CLUBS SUFFERING

State should intervene to save Gor, Leopards from collapse

The same plight is extended to other community soccer clubs since the gaming firm was the KPL’s title sponsor

In Summary

•Gor Mahia and AFC Leopards—have not witnessed any form of financial stability since the betting firm, SportPesa cancelled all sports sponsorship in the country in August 2019

•The withdrawal by the betting giants brought to a halt its four-and-a-half-year deal with the KPL reportedly worth Sh450 million, plus an annual sponsorship to both Gor Mahia and AFC Leopards.

Gor Mahia FC defender Joash Onyango (L) contest for ball with George Odhiambo of Tusker FC in past match
Gor Mahia FC defender Joash Onyango (L) contest for ball with George Odhiambo of Tusker FC in past match
Image: FILE

As an ardent soccer fan, I’m not only concerned about the plight of our non-institutional local soccer clubs but also extremely worried about the possible adverse effects of COVID-19  on local soccer in general and the community clubs in particular.

Our two leading soccer clubs— Gor Mahia and AFC Leopards—have not witnessed any form of financial stability since the betting firm, SportPesa cancelled all sports sponsorship in the country in August 2019. The withdrawal was informed by regulatory and taxation issues which the government and SportPesa failed to level expectations on.

The withdrawal by the betting giants brought to a halt its four-and-a-half-year deal with the Kenya Premier League (KPL), reportedly worth Sh450 million, plus an annual sponsorship to both Gor Mahia and AFC Leopards.

In the last deal signed in 2018, the firm financially supported the Football Kenya Federation to the tune of Sh69 million, the Kenya KPL Sh259 million; Gor Mahia Sh198 million and Leopards Sh159 million. The withdrawal left both the KPL and the two soccer giants with no sponsors.

The same plight is extended to other community soccer clubs since the gaming firm was the KPL’s title sponsor. Since then, the aforementioned soccer clubs have struggled to pay players’ salaries for the past seven months. This is a very gloomy picture considering that apart from standard-essential costs such as house rent, which the players must defray, the same players just like all of us, experience a high-dependency-ratio.

Local soccer had hardly navigated through the harsh economic times informed by the SportPesa exit when the global coronavirus epidemic struck.

Consequently, the local football league has been suspended by the KPL, with the situation likely to continue over the next three months, or even longer. With no soccer being played, the implication is that the non-institutional clubs like Gor and Leopards are not getting any revenue by way of gate collections, yet this would have been their primary source of revenue at the moment.

On the flip-side, the clubs have constant recurrent expenditures like payment of players’ salaries to meet, which are held constant despite the fact that the local soccer league has been suspended.

Informed by best-practice, our local football clubs enter into performance-based contracts with their players. Granted, one may argue in the prevailing circumstances that the players are not meeting their part of the contractual obligation because they are not playing any soccer.

However, COVID-19  is a risk that could never have been effectively mitigated by both the clubs and the players themselves since it is a global problem that has arisen out of reasons beyond everyone’s control. It is therefore mind-boggling how the non-institutional soccer clubs are expected to generate revenue in the absence of gate collections to enable them to pay salaries to the players, which on average ranges about Sh5 million every month. In the same vein, I empathise with the players whose direct expenses are held constant yet faced with a dwindling and erratic disposable income.

Of great concern, quite a number of the players have their contracts running out during the June transfer window and Ceteris paribus, they run the risk of complete loss of livelihood in the prevailing circumstances if their contracts are not renewed. My hypothesis is that the clubs may be unwilling to enter into new contracts with players in view of the current economic uncertainties, but the net effect is that the players equally have nowhere else to go based on the same.

In a nutshell, the aforementioned non-institutional soccer clubs which are the bedrock of Kenya’s football are on the verge of the closing shop altogether. If Gor Mahia and AFC Leopards collapse or operate at sub-optimal capacity levels, this will spell doom to Kenyan soccer. 

Worse still, this will have a catastrophic overall effect on the economy since soccer is a major contributor to our Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by way of both direct employment and the fiscal framework through taxation and public expenditure.

It is, therefore, my humble submission and appeal to the Government through the Ministry of Sports to urgently formulate and deploy a short-term policy intervention at macro-level to cushion the non-institutional soccer clubs in the country.

This should entail either directly off-setting the players’ salaries over the next three months or provision of subsidies; which can be underwritten through the Sports Fund.

Equally, any existing corporate sponsors to the local soccer clubs could also be granted tax reliefs over the next three months to facilitate the now much-needed impetus towards soccer sponsorship.

 

Eliud Owalo is a Management Consultant and an Ardent Soccer fan.