As someone who lives in Bedford I thought I'd start a thread on this. A bitcoin millionaire recently bought local team Bedford FC in the tenth tier of English football with the generic ambition of becoming a premier league club.
The club has already secured over £1 million in sponsorship deals which I imagine will be more than most league one clubs so have the potential to buy their way up the non league.
It has also rippled through the 'bitcoin community' with support and investment from around the world. Games are streamed worldwide and there are already over 70 fan clubs dotted across the globe. The club also holds the record of becoming the first, in England, to pay a players wages totally in bitcoin.
I must say I was very sceptical at first. However, I listened to the owner do an interview on the price of football podcast and the owner seems passionate about helping out the town and grassroots football in the area. They recognise that the international attraction to the club can price out local sponsorship so plan to offer advertising opportunities to local business for free. Additionally the demand for merchandise is high enough to warrant £60 for the club shirt but it will be half price in the club shop so local fans can pick it up cheaper.
I still find the name change to Real Bedford tacky and the delusions of grandeur of the Premier league cringey but even if Bedford could get a 6th tier English club I think it would be good for the town.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-beds-bucks-herts-60084253
Comments
They draw a lot larger crowds at the moment but that could change if Real Bedford FC do progress especially given the now big contrast in finances between the two. I'd assume it will affect them negatively as there's a decent chance they'd become the towns 'second' club
https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/54279530
That won't change significantly whether or not Real Bedford have any success. There will always be a small number of people who latch on to something new with no thought of the tradition on their doorstep, but for those people MK Dons is only 15 miles away.
Doomed vanity project.
I disagree with the changing of the kit and club name but I think the town can sustain a moderate fanbase if the club rises up the divisions. I don't think the 170,000 people in the town would ignore a national league club on their doorstep if they ever did progress that far.
I do feel though that after 3-4 years all the international bitcoin fans will get fed up of the novelty when the club is still languishing in the 8th tier (and that's optimistic) of English football and the investment will dry up
I do find the project interesting though and will be following out of curiosity
All that glisters is not gold, that's as true for pseudo currencies as it is for football club owners with high hopes.
Personally I would never go and follow MK Dons mainly because of morals but also because sadly they are now and have been regularly in the last decade our league rivals.
It is the perfect mask off moment of crypto. This isn't about a "new, decentralized economy." It's not about changing power structures. It's just wealthy people finding a newer, dumber way to get rich. It's a pyramid scheme, those on top will do well, and those not on top will be left holding the worthless bag.
I'm pretty sceptical, but it's definitely something to watch.
The challenge for the club is being able to survive if the outside funding dries up when you're much higher up the pyramid than you can sustain with your natural fanbase.
There are people in third world countries that got airdropped their annual salary worth in the big uniswap airdrop a couple of years ago - that’s amazing.
crypto is about being your own bank. That in itself comes with risk, and it comes with rewards. If you approach crypto like a casino, don’t be surprised if the market takes your money like a casino.
Potentially. In an ideal world I would be following Dorking and Barks (wherever he ends up) but I might not get my wish. Dorking in the National League could be tricky for me in terms of rights. And Barks might take a long break or go to a club that doesn't want the cameras. If a club wants to pay me a significant amount to cover them it's going to be hard to say no. A lot will also depend on the ability of the management to deal with the cameras being on them.
Ultimately I would much rather stick with the guys I have forged relationships with. Going to DW now is like a second home. Such a lovely place to work. It's going to be hard to find a manager more interesting and entertaining than Marc. Not to mention supportive.