FA Cup: FA chief Martin Glenn says it plans to increase prize fund

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Lincoln CityImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

National League side Lincoln City earned a third-round replay with a 2-2 draw at Championship team Ipswich Town on Saturday

The Football Association plans to increase FA Cup prize money with the aim of helping lower league clubs, says chief executive Martin Glenn.

In October, the FA signed a six-season overseas broadcast rights deal for the FA Cup - reportedly worth £820m.

Glenn said the FA could raise the current £25m fund because of the deal, which starts from the 2018-19 season.

"The FA Cup is a great way of redistributing money to the lower leagues," Glenn told BBC Radio 5 live.

"The prize fund is £25m," Glenn told Sportsweek. "We're looking to increase that over the coming years and hopefully benefit the smaller clubs."

Glenn also said the FA may look at introducing a "unity" payment which would help split money more equally. Under the current system, clubs receive a larger amount of money if their game is televised.

'Over-represented by elderly white males'

Sports minister Tracey Crouch warned last month that the government will legislate to force through FA reforms if the governing body does not make changes itself, setting a deadline of April for the FA to "set a path to reform".

Glenn reiterated some of the concerns of five former FA executives, including previous chairman Greg Dyke, who said the organisation was held back by "elderly white men".

Figures show that of the FA Council's 122 members, 92 are aged over 60, eight are women and four are from ethnic minority backgrounds.

"It's over-represented by white males who are quite old and it doesn't reflect the people actually in the game and that's the opportunity," said Glenn.

"With council reform, we'd like to see term limits and the government would like to see term limits so you can't stay there for life.

"You might do three sets of four years and then move on so fresh blood can come through."

Squad rotation

Image source, Rex Features
Image caption,

Callum Wilson was left frustrated as a much-changed Bournemouth lost 3-0 against Millwall

The FA Cup third round saw many top-flight sides rotate their squad, with Bournemouth making 11 changes before they lost 3-0 away at League One side Millwall.

But Glenn said he is happy for teams to use the competition to juggle their resources.

"I think Bournemouth were an outlier. Eddie Howe can make his own reasons for it," he said.

"It doesn't upset me. The Premier League teams really understand the value the FA Cup brings them.

"People want to do well in the cup, but the positive side is that these bigger clubs have big squads, you want to give people game time.

"Giving a chance for young players to get real-game experience is not a bad thing."

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