Showing posts with label Bosman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bosman. Show all posts

Friday, 22 October 2010

Bosman

Blackpool manager, Ian Holloway in his characteristically forthright manner has criticised the state of football and in particular the current Rooney saga at Manchester United:
"I've got big problems with the people running football. They are so wrong it's frightening," Holloway said. I think the game is in trouble..."
Well yes, hard to argue with that, so what does Mr Holloway think the football authorities have got so wrong:
"...you cannot have the Bosman ruling they've got at the moment."
Er...Mr Holloway, the Bosman ruling has nowt to do with football authorities, it was an EU ruling in 1995 regarding freedom of movement for workers. The football authorities can do precisely... nothing about it while we remain a member state - not that the BBC mention this.

As an aside one of the ironies of the ruling, was that Jean-Marc Bosman who brought the case, missed out on the subsequent gravy train that was unleashed, something that he openly admitted in an interview some years ago left him feeling 'bitter' and 'resentful'. My heart bleeds.

Monday, 4 October 2010

Second Bosman Ruling?

The Portsmouth News reports that landlady Ms Murphy, is arguing that being blocked from showing football in her pub on a foreign satellite channel is a restriction of trade; that the Premier League contravenes EU principles of free movement of goods and services between the member states:
A Portsmouth landlady is set to take on Sky in the European Court of Justice tomorrow over her showing Pompey games in her pub. It brings the long-running saga between Karen Murphy, landlady of the Red, White and Blue pub in Fawcett Road, Southsea, and the media giant one step closer to the finish line.

The court battle began when Ms Murphy was twice taken to court by Media Protection Services, which protects the rights of broadcasters, for breaching Sky's copyright in this country.

The first time, she successfully argued that she had been unaware that she was breaching copyright law by using Nova. But the second time she was convicted.
Then confirmation where the real power lies:
She appealed to the High Court over the conviction but judges at the High Court in London said the law was such a grey area that even they couldn't decide.

They passed it to the European Court of Justice for a decision, and tomorrow Ms Murphy and MPS will have 20 minutes each to put their case across.
This has a precedent in the infamous Bosman ruling and should Ms Murphy win then the future value of the Premier League's broadcasting rights could be seriously undermined.

Personally I would have thought it would have been much cheaper and a lot less hassle to Ms Murphy if she had bought a bottle of Tippex and painted the pint glass onto the screen of the pub TV. Not that I suggest any pubs do that of course.