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The Club: How the English Premier League Became the Wildest, Richest, Most Disruptive Force in Sports

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The Club is the previously untold inside story of how English soccer’s Premier League became the wildest, richest, most popular sports product on the planet.

This is a sports and business tale of how money, ambition, and twenty-five years of drama remade an ancient institution into a twenty-first-century entertainment empire. No one knew it when their experiment began, but without any particular genius or acumen, the motley cast of billionaires and hucksters behind the modern Premier League struck gold.

Pretty soon, everyone wanted to try their luck, from Russian oligarchs to Emirati sheikhs, American tycoons, and Asian Tiger titans. Some succeeded beyond their wildest dreams. Some lost everything. Today, players are sold for tens of millions, clubs are valued in the billions, and games are beamed out to nearly two hundred countries, all while the league struggles to preserve its English soul.

Deeply researched and drawing on one hundred exclusive interviews, including the key decision makers at every major English team, The Club is the definitive and wildly entertaining narrative of how the Premier League took over the world.

368 pages, Hardcover

First published December 4, 2018

796 people are currently reading
5,083 people want to read

About the author

Joshua Robinson

4books22followers
Joshua Robinson is the European sports correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, and has written for the New York Times, the Washington Post and Sports Illustrated.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 454 reviews
Profile Image for Sumit RK.
1,217 reviews545 followers
December 11, 2018
Everybody knows anything can happen in the Premier League. #Quote

If you are a football (soccer) fan or even if you aren’t, you must be aware of the English Premier League. The Club is the true story of the meteoric rise of the English Premier League from it’s humble beginnings to becoming the richest & the most dominant sporting leagues in the world.

The Club begins before the advent of the Premier League in 1980’s when the game of football in England was in dire straits. The stadiums were crumbling, football hooligans were driving away the genuine fans and the premier league did not even have a proper TV deal. The book tracks how owners of the top clubs in England finally rebelled against this system and formed the league in 1992. From a slow start to the world’s biggest sporting league, this book tracks the entire history of the English Premier League.

This book is divided into 4 sections. First covers the pre league history and the formation of the league. Second section cover the rise of Manchester United, Arsenal, the rise and fall of Blackburn Rovers. Others cover the invasion of foreign billionaires and how their riches transformed club like Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester City , remarkable stories about other clubs and some memorable characters. Finally the books covers how the premier league is transforming and how the English and World football is transforming due to the Premier League.

The book is not just plain history but has lot of behind the scenes stories, interview snippets and unknown facts. The history is mostly chronological and covers some fascinating stories about clubs, players, managers and key events in the league’s history. It also covers how business of the league evolved and how the clubs transformed themselves to global business entities.

The research is impeccable and covers dozens of interviews with the men who created the EPL. At times, it may feel that the book focuses more on individuals than the clubs but the topics are mixed well. Great care is taken to avoid making it feel like a history book but rather like a novel. Overall, The Club is unique, informative and entertaining at the same time. If you are a football fan or even mildly curious about the Premier League, you will enjoy this book.

Many Thanks to NetGalley, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and the authors Joshua Robinson and Jonathan Clegg for the ARC.
Profile Image for Peter Boyle.
560 reviews714 followers
February 24, 2019
The Premier League is the most-watched football competition in the world, beamed to 185 countries, raking in millions for its wealthy owners. But this wasn't always the case. I'm old enough to remember the late 1980s, when boggy pitches and crumbling stadiums were the norm, and a live game on TV was so rare it was a Big Deal.

Everything changed in 1992. The chairmen of the 22 First Division teams, tired of having to share their meagre TV rights money with the rest of the Football League's 92 clubs, decided to form a breakaway alliance. After a bidding war between Sky and ITV for the license to broadcast the new competition, Team Murdoch won out in a record £305 million five-year deal. This massive influx of cash allowed Premier League clubs attract the best players and managers from around Europe, turning it into the exciting, high-quality competition it is today. Sky, taking their cue from the NFL, revolutionized the TV coverage of live football, and viewers subscribed in their millions to watch the likes of Arsenal, Manchester United and Chelsea battle it out for the league title.

This book examines the success of the Premier League, primarily from a business point of view. It tells the story of how Manchester United were quicker than anybody else to realise the value of merchandising, selling shirts with "Beckham 7" on the back in all corners of the world. It looks at how Russian oligarchs like Roman Abramovich rolled into town and spent millions to win the title for Chelsea. It also examines less successful ventures, like Randy Lerner's ill-fated bankrolling of Aston Villa, and Hicks & Gillett's tempestuous spell in charge of Liverpool.

Of course the Premier League has had its fair share of characters over the years and there are juicy anecdotes aplenty. Even though I'm a long-suffering Leeds United fan and therefore an arch-rival of all things Man U, I enjoyed the account of how the crafty Alex Ferguson secured the signing of a young Cristiano Ronaldo. And the story of a freshly-minted Manchester City making an accidental �50 million bid for Lionel Messi cracked me up.

It all makes for a fascinating read. It's accessible enough to captivate the casual sports fan, but there is also an impressive level of detail for die-hard football experts to get their teeth into. The Premier League has been a runaway success and the amount of money involved is staggering to comprehend. It makes me wonder how much further it can go, or if the bubble might be close to bursting (for example, what would happen if TV rights money were to decrease even slightly, or if Brexit meant restrictions on signing non-British players?). All I know is, whatever shape or form the league takes over the next few years, I'll be glued to it, and hoping my beloved Leeds make it back to the big time.
Profile Image for Robert Sheard.
Author5 books316 followers
April 28, 2021
This book has a fairly specific target reader, but if the subject interests you, it's such a terrific read. Robinson and Clegg trace the growth of the English Premier League from its inception in 1992 up to the Spring of 2018. Along the way, we get the story of how the league created a global media and entertainment behemoth. If you follow English or European football and are familiar with the past week's chaos around the attempt to form a breakaway "Super League," the last few chapters of this are eye opening. The writing's been on the wall for years and just as every fan knew, it's all about greedy billionaires. An absolutely riveting account.
Profile Image for Kazi.
157 reviews20 followers
May 20, 2021

ইংল্যান্ডে� ঐতিহ্যবাহী কিন্তু প্রাচীনপন্থী ফুটব� কাঠামো� শীর্� স্তরটি কিভাবে ঝা� চকচক� মসৃণ বিশ্বখ্যাত ইংলি� প্রিমিয়ার লিগে পরিণ� হল�, সেটা� বর্ণনা দিয়েছেন দু� ক্রীড়� সাংবাদিক�



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এই দক্ষযজ্ঞের বর্ণনা দিতে গিয়� লেখকরা মূলত ক্লাবগুলোর মালিকপক্�, কর্মকর্ত� আর প্রিমিয়ার লীগে� কর্মকর্তাদের বয়ানে� সাহায্� নিয়েছেন� লেখায় উঠ� এসেছ� প্রিমিয়ার লীগে� উজ্জ্ব� সব চরিত্র, স্যা� এলেক্স ফার্গুসন থেকে ভিনসেন্ট কোম্পানি� লেখাটা শে� হয়েছে ২০১৮ তে, তখনই জানা যাচ্ছে বে� কিছুদি� ধর� ইউরোপিয়ান সুপা� লীগে� আলাপ হচ্ছে। গত মাসে� সুপা� লী� কাণ্ডে� পর এই বইটা তা� একটা ভালো একটা perspective দিলো�



প্রিমিয়ার লী� যারা দেখে�, কিংব� যারা স্রে� ফুটব� দেখে� এব� ফুটবলে� পেছনের জগতটার কর্মপদ্ধতি, প্যাঁচঘোঁচ আর টাকাপয়সার ঝনঝনান� নিয়� জানত� চা�- সবার জন্য� বইটা সুপাঠ্� হবে।

Profile Image for Letitia | Bookshelfbyla.
190 reviews132 followers
March 13, 2023
A must read if you’re a fan of English football.

If not, obvious skip lol

They really impressed me with how well they structured the book to keep it engaging, filled with key details and facts and making it relevant with humor and context.

Can’t wait to start a debate now! I’m loaded with info 😂
Profile Image for Caleb Smith.
6 reviews1 follower
March 13, 2023
This was everything I wanted it to be. Being relatively young in my soccer fan hood, I’ve been wanting to learn as much as I can about the history of the sport (and specifically the Premier League). I honestly have had a hard time finding books summarizing the history of English club soccer and the EPL. I came across this book which was similar to what I was looking for but not exactly the on-field stuff I was curious about. I figured I’d still give it a try and wow it blew my expectations out of the water. I expected it to be boring but it really kept me interested throughout. Really interesting to learn about the business side of the league and everything that goes into it. Puts a lot into context and gives you a better understanding for how the league and clubs got to where they are today. I recommend it for anyone who is even slightly interested in soccer or sports in general.
Profile Image for Lance.
1,588 reviews146 followers
March 5, 2019
Could have been a bit shorter, otherwise this would have been five stars as there is a lot of great information and history on this league. Starting with the decision to award the TV contract to Sky, this book covers practically everything about the business side of the English Premier League. Some interesting points were how now avoiding relegation means just as much, if not more, to the bottom line as winning the championship. The adventures of some of the bigger names such as Manchester United, Chelsea (my favorite part of the whole book was the section on their near-bankruptcy) and Liverpool are discussed. Even on-field success is discussed as well. Overall a fine book on the League, for both the casual and hard core fan.
Profile Image for Josh.
44 reviews1 follower
February 28, 2023
I’ve wanted to learn more about the Premier League, but felt like the learning curve was high. This book was really insightful on the formation of it and the past 25 years of different teams building their empires. A really fun read.
Profile Image for Jake Stacks.
69 reviews1 follower
December 5, 2023
If this book doesn’t get you up for the 6am games, nothing will.
39 reviews12 followers
March 9, 2023
What you would expect from a WSJ journalist's history of the Premier League. Needed more introspection on what was lost in addition to the shiny new things gained. Needed a more balanced approach to the owners of clubs, instead of what often read like glowing newspaper profiles. Still, a useful history of the PL business, with an eye to where things are heading. Docked a star for not having ANY citations.
Profile Image for Tomi.
487 reviews46 followers
February 10, 2019
Erittäin viihdyttävä ja perusteellinen selitys siitä, miten englantilaisesta jalkapallosta tehtiin maailmanlaajuista viihdettä. Vähän olisin ehkä kaivannut lisää kannattajakulttuurin muutoksesta ja kulttuurillisesta vaikutuksesta muutenkin, mutta ehkä se on jonkin toisen kirjan tehtävä.
Profile Image for Emily.
47 reviews27 followers
March 8, 2023
3.5 - pretty interesting but could have been a tiny bit shorter. Also, having existing knowledge made this a lot more fun/enjoyable

(Thanks for the rec austin)
Profile Image for Pete.
1,048 reviews74 followers
July 9, 2019
The Club : How the English Premier League Became the Wildest, Richest, Most Disruptive Force in Sports (2018) by Joshua Robinson and Jonathan Clegg is a history of how the Premier League has become so globally popular.

The book first covers the history of English soccer and particular it's state in the 1980s and what led to the formation of the Premier League. Then the early Premier League up to and including the Bosman ruling that radically changed the number of foreigners. Then the arrival of foreign money and finally the rise of the league to become the huge enterprise it is today and the arrival of oil money at Manchester City.

It's a genuinely interesting story. The way in which the Premier League has become a global powerhouse is really something. The book lacks little. One thing that is lacking is a description of how Serie A was the top European league in the late 1980s and early 1990s and how the top players went there. The problems with English football are also exaggerated. It's worth remembering that the English National Team was the top ranked team in the world for a time in the late 1980s. The League certainly had serious problems and the ban from Europe had a big impact but English soccer was still one of the big leagues in Europe.

The book is full of detail and stories about the various stages that the league went through. For anyone who remembers the times it has many interesting tales that will bring back memories and for anyone who wonders why the Premier League is so big now it's also well worth a read.

The book is well written and has a good narrative structure that keeps the reader interested. For anyone interested in the Premier League it's definitely worth a read.
Profile Image for John Tyson.
99 reviews9 followers
May 12, 2019
If you have the slightest interest in soccer or count yourself a sports fan in general, I recommend this book unconditionally. The recent history (~1980-present) of European soccer is fascinating because the market dynamics that shaped the sport’s growth are pretty different when compared to the US, with some notable exceptions (e.g., TV rights!)

The reporting is outstanding, and it is chock full of great stories about players, coaches and owners from the past 30+ years of “football�.

Profile Image for Luca Wilson.
134 reviews
July 18, 2023
If you love watching the premier League you will love this book. Such an easy read, and very cool to read about how the league took off and surpassed everyone else to be the driving force it is today worldwide.
Profile Image for Ryan Stoffield.
97 reviews1 follower
March 25, 2023
Great dive into the premier league and all of the ways the league has expanded into the powerhouse it is today. Would recommend to people who are just getting into following the sport!
Profile Image for Ash.
11 reviews
June 12, 2023
just amazing. I see everything in such a new light now and need to get another book like this asap
Profile Image for Jim Becker.
462 reviews9 followers
January 22, 2022
What a story. What a history. What a read. Excellent!
34 reviews
April 11, 2022
Much better book than I was anticipating. Reads well since the writers work for the WSJ, really good coverage of the creation of the league and the behind the scenes details on how the prem came to be so iconic. Would recommend to anyone, even if you’re not into soccer as it’s a pretty quick read (summer beach read?) and fairly interesting and not all too boring about soccer.
1 review
June 6, 2020
An ok book with some interesting moments, but if like me you have actually followed football for most of the Premier League era a lot of this will be things that you already know.

The highlights come in the chapters about the inner workings of the formation of the league itself, and the various negotiations of the TV deals, unfortunately I found there to be too few of these insightful chapters.

As a football fan I really didn't get anything from reading a chapter on Leicester winning the league or Arsenal going unbeaten, because these are things that have been told a thousand times before and the book didn't offer any new insight into them.

Admittedly this is guess work, but it felt like 75% of the book is explaining the history of who won what and when, which if you are a football fan you will already know. The other 25% is genuinely interesting behind the scenes things you might not have heard before
Profile Image for Sara.
226 reviews
March 14, 2021
I never in a million years would have guessed that I'd be sitting up late at night fervently trying to finish a book about soccer, a sport I don't even particularly care for or understand. But this book makes me want to watch soccer. It's a fascinating story of how an empire was built, and I thoroughly enjoyed it!
12 reviews
July 31, 2021
The Club isn’t really a sports book—it’s an unflinching look at the business of Premier League football and how it has evolved over the last 30 years. It all left me a bit depressed about the influence of unlimited cash and global ambition, which are starting to cost the league the charm and character that made it one of the world’s top sports products.
Profile Image for Nathan Mohr.
27 reviews1 follower
August 13, 2023
I thought this book was pretty brilliant in terms of how it laid out the formation of the EPL, without ever getting too lost in the weeds. I preface my review by saying I’m an American who has spent most of his life ignoring soccer, so I went into the book knowing very little about the EPL or soccer generally. I think, even for EPL fans, there’s a wealth of information here regarding the business of the league that you would find interesting, but there’s also inclusion of things like player contracts, matches, etc, that a fan is probably already aware of, but I don’t think that should detract from the book.


It’s ironic how much different the EPL is in terms of its approach to finances than any of the major American sports leagues. All the American leagues to one degree or another practice some benign form of cooperative socialism. The EPL is far more cut throat and much more of a “Wild West� capitalistic institution than anything modeled here. In some ways that makes things more interesting, but in other ways I (surprisingly, for me at least) think it probably really harms the sport.

The biggest reason is because of contracts. It seems like it’s almost unheard of for a star player to spend his entire career with one team, or even in the EPL at all. Contracts basically mean nothing in the EPL, if a player wants out, you are pretty much resigned to selling their contract. Additionally, because of the incestuous nature of soccer, you’ll probably be selling that contract to another European league where competition is less fierce, because the champions league is such a big deal star players are happy to go to a place like La Ligua where only a few teams compete for the title and you can spend the year beating up on softer teams while prepping yourself for the Champions League.

Also, in terms of parity, the EPL is grossly disproportional in a way that even the most lopsided American leagues are not. That’s why relegation, in theory, is a great idea, but in practice the way it shakes out is that 14 teams fight to stay in the league while six teams fight to win it. Out of curiosity, I looked up the league winners. Outside of 2016 when Leicester City made their surprise run, no team that wasn’t part of the big six has finished first since 1994. That is just depressing.

It’s also interesting to me how influential America has been on the EPL. Mostly in product presentation, but I do wonder if the fact that American representation amongst EPL ownership won’t eventually lead to some of the reforms that exist in American sports leagues, like salary caps. There seems to a definite correlation between the amount a team spends and winning. Which is true to some degree in America too, but not completely. The NFL and NBA have caps so spending doesn’t really matter as much in terms of winning. Baseball has no cap, but they do have a luxury tax and the way the draft and player development are structured, teams can still win even if they don’t have the highest payroll. That doesn’t seem true in the EPL.

Anyway, the book offered some fascinating insights and on a whole, the marketing of the EPL around the globe has been good for soccer, so if you are interested in learning more about that, I can’t recommend this highly enough.
Profile Image for Claire.
328 reviews11 followers
February 22, 2019
[Rounded up from 3.5 stars]

This was a lot of fun! It had a zippy tone that made it easy to get through while not dumbing things down, and it deep-dove enough to help shed some light on references I've heard on soccer podcasts but never fully understood (namely "It was just a bit of banter"). Also, I like that the authors have spent time in the US, because I think the American influence on how the Premier League is presented is important, but I could also see a lot of UK journalists just hand-waving that (see: all the snooty articles in the Guardian about US soccer).

I did notice a factual error at one point in the book (that the 16-17 season was Tottenham's second consecutive second-place finish, which I knew right away was not true because, hi, Arsenal fan here), and that's the sort of thing that makes you wonder how many others there were that I didn't catch. So that's not great.

But also this book did give me the delightful anecdote that the Arsenal chairman first met Arsene Wenger at a party and was really impressed by Wenger's charades rendition of "A Midsummer Night's Dream," which explains SO MUCH and is a delightful mental image that will live in my head forever.
259 reviews9 followers
February 1, 2019
This was a fabulous book! It had everything I wanted: strong emphasis on economics and the business side of the Premier league with a good discussion around various impactful players, managers and owners. An overall brief but nuanced history of the Premier league. While I'm sure I missed a ton due to not being familiar with the players, etc. from the 1990s and early 2000s, I felt like the author used enough explanation for even a new fan of "football" across the pond to follow and enjoy. (Decided to start following Liverpool FC this year.) And the explanation of the various leagues, incentives, and how it all works, while generally comparing to the US sports leagues, and bringing everything through 2018, is precisely the book I would have designed.
Profile Image for Marcus Haugen.
55 reviews
January 14, 2023
Read this one from the bottom of a ball pit at Chuck E Cheese. I had been trying to find my sons socks that he lost in there but I underestimated both how deep the pit was and how heavy the weight of the balls becomes at a certain depth, so I got trapped down there. I probably should have let the shoes go, but my son had made me handpaint them to look like feet cause he said all the "cool" kids are rawdogging the climbing structure but he was afraid cause also many of them were getting warts and fungus afterwards so he still wanted to wear socks. I told him I don't think that's what rawdogging means but then he said what does it mean then and then I said you're right that is what it means cause I didn't want to explain. Anyway when nobody could find me Chuck E Cheese called my ex-wife and she and her lover Jeremy came to pick up my son and apparently got a little handsy with each other in front of the animatronic band. I finally got rescued when the police dredged the bottom of the pit looking for bodies which they said they have to do once a week because of "people like me." This book was good.
Profile Image for Andy.
363 reviews80 followers
December 29, 2021
Fun book for Premier League fans! Takes a close look at the business aspects of the Premier League’s history. I had not realized the degree to which English club owners were influenced by the American vision of sports when designing it, and the dynamics of the initial breakaway are particularly relevant in the context of today’s Super League controversy. The discussion of the broadcast rights is the most interesting part, and even if it makes for dry reading, it’d be great to hear even more there (maybe a book written by Richard Scudamore?). I don’t think this will interest you if you aren’t already interested in soccer, and it’s a little breathlessly written, so recommended for pre-existing fans only.
Profile Image for Stephen Heiner.
Author3 books105 followers
May 23, 2022
This book is an excellent summary of the Premier League era and how the English game became the province of local fans to a global phenomenon. If you know nothing, or even just a little bit, about the Premier League, and want to learn more, this book is an excellent primer, and covers the improbable Leicester City title, the rise of Man City and the changes it has wrought, the leveling-off of Arsenal, Man United, etc. with some explanations.

The indisputable thesis at the heart of the book is how much money has changed the sport at every single level, and how once it is "unleashed" there's no telling where it will lead.
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