Daniel Hart

Football Business Correspondent

Daniel Hart

Daniel Hart covers the business of football for FootyGazette. He writes about money, power, ownership, regulation, and the long-form consequences of both — the part of the game that happens in chairmen's offices, courtrooms, and Companies House filings, and which determines, more often than supporters care to admit, what they will end up watching on a Saturday afternoon. He breaks news rather than analyses tactics, and he reports the transfer market not as a parade of shirt-holding photographs but as a complex, opaque, and often legally fragile global capital flow.

Hart is based in London. He read Economics at the University of Loughborough between 2010 and 2013, and completed an MA in Financial Journalism at City, University of London, in 2014. He spent his first six post-graduate years at the Financial Times, where he worked on the Companies desk and, later, the Media and Sport beat, covering broadcasting rights, club ownership structures, and the early days of the Premier League's owners' and directors' test reforms. It was at the FT that he learned the habit of mind that still defines his work: the assumption that, in any football story involving large sums of money, the press release is at best a partial account, and at worst the opposite of what is happening.

He left the FT in 2021 to cover football full time, joining a daily financial wire as its football business correspondent before going freelance in 2024. His work has appeared in The Athletic, Off The Pitch, Tifo Football, and The Guardian's sports business vertical, where he co-bylined a 2024 investigation into multi-club ownership structures in the Championship that prompted a follow-up inquiry from the EFL.

His areas of expertise include Profit and Sustainability Rules, UEFA Financial Fair Play and the new squad cost ratio framework, multi-club ownership, broadcasting rights cycles, club valuations and private equity in football, Companies House and corporate filings analysis, transfer structuring, and the regulatory architecture of the proposed English football regulator. He is unusually fluent in reading a set of audited accounts and unusually patient at explaining what they show.

His sources network, built across a decade of careful, low-key reporting, runs through agents, intermediaries, finance directors, club lawyers, broadcast executives, and former regulators on both sides of the Channel. He does not name them publicly, and he prefers, where the law and the source allow, to put names on the page.

Hart writes for FootyGazette because, in his view, football's financial reporting has historically been split between trade publications that assume too much and consumer outlets that assume too little. He is sceptical, evidence-led, and instinctively distrustful of the phrase "sources close to the club." He supports West Ham, a fact he discloses where relevant and pretends not to mind where it isn't. He lives in Walthamstow with his wife and a young son whose first complete sentence was reportedly "Daddy, what's amortisation?"

You can reach Daniel at [email protected].

Areas of expertise

  • Transfer market
  • Football finance
  • Profit and Sustainability Rules
  • Club ownership
  • Broadcasting rights

Contact: [email protected]

Iran’s World Cup 2026 Complaint: The FIFA Charter Problem Nobody Will Acknowledge

Amir Ghalenoei put a question to the other 47 World Cup 2026 coaches. None of them answered. “We are here for football, not politics, and we are saying that again,” the Iran head coach said, after a month in which his squad arrived in Los Angeles with fewer than 16 hours before kickoff, watched their … Read more

Brazil’s World Cup 2026 Referee Complaint: What FIFA Can and Can’t Do About It

Vinicius Jr at the FIFA World Cup

Brazil’s World Cup 2026 Referee Complaint: What FIFA Can and Can’t Do About It Brazil’s formal World Cup 2026 referee complaint, filed by the Confederação Brasileira de Futebol on 26 June, arrived with the clarity of a legal brief. The CBF demanded that referee Cesar Ramos be removed from all future Brazil fixtures. It cited … Read more

SoFi Stadium Deal: The ICE Clause FIFA Didn’t See Coming

SoFi Stadium exterior before a World Cup 2026 match at Inglewood, California

When nearly 2,000 SoFi Stadium hospitality workers authorized a strike by 96 percent in early June, the timing looked like textbook leverage. The USA’s World Cup 2026 group stage matches were locked in at Inglewood. FIFA had no power to move them. A walkout at the host nation’s marquee venue would have been the most … Read more

Algeria v Austria: World Cup 2026 Faces Its 1982 Gijón Moment

The Algeria team that played Austria at the 1982 FIFA World Cup — the match that became the Disgrace of Gijón

On June 27, 1982, Austria and West Germany played 10 minutes of genuine football in Gijón, Spain. West Germany scored. The teams then spent 80 minutes passing calmly between themselves while Algeria, which had beaten West Germany three days earlier, watched from the stands as the result that would eliminate them was held in place … Read more

Senegal’s World Cup Camp Crisis: Why FIFA’s Prize Money Never Reaches the Players

Stylized illustration of FIFA World Cup prize money flowing through federations to players

Pape Thiaw coached Senegal through the Africa Cup of Nations in January 2025, led them to World Cup qualification, and arrived in the United States for the biggest tournament of his career without a signed contract. He hadn’t been paid since February. The original team chef left mid-camp. Players chased bonus payments owed from months … Read more

World Cup 2026 Fan Festivals: Why Houston Went Big as Other Host Cities Cut Back

Crowds gathered at a FIFA Fan Fest watching a World Cup match on a big screen

Houston is running a free World Cup 2026 fan festival for 39 days, a 275,000 square-foot build in East Downtown that its host committee expects to draw more than half a million visitors across 34 match days, and which local outlets have reported reaching capacity and pausing entry on busy nights. That makes Houston the … Read more