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Published 17:11 22 Feb 2017 GMT
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That is the spirit and generosity that keeps small clubs alive.
When was the last time you saw a Premier League manager or player speak without a backdrop crowded with logos, of which nearly all were bookies? And how often do you see a player getting his man of the match award swigging slowly from a branded bottle of energy drink for a little bit of product placement?
What will Wayne Shaw think when he counts up and sees that exactly half of the teams in the Premier League have gambling firms as their front of shirt sponsors and that every single Premier League club has, "an official gambling partner".
Will he read the report from last year which said that, "of the estimated €100 million invested by the betting sector in UK sports sponsorship this year, over €80 million goes into football."
Gambling is deeply embedded in football. I enjoy more than the odd flutter but I don’t delude myself into thinking that what is affordable for me can not be something much darker for a lot of other people.
The Gambling Commission enforcement and intelligence director, Richard Watson, said: “Integrity in sport is not a joke and we have opened an investigation to establish exactly what happened. As part of that we’ll be looking into any irregularity in the betting market and establishing whether the operator has met its licence requirement to conduct its business with integrity.”
Integrity in sport is not a joke but it is odd that it takes a sub goalkeeper eating a pie for a bit of a joke to prompt somebody to remind us of that in such a po-faced manner.
What Wayne Shaw spent all his days doing for Sutton United football club was precisely what the integrity of sport is all about. He made a mistake the other night, caught up in the mad excitement of the whole occasion.
This weekend, football will be back to normal with gambling firms jostling for attention and space in front of the cameras and trailing all sorts of novelty football-related bets for punters. The circus moves on.
British horseracing has just moved closer to making sure that the gambling industry puts something back into the sport.
All betting operators, including online firms based offshore, will be required to return 10% of their gross profits from racing bets back to the sport from April.
I’d like to see that idea extended and for all football bets to be levied and the funds be put back into grassroots clubs, not just used to pay PL players higher wages as it is now.
We could call it the Wayne Shaw Rule and make sure all grassroots clubs got a piece of the pie. Until then, give Wayne Shaw his life back and let Sutton return to being the true community club they once were.
Niall Quinn is a former Arsenal, Manchester City, Sunderland and Republic of Ireland striker. He currently works as a pundit and co-commentator for Sky Sports, and also writes for Sportsvibe.Live sport on TV in Ireland this weekend – Football, GAA, Rugby – April 24th to 26th
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