Aston Villa supporters criticise club's sponsorship deal with betting firm

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Aston Villa have agreed to a partnership with Asia-based online betting firm BK8 until the end of the 2025-26 campaign.

Aston Villa have agreed to a partnership with Asia-based online betting firm BK8 until the end of the 2025-26 campaign.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Aston Villa’s new front-of-shirt sponsorship deal with an online betting firm is a “cynical attempt” at financial gain and ignores concerns about gambling sponsorship in sports, the Aston Villa Supporters’ Trust (AVST) said on Thursday.

Villa have agreed to a partnership with Asia-based online betting firm BK8 until the end of the 2025-26 campaign, when

English Premier League clubs will withdraw gambling sponsorships from the front of their matchday shirts.

Norwich City cancelled a sponsorship deal with BK8 in 2021 after just three days, following a backlash from supporters over its sexualised marketing material involving young women.

“Though we acknowledge the commercial reality, we sadly feel the club has failed to listen to the legitimate concerns of fans about the role of gambling sponsorship in sports,” AVST said in a statement.

“The BK8 agreement is a cynical last-minute attempt to scoop the financial gains ahead of the voluntary ban on front-of-shirt gambling sponsors.

“While we understand fans, players and club staff alike want Villa to be as successful as possible, that should not come at the expense of exposing fans to the exploitative practices of gambling operators, especially during a cost-of-living crisis.”

The views of the supporters’ club were backed by Will Prochaska, a spokesman for The Big Step campaign, part of the charity Gambling with Lives.

“For Villa to promote gambling on the front of their shirts, following the Premier League’s acceptance that it harms fans, exemplifies the greed that dominates football. (It) shows why we need the government to step in to regulate gambling advertisements out of the game,” he said.

As it stands, Villa are unlikely to back down. The club, while announcing the partnership, said in a statement that BK8 will make a contribution to a local charity in Birmingham for every sale of Villa’s third kit.

“The move comes off the back of BK8’s previous work over the past two years, working with charities and programmes involving mental health awareness, and this initiative is the first of what will be a number of collaborations with the club,” Villa added.

AVST added that it had already highlighted the social and mental harms caused by gambling addiction and expressed concerns about BK8’s “misogynistic” marketing practices in a joint statement with Villa fan groups in January.

“At the time, we were given assurances of the club’s due diligence process and advised that the misogynistic practices were that of a BK8 affiliate,” AVST said.

“Our club is not holding itself to a high enough standard, especially when it comes to the ethics of sponsorship arrangements.”

Reuters has contacted Aston Villa and BK8 for comment. REUTERS

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