with the Premier League without having to fork out top-end sums.

 "It is cheaper than sponsoring any of the top six," Piggin says.  "And they also get their brand on shirts in photos of these teams playing the top six anyway.  So there would be that legitimacy of 'look, we're in the Premier League, who cares who we're sponsoring?'"

 Some of the gambling sponsors are based in tax havens such as Curacao and Malta, allowing them to keep more of the profits they make from customers.

 UK customers are not even able to bet with some of the gambling companies which feature on the front of shirts.

 These so-called 'white label' firms instead use sponsorship of Premier League clubs to target customers in other markets.

 Gambling establishments that sponsor Wolves and Nottingham Forest are among those aiming to attract customers in Asia. A lot of those companies are based in East Asia, and are aimed at customers in China, even though gambling is illegal there.

 "There are ways around China's gambling ban using VPNs and so on," says Dr Raffaello Rossi, lecturer in marketing at the University of Bristol.  "They're advertising in the UK, not China, so the Chinese government can't do anything about it.  But still they're reaching the Chinese population because the Premier League is a global phenomenon."

 The fact that UK customers can't gamble with some of these companies doesn't necessarily mean the advertisement has zero impact on British spectators, however.

 "It can still trigger someone to start betting because you recognise it's a betting sponsor," Rossi adds.




Total Comments: 0

Meet the Author


PC
Zechariah Nyamekye

Blogger

follow me

INTERSTING TOPICS


Connect and interact with amazing Authors in our twitter community