Gambling in professional sport: the enabling role of “regulatory legitimacy”
ISSN: 1472-0701
Article publication date: 20 January 2022
Issue publication date: 14 June 2022
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to explain why organisations remain vulnerable to financial failure despite increasing financial regulation to improve governance. Using a case study of gambling and regulation in professional football in England, it introduces the concept of “regulatory legitimacy” to show how this enables football clubs to gamble.
Design/methodology/approach
The study quantifies the extent to which football clubs in the Championship of the English Football League (EFL) adopt a conventionally economically irrational decision to run a loss-making budget in the hope of achieving sporting success. The study postulates criteria for evidence of this form of gambling by overspending on playing talent with data from the clubs’ published financial statements. A pay-off matrix is developed to compare the intended and actual outcomes.
Findings
The research finds that this strategy was both prevalent and the most successful to achieve promotion.
Originality/value
This study makes three contributions. The first is the quantification of the prevalence of this form of gambling. The second is the finding that, despite regulations to limit spending on wages, gambling is rational in the non-economic sense because it is almost a necessary strategy to achieve promotion if the club had not been relegated from the Premier League in the previous season. The third contribution is the development of the concept of “regulatory legitimacy” as a way to understand the process through which regulations are implemented yet are ineffective at curbing financial gambling.
Keywords
Citation
Evans, R., Walters, G. and Hamil, S. (2022), "Gambling in professional sport: the enabling role of “regulatory legitimacy”", Corporate Governance, Vol. 22 No. 5, pp. 1078-1093. https://doi.org/10.1108/CG-07-2021-0251
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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