What Is Sports Law?
Welcome to Chris Farnell law blog, ever thought of getting into sport law, here a breakdown of how to get into the work of sports law.
Sports Law consists of the below elements:
Contract Law relating to a sportsperson’s sponsors
Employment law relating to one’s club or federation contracts
European Union Law relating to the impact of freedom of movement on transfers
Criminal Law concerning doping or on-field altercations
Unlike areas such as conveyancing, criminal or family law, this specialism cannot necessarily be described as an individual entity that you can train in. Rather than being able to simply study and qualify in in the subject, you would need to have a working knowledge of various legal specialties.
Sports Law in England & Wales
In the late part of the 19th Century, courts began to accept that sport in any form cannot continue to exist without checks or regulations. Some commentators would seek to argue the law stops at the touchline but the actions of both Parliament and judges make clear that the law can and must regulate spectators and sportspeople.
The law has faced problems for example when examining on-field violence, with judges debating whether the conduct falls short of the law or is, in fact, acceptable within the confines of the sporting arena.
The following acts give a brief overview of this legal area:
Safety of Sports Grounds Act 1975
1986
Football Spectators Act 1989
Football Offences Act 1991
Football (Disorder) Act 2000
How to Get Into Sports Law
To give yourself the best chance of starting a career in the field, you should:
Have an general interest and knowledge in sport. Unlike other areas of law where knowing the substantive content is arguably enough, you cannot succeed in the field without a wide interest and passion for the subject
Look at key cases. Whereas most other areas of law are resolved under English and Welsh Law, this is often not the case in sport. The highest appellate body is the Court of Arbitration for Sport who make decisions on cases using their own principles mixed with Swiss Law
Find work experience – whether that’s at a law firm with a sports law department or in another career field within sports
Salaries
There are no fixed salaries for solicitors and sports law salaries will inevitably vary based on the firm’s size and location. The most up-to-date figures according to the Law Society indicate that in 2018, the recommended annual salaries were as follows:
Trainee in London – £22,121
Trainee Outside London – £19,619
Fully Qualified Solicitor in Private Practice – £62,000
Fully Qualified Solicitor in Greater London – £88,000
South England – £63,000
Midlands and Wales – £46,000
North England – £43,000
Where barristers are concerned, they are seen to have more specialist knowledge, allowing them to out-earn solicitors by a significant margin. That being said they are self-employed and work can be sporadic, whereas solicitors are guaranteed a regular salary.
Firms
Some firms in and out of London that deal with the subject are as follows:
Brabners LLP
Walker Morris Solicitors
Richard Nelson LLP
Harbottle & Lewis
Morgan Sports Law
Learn more Chris Farnell and his work in sports law here.