BST column: Blackpool's on-field security and off-field uncertainty

Eight goals and six points in four days have eased the Seasiders away from the drop zone. A win over Fleetwood Town on Saturday would virtually guarantee safety.
Blackpools 5-0 win over Northampton was played out against the usual backdrop of empty seats as supporters have been left to wonder what the future holds for the clubBlackpools 5-0 win over Northampton was played out against the usual backdrop of empty seats as supporters have been left to wonder what the future holds for the club
Blackpools 5-0 win over Northampton was played out against the usual backdrop of empty seats as supporters have been left to wonder what the future holds for the club

If we’d been told at the start of the season that this was to be a year of consolidation on the field, many fans would probably have settled for a respectable mid-table finish, given all that has been happening behind the scenes: the game-changing High Court rulings in Mr Belokon’s favour, the sacking of Karl Oyston as chairman, two CEOs gone, the club allegedly up for sale, the owner’s position looking increasingly untenable and the messages from a spokesperson for the Oystons sounding more fantastic by the week.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Social media has been full of discussion about the statement released by Blackpool FC last Friday, promising new investors and a return to the Premier League.

That statement, coming as it did at 6pm on the day it was claimed the outstanding debt of £25m would be paid to Mr Belokon, appears to have been yet another smoke and mirrors exercise.

Owen Oyston would be forced to relinquish any shares in the club before it could return to the Premier League. Realistically, the likelihood of any savvy investor being prepared to plough money into Blackpool FC while the Oystons are in any way connected, the fans are boycotting, the club is losing circa £45,000 a week and Valeri Belokon is still owed £25m is surely the product of someone’s fevered imagination.

What this continuing melodrama highlights is the fact that football fans, whichever club they support, are largely at the mercy of whoever their owner is at any given time. It is an insufficiently regulated lottery which has given rise to the appalling situation of an historic sporting asset like Blackpool FC, which ordinarily would be supported by thousands and which sits at the heart of the community it serves, being a pawn in someone’s unscrupulous game.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Most Blackpool fans realised a long time ago that the Oystons, despite Owen’s protestations to the contrary, do not have the best interests of the football club and its supporters at heart.

Few others have had the running of their club exposed in a court of law like Blackpool has and yet it seems there is still very little long-suffering supporters can do except wait.

It is understandable that some are becoming impatient, are beginning to question what is actually happening with the club and what Valeri Belokon’s intentions are.

Mr Belokon invested in our football club in good faith back in 2006, achieved promotion to the Premier League within his five-year target and throughout these recent, turbulent years has kept contact with Blackpool fans.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He has consistently maintained his love for Blackpool FC and his intention to be part of its future. The EFL has to pave the way for that to happen by overturning his disqualification, while Owen Oyston has to prove he is serious about complying with the High Court ruling by offering the club and stadium at a realistic valuation to Mr Belokon in part settlement of his debt.

The football authorities (the EPL, EFL and FA) have not covered themselves in glory in any of this. They have failed to adequately implement their own statutes of governance and it is only because Mr Belokon took out a civil action to seek redress for unfair prejudice that the ‘illegitimate stripping’ of our club by the Oystons has been exposed.

That serves to underline the necessity of Blackpool Supporters’ Trust campaigning for the government to appoint an independent regulator so all football fans, not just Blackpool’s, can feel the ethical running of their club is not dependent on pot luck.

Some sort of licensing system is required to provide a framework for the way clubs can be run and which will limit the damage that can be done by individual owners and directors. It is long overdue reform but will still take months of sustained pressure to get all parties mobilised to enact it.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

In the meantime, as fans we can only watch and wait for the final scene of the melodrama to be played out at our wreck of a football club.

The majority of Blackpool supporters continue to press in the most effective way we can by withholding our revenue and campaigning for regime change.

A strong and principled Supporters’ Trust will continue to contribute to the stability of our fanbase and the resurgence of our club once the business side of this dispute is finally settled.

Eventually we will be able to move forward under new ownership. If that new ownership turns out to include Valeri Belokon, then Blackpool fans are sure to welcome him with open arms.