Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Football Leaks

Rate this book
This is the explosive story of the biggest leak in sporting history – and the shady underworld of modern football. In 2016, a whistle-blower known only as ‘John’ started to leak a treasure trove of top-secret files to German newspaper Der Spiegel. These documents reveal the clandestine dealings of clubs, players and agents at the highest echelons of international football. And the story they tell is astonishing. From the eye-popping details of player transfers, including Neymar Jr, Pogba and Coutinho, to the loopholes and opaque tax structures that ensure maximum earnings for players and agents alike, this is a tale rife with rapacious greed and questionable deals. At the same time, it is the gripping story of a fan who wanted to free football from its corrupt overlords – and now finds himself on the run.

272 pages, Paperback

Published August 27, 2019

30 people are currently reading
113 people want to read

About the author

Rafael Buschmann

9 books1 follower

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
37 (23%)
4 stars
70 (45%)
3 stars
43 (27%)
2 stars
3 (1%)
1 star
2 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Rey.
270 reviews24 followers
June 16, 2023
Just did a second read through.

Still is an absolutely fascinating read. It is not however an objective view point and there was a very clear bias within the language used to describe even some normal contracts for the athletes in such a profession.

While there are quite a few questionable activities that have been revealed from the leaks, reading the book gives a general impression that the most of the field is nefarious which isint true.

Multimillion contracts for athletes isint new, so painting it to be something shady while quite a few of these reveals were from hacks of confidential information is rather hypocritical.

Regardless, there was so much to unpack from this and was really a fascinating read. From the tax structures, to the variety of behind the scenes negotiations and interactions, it is quite gripping. Just would have preferred a more neutral tone to it.
Profile Image for Kieran Lancaster.
10 reviews
January 28, 2024
It is quite an interesting subject, and does reveal a lot about the finances of football which have become even more apparent over the years.

As an overall book it is a bit lacklustre - it does give a fair overview of the tax avoidance & contract situations, TPO’s, and a rough story of how these events were published in the press.

But it doesn’t really have a certain impact at the end, or flow as well as it possibly could - it switches between 3rd and 1st person at points. Say compared to Catch & Kill which is another journalistic story within the past few years, that was much more of a pager turner & felt a bit more cohesive in what the story was.

Still a good read but it just jumps around a bit & doesn’t perhaps have the impact it could’ve done were it written slightly better
2,827 reviews73 followers
September 2, 2018

4.5 Stars!

How Much Is Enough?...

“With my current data alone, I could prove worldwide tax fraud to the tune of three-digit millions to the authorities. But I hope they will give me a bit more time before they arrest me.”

So says the mysterious John, the figurehead of Football Leaks which has leaked more than 18.6 million confidential documents to date. It’s no exaggeration to put Football Leaks up there with Snowden, Assange and Manning in terms of the bravery in the face of real danger and the sheer weight of the hugely important revelations that bring shame on a great number of shameless people.

Buschmann and Wulzinger have written a really engrossing account of their part in meeting with the mysterious protagonist, showing us how they helped to raise awareness and promote his findings, giving them an even wider audience in the hope of making some real, serious changes in the game, which everyone within the higher echelons of, seems intent on not doing.

This book is bursting with facts and stats and intimate contract details that clearly show how out of touch and removed from reality footballers and football has become. The hyper-gentrification of the game is getting worse all the time, which means little by little the kind of people who invented it and made it great are slowly being excluded and pushed out of it in order to accommodate a new moneyed class with vast financial ambitions and little to no interest in the game itself.

Depending on your age, background or level of tolerance, most football fans will have their point when they thought that the game/transfer market had gotten out of control, whether it’s the £1 million paid for Trevor Francis by Clough’s Nottingham Forest way back in 1979, or maybe the £15 million shelled out for Alan Shearer, by Newcastle in 1996?...But surely the obscene 222 million euro that PSG paid for Neymar in 2017 would be the breaking point for most rational minds?...Either way it raises clear questions as to the point of deluding people with the empty charade of FFP.

Money and greed have unquestionably tainted and distorted the game, almost beyond recognition. When you’ve got Sunderland being rewarded nearly £100 million for finishing bottom of their league, earning more than Bayern Munich who won the Bundesliga for the fifth consecutive year, then not only should serious questions be getting asked, but meaningful action taken.

Many of the uglier aspects of the modern game are addressed in here, the murky world of TPO (Third Party Ownership) with specific reference to Doyen Sports, apparently owned by Kazakh oligarchs. We hear about their part in various players and transfers and in particular with the Dutch outfit FC Twente. FIFA would later ban TPO in 2015, but of course this doesn’t mean that will put an end to it.

Spain is of much interest in here, for obvious reasons, with them having the current best club team on the planet. We learn about the so called Impatriado status, given to those who hadn’t lived in the country in the previous ten years, they were allowed to pay at tax rate of just under 25% on all their Spanish income, whereas their Spanish team mates had to pay more than 50%. This loophole was later closed by a new, socialist government.

There is understandable attention on the Gareth Bale transfer from Spurs to Real Madrid in 2013, as we now know the apparent fee was actually 100,759,418 euros (making him the first player to break the 100 million euro barrier) and not the reported 91,589,842. Why did Real lie?...Was it to protect Ronaldo’s ego or was it something else?...Tax reasons perhaps?...We hear of how the Spanish banks had issued guarantees for the deal and yet these were the very same banks that had been given 40 billion euros of public funds to save them from going under in 2012.

We hear of a detail in the draft clause of a contract between Adidas and Real Madrid in 2011, apparently Madrid had it written in that Adidas had to pay them 40 million euros in cash. It is not known if this clause made it into the final contract or indeed why Madrid required 40 million euros in cash?...

This book is filled with many shameless details and clauses that footballers have written into their contracts, like when Chicharito went to Leverkusen, he had it put in his contract that after every fifth goal in competitive matches, he received a special payment of 100’000 euros. He scored 26 goals that season. Then there is the bizarre case of Mario Balotelli who had a ‘good conduct bonus’ put in his contract at Liverpool, stating that if he was sent off fewer than three times a season for bad behaviour then he was entitled to an extra £1 million. He never got a single red card in his first season.

We also learn about egomaniac, Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s contract when he went to Man Utd. He had it written into his contract that he would be paid 280’000 euros for the first five goals or assists for his team, a further 470’000 euros for six through to 10 and an additional 660’000 euros for goals and assists from 10 to 15, which surely begs the question, What were his wages for in the first place?...

Then there is the case of Ezequiel Lavezzi, who is described as, “a doddering striker plying his trade for a team from China.” At the start of 2016, months away from turning 31, his salary for Hebei China Fortune in the Chinese Super League for just under two years was $56.7 million. Net. So in the end he had the best paid contract in the world in 2016, more than Ronaldo, Messi etc, Earning $1,894 an hour or $32 a minute.

“Killing the messenger to get rid of the message is a classic response of systems of power when their strategies for maintaining dominance are made public and questioned by anonymous third parties”

This is easily my favourite quote from this book, and it really sums up a modern dilemma faced by whistle blowers. Instead of the powerful system that has been ridiculed and exposed for its lies and illegality questioning itself and correcting its behaviour, it’s instinct is always, and will always be to protect itself and punish those who dare have the courage to speak up against it. This was exactly the case with Manning, Snowden and Assange who all showed tremendous courage in what they did and this is what this system is trying to do to Football Leaks.

But of course this is not just about football it’s about a group of greedy, elite people who earn an absurd amount of money, who feel that the laws applying to everyone else should not apply to them, and so what ultimately happens is that the state is deprived of millions upon millions of euros/pounds worth of money that could be used to improve the system and benefit the welfare of many others. The same systems that would have supported and helped the communities these footballers would have grown up in. Too often these people forget about the wider support systems that allowed them to flourish in the first place, from hospitals and schools to various other security systems. When they chose to avoid tax on such a massive scale, ultimately what they are doing is choosing to deprive future generations of being able to enjoy the same opportunities as they did.

Football fans can be notoriously fickle, in one sense they can be harshly unforgiving of perceived slights, holding grudges against teams, managers or players for decades, and on one hand they can be bizarrely forgiving and selective sighted on other matters. If politicians, bankers or other celebrities had gone to the same cynical and selfish lengths to avoid tax, they would rightly be shamed and condemned, but the same rules don’t seem to apply to football stars, yet whether these players want to admit it or not, they obviously have a social and moral responsibility to act and behave in a certain manner. It is a tiny price to pay for the immense wealth and privilege they get to enjoy. It is apparent that too few are either mature, responsible or reasonable enough to acknowledge that and embrace the opportunities of helping others or setting positive examples, instead of just squeezing the next million out and tucking it away in a tax haven and playing the dumb footballer card, when they are caught out doing it.
Profile Image for Ushnav Shroff.
1,031 reviews10 followers
November 30, 2018
I was skeptical when I began reading this book, for my interest in football had waned over the years, but it was only after watching a Chelsea match a week before picking this book up that the intrigue for the sport began. The fact that this book took me a long time to read and wasn't that much of a page-turner made sense - however, I never thought of shelving it. All in all, Football Leaks reads partly like a thriller, but mostly like a book filled with feature articles that carry great narrative almost all the time.
18 reviews4 followers
December 28, 2018
Great read as a football fan. The writing itself is loosely organized into short chapters illustrating how dirty the football business is, using various famous players’ contracts and transfers. This part may not be well liked by non football fans.

It exposes the depth of corruption that goes on in the footballing world, through the courageous acts of the whistleblowers and the journalists. Change to the football industry may come very slowly, but at least the book and the exposé will hopefully be a catalyst in improving the beautiful game off the pitch.
401 reviews1 follower
September 4, 2018
A reasonable read but a little disappointing. It wasn’t really the story of the scoop as John, the leak source, remains a mystery throughout. The story then becomes a series of revelations, most of which have been published already. So, the stories become a meaningless procession of way-out contracts and 3rd party ownership scams.
26 reviews
May 17, 2018
Very detailed and informative. Need peace and quiet and good concentration to follow
Profile Image for Francisco Lima.
27 reviews1 follower
December 25, 2018
A gripping narrative about the dark side of football. Lots of numbers and details illustrate very well how cynical the highest echelons of football became in recent years.
182 reviews2 followers
December 16, 2021
Fascinating to read how people like Ronaldo, De Gea etc have avoided paying tax, however the book did drag a bit.
10 reviews
February 12, 2025
Good coverage. Some chapters seem like gap fillers until the next big moment but that’s ok as they provide extra info
33 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2019
An excelent read drawing attention to aspects of football finance that I was unaware of. Interesting to read about Ireland in the context of a tax haven. One aspect of the writing is journalistic in Style and could have taken a more creative route. Apart from that its a very good book.
Profile Image for Dominic Carlin.
245 reviews5 followers
August 19, 2018
There's a lot of interesting stuff in here, but I'm not sure what the authors were hoping to achieve beyond another pay day.

Profile Image for Tom Rodwell.
19 reviews2 followers
July 11, 2018
The not so beautiful game

It's no exaggeration to say that this book is genuinely ground-breaking in its revelations about the biggest and most watched sport in the world.

As someone who has a season ticket at a Champions League club, has travelled to several European countries to watch domestic games and generally invests too much time watching the game, I can honestly say this book has tainted the way I view it.

While that's slightly saddening, it's also shocking to me that I had never questioned some of the aspects of the sport that this book not only challenges, but lays bare.

Can't recommend this highly enough - open your eyes to what's really happening!
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.