For the first of LAYTH YOUSIF’S Canadian World Cup diaries, he discovers a Gunners’ haven in Oshawa, Ontario, and explores the town’s role in the historic 1937 labour strikes
Labour will unveil plans today that attempt to give football fans a bigger voice in club boardrooms and allow them to buy shares when the ownership of sides change.
Labour’s shadow sports minister Clive Efford MP is behind the launch of what would be the biggest legislative shake-up in the governance of English and Welsh football clubs since the creation of the game.
After consulting 95 football supporters’ organisations, the plan still requires supporters to come together to form a single accredited trust in return for the right to “appoint and remove up to a quarter and not less than two of a football club’s board of directors,” and “purchase up to 10 per cent of the shares when a club change ownership, if they so wish.”
From pirate statues to surplus Wembley seats, The Dripping Pan offers a reminder that the game’s soul survives beyond the Premier League glare, writes LAYTH YOUSIF
Fan group The 1873 issues scathing response to owners’ statement saying the club will not close
Joao Pedro’s emotional goals against Fluminense captured the magic of an international club competition. But even as fans bring colour and passion, the Club World Cup’s deeper issues loom large, writes JAMES NALTON
STEVEN ANDREW welcomes a fine introduction to FC United of Manchester, the team set up in opposition to Manchester United


