Listen closely, and you can hear the ghost of Gibbon weeping into his tea. The news that UK sponsors are recoiling at the spiralling costs of what is breathlessly being called the ‘craziest World Cup ever’ should surprise no one with a passing familiarity with history. We are watching the final, decadent act of a civilisation that has mistaken excess for excellence, spectacle for substance. The economics of this tournament are not an aberration; they are the logical endpoint of an age that venerates the gig economy while ignoring the crumbling aqueducts.
Let us be clear. The sums being bandied about would have made a Victorian railway baron blush. But the sponsors’ sudden attack of conscience is less a moral awakening and more a panic attack at the balance sheet. They have realised, belatedly, that the bubble is not made of rubber but of hot air. The same mindset that gave us the South Sea Bubble now gives us a World Cup whose costs defy all arithmetic. We are funding coliseums for the few while the majority struggle to heat their homes. It is a redistribution of wealth, but upward, to the architects of this glorious irrelevance.
Why do we call it crazy? Because it has lost all connection to the game itself. Football was once a working-class escape, a local pride. Now it is a global brand, a vehicle for petrodollars and state propaganda. The sponsors, who once clamoured to associate with its purity, now find themselves holding a poisoned chalice. They ask: ‘Where is the return on investment?’ The answer, my friends, is that there is none. Not in any rational sense. We have entered the realm of pure symbolism, where billion-dollar stadiums are built for a month of use and then left to moulder like Roman ruins.
This is intellectual and moral decadence. We have replaced civic virtue with conspicuous consumption. The tournament has become a monument to our own hubris, a mirror of the inequality that gnaws at the foundations of our societies. The sponsors’ discomfort is the discomfort of the Roman senator who realises the barbarians are not at the gates but in the banquet hall, drinking his wine.
But do not mistake me for a Luddite. I love the game. I love its chaos and its poetry. But this is not the game. This is a globalised, financialised chimera. The sponsors are right to question, but their questioning is too little, too late. The horse has bolted, and it is made of gold. The only sane response is to let the thing collapse under its own weight. Perhaps then we can rebuild something smaller, more honest, more local. Until then, we are all spectators at our own decline.









