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]

World Cup 2026 Empty Seats: FIFA Redefines the Full House

Rows of empty stadium seats illustrating World Cup 2026 attendance gaps

For months the story was that you couldn’t get a ticket. Now the cameras have arrived, the matches are being played, and the most striking thing on the broadcast isn’t the football, it’s the red plastic. Empty seats at the World Cup 2026 are showing up across the opening round, and FIFA’s response has quietly … Read more

West Ham, Kretinsky and the Regulator: Who Actually Vets a 43% Owner?

The London Stadium, West Ham United's home ground

Daniel Kretinsky is about to become West Ham United’s biggest shareholder, and the way that happens matters more than the fact of it. According to Sky Sports the Czech billionaire’s stake will rise from 27 per cent to 43 per cent over the next couple of weeks, overtaking the 38.8 per cent held by David … Read more

Fox’s World Cup Hydration-Break Ads Turn Player Welfare Into Inventory

Television broadcast cameras and commentators covering a live sporting event

The first controversy of the 2026 World Cup did not come from a referee, a penalty or a border desk. It came from a commercial. Within 90 minutes of the opening whistle in Mexico City, World Cup 2026 hydration break ads on Fox had become the story of day one, full-screen commercials, slotted into a … Read more

Philadelphia’s 4 A.M. Last Call: The World Cup Permit Bottleneck

Philadelphia skyline at night, a 2026 World Cup host city

Philadelphia spent months building a way to cash in on the World Cup’s late-night crowds, and then quietly throttled it. The pitch was simple: let bars serve until 4 a.m. instead of the usual 2 a.m. for the duration of the tournament, capturing the spending of fans who, in a normal Philadelphia June, would be … Read more

Toronto Is Reselling Its Own World Cup Tickets — and the Math Explains Why

BMO Field in Toronto, a FIFA World Cup 2026 host venue

There is a quiet scandal of arithmetic buried in the build-up to Canada’s first men’s World Cup, and it has nothing to do with what fans pay. It is about what the host cities themselves are doing as sellers. Toronto’s World Cup 2026 ticket resale programme, the city buying its own allocation of seats and … Read more