Thousands of Blackpool fans are boycotting their football club, because of the owners, the Oyston family. They will not go back whilst the Oystons own the club.
Many football professionals have joined the fans in speaking out about the appalling behaviour and dreadful management of the club the Oystons.
As Blackpool loses yet another game and Karl Oyston is accused by a police officer of inciting violence from fans I thought it might useful to pull together some of what the journalists (*) who write for our national and local newspapers have said. It is useful to know what it is legally safe to say and who has heard journalists saying it.
Quotes from journalists on Blackpool FC
Jack Gaughan of the Daily Mail reported:
Henry Winter of the Telegraph wrote:
At that time Karl Oyston sat on the board of the Football League. No action was taken.
Paul Wilson of the Guardian said:
Before the end of the 2014/15 season when Blackpool were relegated the Guardian’s James Riach said
Protests instead have been targeted at Karl Oyston, the Blackpool chairman, and his father Owen, the club’s majority owner. It is they who have presided over a remarkable decline, one with no end in sight. Perhaps when the parachute payments from the Premier League dry up after this season, a clearer future will emerge.
The parachute payments have ended. The club look like they will be relegated for the second season in a row. The future seems clear.
The Independent reported on an apology to Karl Oyston:
Last year the Telegraph decided Blackpool was the worst run club in Britain:
After his abusive text exchange with a fan the local Blackpool paper said:
Reporting on the Oyston family removing a statue of footballing legend Stan Morten before a fan’s protest march the Mirror said:
As Alyson Rudd of the Times wrote:
You would have expected that this chain of thought would resonate with Blackpool’s councillors. The leader of Blackpool council invited Karl Oyston to his wedding.
Who hears the views of journalists
The Guardian, the Telegraph and the Mail have a combined print circulation of about 2.3 million people with 28.8 million online readers in November 2015.
Just this weekend 2.5 million people heard boos when the Oyston’s name was mentioned on Radio 4.
The seaside resort of Blackpool has been in decline for many years. Unfortunately Google’s search data tells the tale of an enormous drop in searches for Blackpool following the Oyston’s mismanagement of the club. Sport and entertainment could have played a significant part in regenerating the town. Instead Blackpool’s promotion was a wasted opportunity.
The data also tells another tale. The growing number of people who are researching the Oystons.
Increasingly it is stories from the fans, the football professionals, journalists and their tales of the Oystons’ appalling behaviour that they are finding.
(*) I know Kelvin Mackenzie, ex-editor of the Sun, has also written strong words about the Oystons and Blackpool but he is no journalist. You can donate to the Hillsborough Justice Campaign online.
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