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Richard Scudamore

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Richard Scudamore is currently Chief Executive of the F.A. Premier League, a position he has held since November 1999.

Richard is second cousin to former champion jockey Peter Scudamore.[1]

Biography

Scudamore attended Kingsfield School in Kingswood, Bristol, which he left in 1977 aged 18. He studied law at the University of Nottingham and then Land Management at Reading. He then spent nine years at Yellow Pages, a division of British Telecom, progressing through sales and marketing, business planning and regional management to the position of Sales Director.[2]

Newspaper career

Scudamore worked for 10 years in the newspaper industry, mainly for Thomson. He joined them as Group Advertising Director but went on to spend his last three years with the Thomson Corporation in the US as Senior Vice President responsible for all their newspaper operations in the southern and eastern United States.

FA Premier League

Scudamore was appointed CEO of the Premier League in November 1999, reputed to earn in excess of £800,000pa.[3] Scudamore is responsible for negotiating broadcasting and sponsorship contracts worth in excess of £1.6 billion. He is also on the board of the Football Foundation, the organisation responsible for granting £60 million per year to fund grass roots football. These roles followed a two-year period as Chief Executive of the Football League - responsible for the other 72 professional clubs outside the Barclaycard Premiership.

Scudamore has recently been under fire for his handling of the Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano transfer affair in which an independent tribunal rejected the deduction of points from West Ham United in favour of a record £5.5m fine.[citation needed]

Scudamore is also one of the key negotiators in the decision for Premier League teams to play one additional match per season, proposed to be played in the Far East, the US and Australia. This is intended to come into action in the 2010/2011 season and would encourage overseas talent to come to the fore-ground. However, the move now seems highly unlikely after the proposal was greeted with widespread derision from fans and the Fifa president, Sepp Blatter, dismissed the proposals as "an abuse of association football"[4]

Personal life

Scudamore is married to Catherine, and the couple have 3 children: Patrick, Ned and Lara. Richard has 2 older children from a previous marriage, Jamie and Chloe. [5]

A qualified level 5 referee, Scudamore is a lifetime Bristol City F.C. fan,[6] and admitted he would be happier for Bristol City to reach the Premiership than England win the World Cup.[7] He is also a keen golfer.

References

  1. ^ Alan Hubbard (August 17, 2003). "INSIDE LINES: Richard Scudamore". Independent on Sunday. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
  2. ^ "Bio - Richard Scudamore". sportindustry.biz. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
  3. ^ "What Britain earns". The Independent. London. 2005-10-05. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  4. ^ Kelso, Paul (February 15, 2008). "Blatter: 39th game would sink World Cup bid". London: guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-02-15.
  5. ^ "Speaker Bio's - Richard Scudamore" (PDF). northeasteconomicforum.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
  6. ^ Donald McRae (August 15, 2006). "'It will not be healthy if Chelsea win 10 years in a row'". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
  7. ^ Football Focus, BBC ONE - 12th January, 2008