Indie band singer becomes Sheffield FC chairman

Adam OxleyYorkshire
News imageBBC A middle-aged man, with grey hair and beard, wears a pin-stripe black suit with a brown tie. He is standing against a purple BBC Radio Sheffield backdrop.BBC
Jon McClure, from Reverend and the Makers, said he wants to return the club to Sheffield from its current Derbyshire home

The lead singer of indie band Reverend and the Makers has been named as the new chairman of Sheffield FC.

Jon McClure and performing arts firm IAV Holdings Limited bought a stake in the club, whose men's side currently play in the ninth tier of English football, with hopes of climbing the non-league football system.

They said they aimed to return the club to the city from its current Derbyshire home and have plans for a football academy, eSports hub, national football festival, clothing brand, visitor centre and TV show.

McClure said he had "always" had an interest in the club, "as a Sheffield native with a lot of us schooled in the idea that we invented football in this city".

"It's a frustration for many of us that it's not more widely celebrated," McClure said.

Founded in 1857, Sheffield FC is widely considered to be the world's first football club.

"There's still a lot of people in the city who don't know that. And nationally and globally, people are completely unaware," he added.

McClure said he had originally tried to buy Sheffield FC in 2018, alongside his manager David Bianchi, co-founder of Various Artists Management.

"We were quoted a price that seemed silly to us at the time, so we walked away and thought that was that," he said.

"Fast forward to now and we've managed to do a deal to get involved and to purchase a chunk of the club with a bunch of other people."

Andrew Ford and Alexis Krachai join McClure and Bianchi on Sheffield FC's new-look board alongside existing owner, Jeremy Levine, and his son Jack.

Ford is a local businessman and the son of former Sheffield Wednesday footballer David Ford, while Krachai is the managing director of Counter Context, a Sheffield-based communications and public affairs company.

Sheffield FC's new ownership structure has been announced less than two months after venture capital firm Yorkshire AI Labs claimed it had two bids to buy the club rejected.

'This is not Wrexham'

The club's men play in the ninth tier of men's English football after relegation last year, while the women's side plays in the fourth-tier of the women's pyramid.

McClure said he wanted to bring success for all teams at Sheffield FC, but he recognised "there's a limit football-wise", especially with the men.

"This is not Wrexham. I'm not Ryan Reynolds. Let's get it clear, I'm in an indie band. I know my place in this world," he said.

"I've taken a lot of advice from football people. I'm not a football person, and I won't be involved in football stuff.

"There's a limit for Sheffield FC. It's a non-league club. This is not me talking now. This is Chris Wilder, Vill Powell and others.

"These are people who care about the club. They're saying to me, it can't ever compete with Wednesday or United. That's not what it's there to do.

"On the women's side, I think there's less of a ceiling. I think the women could be very successful, and we want to prioritise that, but it has to be done by engaging actual football people."

News imageSheffield FC A light stone cladded two storey building surrounded by a neat wooden fenceSheffield FC
Sheffield FC have played behind the Coach and Horses in Dronfield since 2001

Sheffield FC have played their games outside of their home city, in Dronfield in North East Derbyshire, since 2001.

The club has made several attempts to return to Sheffield over the past two decades, with the latest plans unveiled in November 2023 as a joint venture with Sheffield Eagles Rugby League Club.

McClure said they were looking at "a bunch of places" for a new stadium, with a move to the former Sheffield Transport Sports Club site at Meadowhead remaining a possibility.

"The planning application is still live and we're undertaking a review," he said.

"We don't want to take anything off the table. It's about engaging constructively with the people in charge in this city, the council and the mayoral authority.

"I think everybody wants the club back in the city, but there's only Sheffield that could invent football and build a B&Q car park on it."

McClure said he acknowledged there would be some scepticism about a local musician becoming the chairman of the world's oldest football club.

"Judge it in a year. If it's not tangibly in a better place than it is now, come and see me at a match and discuss why you think that's not the case," he said.

"But give me a year to just do some stuff, because I think we're going to move the dial on this considerably.

"We're trying to build a community here, and we're trying to do something for the city, because this city is amazing.

"For far too long now this city has not shouted about itself. It's enough now.

"Now's our time to stand up and say this city's brilliant.

"We invented this game, and this club invented this game, and we're going to celebrate that."

McClure: 'Now's our time to stand up'

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