The Board of Motherwell FC has reviewed the draft strategies and ideas being put forward from both the SPL and the McLeish review process.
We will listen to the thoughts and views of our fans before reaching a final position and will consider the package of all measures in the round. Our agreed position as a Board going into the debates and negotiations is as follows:
- We urge all Clubs and participants in the debate to act in the long term interests of the sustainable development of football in Scotland as a whole. While it is tempting to have as our core driver the narrow interests of our own Club in the short and medium term – because it makes decisions easier – we believe that such an approach is ultimately to the detriment of all including Motherwell FC.
- It is fair to assert that the sport enjoys proportionately greater support from the Scottish population and society than in any other country. Given this, the wider evidence we believe is unequivocal: Scotland is massively underperforming our potential in football both commercially and in sporting terms.
- As a result we believe that everyone with the future of the game at heart has to conclude that ‘no change’ is no option.
- We recognise that the historic evolution of the structure of football has ensured for too long that there is a blockage on reform and improvement from vested interests almost baked-in to the constitution of the game. That said we recognise the groundswell for change and will do all we can to support those taking leadership positions, including the leadership of the SPL with our fellow member clubs.
- Our priority for reforms will be behind those fundamental and substantial measures that stand a chance of arresting the decline in average attendances, commercial performance and sporting achievement at a club and national team level.
- Our number one priority would be the introduction of a substantial ‘winter-break’ and a Spring/early Summer start to the football calendar. The commercial, practical and cultural advantages of this we believe are compelling. We also support innovations around the timing of games throughout the week to secure maximum attendance, new audiences and commercial advantage.
- We remain open-minded on league and cup structure and will test any model against its ability to grow interest and active support for the game on a sustainable commercial basis. We believe it is critical for models to be found that allow ambitious clubs to move up through the league ranks and for underperforming clubs to take the opposite route through all levels of the game.
- We are fully supportive and urge moves to streamline the governance structure of the game in Scotland.