The World Cup is about to land on us, which means bunting, pundits, wall charts, and the usual national shortage of perspective. It did get me thinking though. Football still matters for reasons beyond the scoreline, and not just because it gives grown men permission to shout tactical advice at televisions while wearing shirts designed for people 35 years younger.
At least in theory, football is one of the few grand professions left where a boy from a housing estate can become richer than the barrister, the banker, the columnist and the think-tank boy who went to Oxford to learn how ordinary people feel.
This, naturally, annoys people.
There is something deeply revealing in the way Britain talks about footballers. We like the working class when it is nostalgic, safely dead, or singing in a black-and-white documentary about pits and brass bands. We are less keen when it is 24 years old, driving a Lamborghini, speaking in its own accent and earning more in a week than a minor royal gets for opening a leisure centre.
And yes, footballers have often come from working-class backgrounds. Not all of them, obviously. Jurgen Klopp had a degree in sports science, which rather spoils the cartoon. Plenty of modern players now come through structured academies with parents who can manage the travel, the costs, the emotional strain and the miniature HR department that seems to surround every promising 13-year-old with a left foot.
The route differs by country too. In parts of Latin America and West Africa, football can still look much more like a raw escape route. The economic stakes are sharper and informal football remains a huge part of everyday life. Germany and the Netherlands feel different. Football is still accessible, but it sits inside a more organised sporting and educational culture, with clubs, schools, coaching structures and vocational routes all mattering more. Klopp’s degree is not some bizarre exception from another planet. It fits a culture where football intelligence and formal education are not seen as mutually exclusive, which must come as a terrible shock to the British pundit class.
But the working-class route still matters. Football remains one of the few places where talent can elbow its way past polish. You can’t blag your way into a Premier League midfield with a summer internship, a reassuring surname and a father who knows someone at Coutts. At some point you have to control the ball while someone is trying to remove your ankle.
That is why football unsettles the class system. It is not pure meritocracy, because nothing is. Scouts miss people. Academies chew boys up. Parents need petrol money, time, patience and the ability to watch their child’s hopes being assessed by men in branded coats. But compared with politics, journalism, law, finance and large parts of the arts, football is still brutally honest. Either you can play, or you can’t.
There is also the old Roy of the Rovers thing sitting in the background. The local lad, the impossible comeback, the mud on the knees, the last-minute winner, the sense that talent and courage could burst through ordinary life and make the crowd go mad. It was never documentary realism, obviously. Even Melchester Rovers would probably need a compliance department now. But the myth mattered because it was democratic. The hero came from somewhere recognisable.
Then look at Formula 1.
F1 is not short of talent. The drivers are not just rich boys having a very noisy gap year. The skill, nerve, fitness and technical feel needed to drive one of those cars properly is absurd. Put an ordinary person in an F1 car and they would not discover their inner Senna. They would discover a barrier, shortly before the medical car arrived.
But F1 has a different problem. It is meritocracy after the cover charge.
Football’s basic entry point is cheap. You need a ball, space, other children and enough talent to stand out. F1 starts with karting, transport, race fees, licences, mechanics, tyres, engines, coaching, teams, and parents who are willing to spend weekends standing beside a track pretending this is all perfectly normal. Before you reach the glamour of Monaco, you have to survive the glamour of a damp kart circuit and an invoice.
That matters, because raw football ability can be visible in ordinary life. A child can reveal ability in the street, the park, the school playground, the cage, the estate pitch. Someone can see it.
Motorsport has no equivalent legitimate informal route. Driving a souped-up Fiesta through town at 100 mph does not mark you out as a future Grand Prix driver. It marks you out as a future defendant. The next stop is not Monza. It is magistrates’ court, possibly after a short conversation with a police officer who is unimpressed by your racing line past Greggs.
So a poor kid can reveal football talent by playing football in a park. A poor kid cannot reveal racing talent by driving like a lunatic outside Halfords.
And that, I think, is the class bit. Football talent can appear in public. Racing talent has to be purchased into visibility.
To be fair to Formula 1, it was not always quite as sealed off as it is now. Earlier F1 had examples of a more porous world. Graham Hill did not emerge from a modern driver academy with a sponsor deck and a junior brand strategy. He went to technical school, became an apprentice, served in the Navy, found his way into racing through Brands Hatch, joined Lotus as a mechanic and then somehow talked himself into becoming a racing driver. That route now sounds less like career planning and more like breaking into a cathedral through the boiler room.
Nigel Mansell belongs in the same argument. He was not a billionaire’s son being eased gently down a pre-funded staircase. He came from the Midlands, drove in fields, took risks, spent money he did not really have, and clawed his way through a sport that was already expensive but still had some gaps in the fence. Chapman and Clark add colour too: the clever engineer with aluminium in his blood, and the farmer’s son from the Borders whose talent came through local motorsport before it had been turned into a managed product.
None of that made early F1 democratic in the football sense. It was never the equivalent of a poor kid revealing talent by playing football in a park. But it was more porous. It had privateers, mechanics, farmers’ sons, garagistes and alarming men who looked at a racing car and thought, “That’s good, but what if half of it wasn’t there?”
Modern F1 has less of that. Money was always there, but the texture of the money has changed. It has moved from messy money to institutional money, from workshops and favours and second chances to karting budgets, driver academies, simulator programmes, sponsor decks and children being professionally managed before they’re old enough to look bored in a GCSE maths lesson.
In modern F1, Lewis Hamilton is the exception everyone reaches for, and rightly so in one sense. He came from a far less privileged background than most F1 drivers and his father worked ferociously hard to support him. But that does not prove the system is open. It proves how exceptional you have to be to break through it. Britain loves finding one ladder against a castle wall and declaring the moat fully accessible.
Rugby is even more revealing, because rugby actually split over this.
For years, rugby union presented itself as the noble amateur code, which sounds splendid until you ask who could afford to be noble. It was the game of public schools, universities, officers, doctors, solicitors and men who could afford to lose a Saturday without the household budget making an unpleasant noise.
Rugby league broke that spell. The split in 1895 was not just about rules, tackles and what happened after the sixth collision with a man built like a wardrobe. It was about class. Working men in the North were losing wages to play rugby on Saturdays. They wanted broken-time payments - not yachts, villas or a Swiss bank account, just compensation for wages lost while playing the game. The Rugby Football Union said no. The northern clubs eventually broke away.
That is the revealing bit. Amateurism is very easy to admire when someone else is paying for it. If you are a solicitor, a doctor, an officer or a university man, you can play for honour. If you are a miner, a dock worker or a mill worker, honour does not pay the rent, buy boots for the children or put anything useful on the table apart from a warm glow and a slight limp.
So rugby league became the blunt northern reply to rugby union’s polished moral language. Working-class players were not morally inferior because they needed wages. They were just poorer, which is apparently still a distinction some sporting authorities struggle with unless it is explained very slowly and possibly with a diagram.
And that matters because money does not only narrow the field by being expensive. Sometimes it narrows the field by dressing exclusion up as virtue. Amateurism sounded pure, but it worked rather conveniently for the people who could afford to be amateurs.
Football, worryingly, is drifting in that direction. Not all the way. Not yet. But money is narrowing the field. Academies, travel, elite coaching, private development sessions, sports science, parental availability and sheer organisational stamina all matter more than they used to. The old Roy of the Rovers idea of a boy being spotted on a muddy pitch has not vanished, but it now competes with spreadsheets, GPS vests and parents who know how to navigate the system.
The gap between talent and opportunity is being filled with costs. Not always obvious costs. Not always fees. Sometimes it is petrol, time off work, getting to training three nights a week, absorbing rejection without the household collapsing, and knowing which trial matters and which one is just an afternoon in the rain with branded cones.
Money rarely announces itself honestly. It does not say, “poor children stop here.” It says “pathway”, “development”, “commitment”, “elite environment” and “parental engagement”. All very reasonable words, each one quietly carrying a card machine.
Football still irritates the British class system because it lets working-class boys become rich without asking permission. But even football is not immune from the slow creep of money turning opportunity into a managed product. Formula 1 is the extreme version. It shows what happens when talent has to arrive with a receipt. Rugby union showed what happens when a sport builds a moral philosophy around excluding people who cannot afford to play for free.
Football has not gone that far, and perhaps never will, because the game is too big, too cheap and too culturally embedded to be fully captured. There will always be some ridiculous child on a concrete pitch doing things with a ball that make adults stop talking.
But the danger is obvious. The more organised the route becomes, the more it favours families who are already organised, solvent and confident. The more professional the childhood becomes, the less room there is for the chaotic genius who turns up late, forgot his boots, borrowed someone else’s shin pads and is still the best player on the pitch.
And that would be a loss. Not because working-class boys have some magical moral purity. They don’t. But because a country that closes off its rougher routes to excellence becomes duller, narrower and more pleased with itself.
Education should not be treated as the enemy of sporting talent either. Some countries seem to understand that better than others. Britain too often behaves as if a gifted young footballer is either going to become a star or a write-off, with not much planning for the large number who become neither.
Football is still a door left slightly ajar. Formula 1 is a door with a keypad, a sponsor deck and a father who knows someone. Rugby union spent years telling people that money would ruin the spirit of the game, from the safe side of the door where money had already done its work.
The sad part is that the kid may still have the talent. The ball is still cheap. It’s the fuel money, the spare evenings and the working knowledge of the pathway that now cost extra.










