Sam Wallace: It's sad that Maidstone miss out on share of
£10m Smalling windfall
Talking Football: Maidstone have the planning permission for
their own home but not the £750,000 to build it
Monday, 8 February 2010
If you can remember that time before John Terry, Vanessa
Perroncel and Wayne Bridge occupied our every waking thought (I know, feels
like a different world, doesn't it?) you will recall that last month Manchester
United signed a player they hope will one day be the new Rio Ferdinand.
Chris Smalling is that good apparently. Good enough to cost
United up to £10m from Fulham, which is remarkable for a player who fell
through the net and ended up at Maidstone United aged 14, unwanted by any
professional club. That does not happen often in a country where bright young
footballers are searched out with the same fervour as a 19th-century gold rush.
But Smalling ended up at Maidstone and for four years, some
would say the most crucial of his development, he worked under the tutelage of
the youth team coach, Peter Nott. In the aftermath of Smalling's transfer I
spoke to a couple of Maidstone's officials, who were delighted for the player.
More than anyone, they knew how far Smalling had come from non-League Kent to Old
Trafford.
They talked in glowing terms about this young man's
character and ability, but also politely pointed out that this was not a
happy-ever-after story for everyone involved.
Maidstone United do not have their own stadium. A previous
regime sold it in 1987, spent all the money and bankrupted the club, which
plummeted 11 divisions in 1992. From their Football League peak, it has been a
long road back for Maidstone to the Ryman Premier League, six divisions below
the Premier League, and they have done it all at other clubs' grounds, most
recently Ashford Town.
They have planning permission for a new ground but not the
£750,000 required to build it. They also do not have dedicated training
facilities for their 600 players who make up their first team, reserves, youth,
women and disability sides. Smalling was their winning Lottery ticket. Except
Maidstone will not see a penny of his £10m-plus transfer fee.
Fulham paid Maidstone £20,000 for Smalling, the kid who is
now Ferdinand's long-term replacement. Some reports wrongly suggested a
"windfall" for the club, so let's get this right. Fulham made a
£10,000 down payment on Smalling and paid Maidstone £10,000 when he played 10
games for them. Legally Fulham could have paid nothing and they certainly did not
agree to a sell-on fee. At a club that needs £750,000, no one thinks £20,000 is
a windfall.
As Arsenal's interest drove up United's price for Smalling
and Fulham cashed in, Maidstone were in the cold. Unfortunately for them,
Smalling never signed a professional deal with the club that coached him.
It seems like a ludicrous oversight but there is a good
reason why. To do so would have precluded Smalling from playing for the English
Schools' Football Association (ESFA) Under-18s, who will not select any kid on
a pro deal. Maidstone being a supportive, friendly club, did not want to deny
him. For four years they coached a £10m player who may yet play for England one
day. In return they got £20,000.
You can examine the unhappy coincidence by which Maidstone
missed out on a payday on Smalling and decide that no one is to blame. Not
Fulham, who could have signed him for nothing. Not the ESFA, which has been
sidelined itself in recent years by the Football Association. Not the FA, whose
rules have not been broken. Not United, who paid a high price for an unproven
player.
But it makes you fear for the future of English football
when a £10m deal is done and the party whose need is the greatest end up with
0.2 per cent of the money. It makes you wonder why a club like Maidstone should
bother with another player like Smalling in the future. Why give up time and
money to coach young players who are taken away for such a pitiful amount?
Smalling's story is a fairy tale but for a club without a
stadium, whose fans must travel 20 miles or more for a home game, whose junior
teams do not even have an all-weather pitch to train on, it is also a
nightmare. English football was built on the trickle-down economy, of good
players like Smalling going up the hierarchy and money coming back down to the
clubs that produce them.
These days, in the modern Britain of identikit chain-store
high streets, where most pubs look the same and town or city-specific
industries have been replaced by multinational supermarkets as the big employers,
local football clubs are one of the last bulwarks of local pride and identity.
It matters more than ever that they survive.
Would it be too much to ask for Fulham to push some of the
money they have earned from Smalling towards Maidstone? I know they are not
obliged to do so, but that would only make the gesture all the more admirable.
There are some clubs in the Premier League – you know the type – who would
never even consider it. With good old Fulham, you just never know.
In the meantime, on Maidstone United's website there is a
campaign to build a new stadium in the town – "Bring the Stones Home"
– all donations gratefully received. For £6.99, I got my own seat in a virtual
stadium which 200 have already joined. It is a start, I suppose. But nothing
that would have compared to a big cheque from Fulham, courtesy of Manchester
United.
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