I will get it out of the way first. I am a Chelsea supporter and although I may use the Blues to back up my arguments, it’s only because that is what I know best. I believe it holds good for other clubs as well.

There are a number of major problems with our national game, all of which can be alleviated by an amendment to one rule. Allow Premiership clubs to have a real investment in another, lower division side.

How does this solve the problems?

'There are a number of major problems with our national game, all of which can be alleviated by an amendment to one rule'


Too many foreign players: There is too big a gap between the standard of the top Premiership clubs and reserves/youth football. With all the money at stake, clubs cannot afford to experiment (lose or draw more than a few matches and you pretty much can’t win the Premiership). So when they need to improve the team, they go for foreigners already playing top-flight football somewhere. Chelsea buy Michael Essien, Manchester United buy Cristiano Ronaldo - both very young but both already playing Champions League football in other countries where the pressure is not so great.

Lower league teams going bust|: Now if Chelsea owned, say, Brentford, then they could ship out half-a-dozen promising English under-21s to play regularly to a good standard, in front of reasonable crowds under a common, linked, coaching regime. Brentford get these players for free, they tap into high-level coaching experience and receive a couple of million a year for their running costs. There would still be a step-up to Premiership standard but nowhere near as much as from playing for the reserves at Aldershot in front of 250 people.

Not enough English talent: Of the four regular English Champions League teams, all bar Arsenal (proof that there is too big a jump between reserves and Premiership-winning, no matter how talented the individuals) play regularly with the nucleus of the current England side. Yet all these players are either at their peak or at the more mature end of their careers. How many of the current Under-21 squad play Champions League football? Scott Carson, Justin Hoyte and Kieran Richardson are the only three playing for one of the Big Four - and they are far from first-team regulars.

Playing a youngster at somewhere like Brentford may not be Champions League but it will enable them to bridge the gap quicker. It is likely that Steve Sidwell will play Champions League football this season with Chelsea, but he had to leave Arsenal and get his experience with a lower division team (Reading at the time) as it would have been too much of a risk and taken too long for the Gunners to break him in playing reserve football.

There are plenty of reasons why this cannot be done but I believe there is not a single argument against this which cannot be sorted by a few simple rules. Everyone admits there is a problem but no one has the guts to take simple steps to resolve it.