The Most Lucrative Game In Soccer

Accidentally uttering a choice swear word on live, prime-time television isn’t typically the wisest move, but Fulham’s Joe Bryan had a pretty good excuse for his slip of the tongue on Tuesday.

A full back, Bryan wouldn’t be the likeliest name to spring to mind for a pair of destiny-shifting goals, but he’d just gotten two of them after getting through a lockdown that challenged his mental health and it was time to celebrate.

Most significant of all, his pair of strikes had been decisive in not just any old game, but the most financially lucrative one in soccer.

The English Premier League campaign came to an end 10 days ago, with Liverpool crowned as champions, Manchester City, Chelsea and Manchester United booking Champions League places and Bournemouth, Watford and Norwich condemned to relegation.
 
But there was still one serious piece of business to be attended to. In English soccer, the leading two teams in the second-tier Championship gain automatic promotion to the EPL. Clubs placed third through sixth then square off in semifinals and a final for the remaining spot. Fulham’s clash with West London rival Brentford, at Wembley, had that cherished prize at stake.

Being dubbed soccer’s “richest game” is a conveniently catchy slogan for the matchup, but it is also true. One night of action has the capacity to make a seismic difference to the immediate and lingering future of each club.

According to Tim Bridge, who is the Director of the Sports Business Group at analytics firm Deloitte, a victory for Fulham was worth at least $176 million. Had Brentford, an historically small club that last saw life in the top tier of English soccer 73 years ago, prevailed, it would have been even more, $221 million.

“Given the recent impact of COVID-19, it is likely that the financial impact of promotion will be better received than ever before,” Bridge said. “The increased revenue provides these clubs with the platform from which they can develop on and off the pitch. Promotion to the Premier League provides clubs with the financial resources to make strategic investments.”

If promoted teams are able to stay in the EPL for two or more years, the numbers increase dramatically. 

Being a championship team means playing in front of good crowds and a solid domestic audience in England. Being part of the EPL means instantly transforming into a brand that reaches hundreds of millions around the world and being assured a share of astronomical television revenues. 

No wonder Bryan struggled to control his excitement.

“The best description of the Championship playoff final that I’ve heard is to say it’s a ‘gunslinger’s shootout for the promised land,’” Jeremy Cross, Chief Sports Writer for U.K. national newspaper The Daily Star told me, via telephone. “Fulham can now start looking at signing a different class of player, spend more on transfer fees and wages. It changes everything.”
 

There is a wealth gap in English soccer and there are no signs of it tightening. There is disparity even within the EPL, with the top teams capable of snapping up all the best and most expensive talent. Take it down to the division below and it is a chasm.

One-off games for all the marbles provide the ultimate test of fortitude and, naturally, there are heroes and – sadly – villains. Brentford put together a marvelous campaign that slipped at the end. Two defeats pushed them down into the playoff places, then a goalkeeping error from the otherwise excellent David Raya doomed them. Bryan was the beneficiary, and Fulham will be laughing all the way to the bank.

Fulham, controlled by Jacksonville Jaguars owner Shahid Khan, has plenty of links with the United States. Former national team standouts Brian McBride and Clint Dempsey shined there, while current U.S. defender Tim Ream played the whole game against Brentford.
 

For fans of the team, the experience was a mix of enjoyment and emotional agony.

“You have to spend some time in the Premier League just to survive and be able to enjoy the next 10 years of your history,” Bleacher Report soccer correspondent and Fulham fan Dean Jones told me. “If you go two or three years out of (the EPL), you are in danger of ownership changes, or your stadium might have to be sold, or a mass exodus of players, especially for a club without a huge fanbase.

“Watching from home was really weird. Every big game Fulham have ever played in my lifetime, I’ve been there. The only thing to make it normal was that there was no choice, nobody was there. At home, I spent a lot of the game with my hands over my eyes.”

He can remove them now. The richest game in soccer is done for another year. The prize has been awarded, and there can only ever be one recipient. For everyone else looking up at the riches of the Premier League, it remains nothing more than a dream for now.
 

Here’s what others have said …

Tom Hamilton, ESPN: “Now they’ve regained that winning touch, but (Scott) Parker knows the Championship playoff final win is only half the battle to getting Fulham back to the club they want to be. But they’ve got the platform now to build on … Fulham managed this final win perfectly and the 2-1 scoreline was fair. They went against their expected style of containment and counter, and instead controlled possession, prodded and pressed and then waited for their opportunity.”

Joe Bryan, Fulham player: “I’m not the hero. Every single one of them boys, players, staff, supporters, everyone who has been with us all season. It’s been unbelievable. We’ve been written off five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10 times. I even read somewhere we were supposed to be scared of them. But we took it to them and we scored twice.”

Scott Parker, Fulham manager: “I feel emotional. The journey you go on, the ups and downs, I’m the face that fronts it up. But behind the scenes is a support network of people that keep you going.”