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Call to protect Stoke City fans' Saturday afternoons from 'whims of broadcasters'

Stoke City fans haven't seen their side finish in the Championship top half since relegation from the Premier League in 2018.
-Credit: (Image: Charlotte Tattersall/Getty Images)


The Saturday 3pm television blackout should be kept “for the health of the entire game” and put above the whims of broadcasters, a fans’ chief has said.

The Times has reported that senior figures in football believe the blackout, which is designed to protect live attendances at matches throughout the pyramid, is unlikely to survive beyond the 2028/29 season when the current domestic Premier League and EFL television deals end.

Tom Greatrex, the chair of the Football Supporters’ Association, has now calling on the game’s authorities to properly assess the impact this would have on the game and supporters.

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“It should come as no surprise that the erosion of a full 3pm fixture list is putting the TV blackout under question,” Greatrex said.

“The FSA supports retaining the blackout for the health of the entire game, putting that above the whims of broadcasters.”

EFL chairman Rick Parry told PA in 2021 – prior to his competition’s most recent deal with Sky Sports being agreed – that he did not rule out scrapping the blackout in the next deal, although ultimately it was retained.

The EFL’s current deal includes more than 1,000 matches a season being shown live, with more games moving to the 12.30pm Saturday slot, such as Stoke City's trip to Sunderland this weekend. Stoke have been live on television 13 times already this season and will have at least 28 matches on Sky in all in 2024/25.

All games except Saturday 3pm kick-offs will be screened live in the new Premier League deal which starts next season too.

Greatrex warned English football risked ending up like Portugal, where crowds have fallen with kick-offs spread across weekends and two games rarely starting at the same time.

He added: “As so often seems to be the case, the impact on lower league and non league clubs is barely considered; the impact on match-going supporters being forced to drive as kick-off changes mean no public transport options is ignored, while claims about sustainability are bandied about by leagues and sponsors.

“Perhaps most significantly the full fixture list becoming a thing of the past, other than the final day, reduces the sporting spectacle, increases pressure on policing resources and risks the Portugalisation of our competitions.

“Any proposed changes need to properly assess those impacts too – blithely stating a desire to protect the pyramid is not enough. Actions – and inaction – speak louder than PR adviser crafted words.”

The Times reports that the EFL’s analysis has shown there to be no significant impact on attendances caused by the changes made to scheduling under its new Sky deal.

Associations are allowed to impose the broadcast block between 2.45pm and 5.15pm on Saturdays under UEFA Article 48, which can only be applied where 50 per cent of Premier League and Championship matches on a given weekend are scheduled for Saturday 3pm.

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