Public have the wrong idea of footballers, says FIFPro

Public have the wrong idea of footballers, says FIFPro

by Joseph Anthony
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Monaco forward Keita Balde helped 200 Senegalese workers based in Spain after they lost their jobs

The perception that footballers do not live up to their social responsibilities has been debunked by their โ€œincredible initiativesโ€ during the COVID-19 pandemic, the global playersโ€™ union FIFPro said in a report published Thursday.

The report, which highlights contributions made by professional footballers in fighting the effects of the pandemic, said that a large number of players have been โ€œgenerous and creativeโ€ during the crisis.

Among other things, they have created dedicated funds, set up charities to donate to food banks and to fund medical equipment in hospitals, and taken part in campaigns to raise awareness and protect people from catching the virus, the report says.

โ€œProfessional football players and athletes across sports have developed incredible initiatives around the world to help their communities, their clubs and teams and often their team mates,โ€ said FIFPro general secretary Jonas Baer-Hoffmann.

โ€œThe public perception of athletes not living up to their social responsibility could not be more wrong.โ€

Examples listed include AS Monaco forward Keita Balde, who helped 200 Senegalese workers based in Spain after they lost their jobs, and Manchester Unitedโ€™s Marcus Rashford who helped persuade the British government to extend a school meals scheme.

It also said that players had helped each other. In one case, a group of senior Irish international players contributed to an emergency fund to help footballers in the countryโ€™s domestic league who were in financial difficulties.

The playersโ€™ union in Botswana distributed food to players at seven clubs, plus 50 female players as well, it said.

The report also pointed out that life for a majority of footballers outside the elite is โ€œfrequently uncertain and highly competitive.โ€

It said that in menโ€™s football, more than 45% of players earn less than $1,000 a month, 41% receive late pay and in most cases have short contracts. In womenโ€™s football, the majority of players earn less than $600 a month.

โ€œThe belief that footballers live carefree and wealthy lives has led supporters and the general public to have high expectations when it comes to playersโ€™ shared responsibility towards fighting the virus,โ€ it said.

โ€œBut many players during this time have even relied on food parcels and financial support packages to survive.โ€

REUTERS

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