James Copley update tonight - Sunderland Echo
Some decisions in football can be rationalised without undue difficulty. Others, even when the underlying reasoning is understood, still leave an uneasy residue. Sunderland’s decision to withdraw the Bradley Lowery Foundation’s long-standing use of a corporate box falls into that latter category.
It is important to set out the facts with clarity. The club has not withdrawn its support from the foundation. A revised arrangement is now in place - a table of 10 across six fixtures in the Montgomery Suite, alongside two smaller, quieter matchday experiences for vulnerable children in more appropriate environments. Sunderland also continues to provide access to sensory rooms for autistic children, though that provision serves a different purpose. That continued backing is meaningful and should be acknowledged. It does not, however, alter the central point: this is a reduction.
It is also worth pausing on what the Bradley Lowery Foundation represents. Established in Bradley’s name following his battle with neuroblastoma, it has developed into a charity providing both practical and emotional support to families navigating some of the most difficult circumstances imaginable. From funding equipment and experiences to creating moments of respite, its work is rooted in compassion, dignity and a clear sense of purpose.
The matchday element has always carried particular emotional resonance. For many families, these are not routine outings. They are rare opportunities to step away from hospital appointments, uncertainty and sustained strain, and to share something positive together. The privacy and familiarity of a dedicated box played a role in that - not simply as a physical space, but as something consistent and dependable.
That is why the reaction cannot be reduced to logistics or numbers. It speaks to what those experiences have represented, repeatedly, over a sustained period of time. For years, that box offered something genuinely special for seriously ill children and their families. It was never simply a hospitality provision. It became embedded within the foundation’s work and, by extension, within Sunderland’s identity as a club that understood its place within the community. That is why this decision is difficult to reconcile.
It also does not exist in isolation. There has been a steady accumulation of concerns in recent months - corporate restructuring, season ticket renewals, direct debit issues and a growing perception among some long-serving supporters, including elderly fans, that they are being marginalised. Each case, taken individually, may have an explanation. Taken collectively, they begin to suggest a shift in emphasis that supporters are entitled to interrogate.
The financial context is obvious. Sunderland are back in the Premier League and operating at a level that demands sharper commercial pragmatism. Corporate hospitality is a significant revenue stream, and the reported value attached to this box underlines the scale of that reality. There is nothing inherently problematic in that. Indeed, much of the club’s recent progress has been driven by a willingness to make difficult, at times ruthless, decisions. That approach has been a defining characteristic of the current ownership model.
It would be wrong not to recognise the broader picture. Under Kyril Louis-Dreyfus, Sunderland have been revitalised. The club is in a demonstrably stronger position - structurally, financially and on the pitch - than it was just a few years ago. There is no doubting the positive impact of his tenure. That, in itself, is why this decision carries greater significance. While decisiveness and a certain ruthlessness can be invaluable on the football side - in recruitment, in strategic planning and in driving performance standards - that same disposition does not translate in the same way when applied to supporters or community-facing initiatives. There is a distinction to be drawn, and it is a meaningful one.
Football clubs, particularly Sunderland, do not exist purely as commercial entities. They are civic institutions, embedded within and reflective of the communities they represent. That has always been part of Sunderland’s identity and, at its best, one of its defining strengths. There was a time when Sunderland was widely regarded as the “caring club”. That reputation was earned through sustained actions rather than messaging. This shouldn't be allowed to erode through incremental decisions.
Interim CEO Tom Burwell is due to meet with supporters in the near future. That conversation will be significant - not simply in articulating the rationale behind recent decisions, but in demonstrating that the club remains aligned with the values that have historically defined it. Supporters do not expect perfection, but they do expect to feel respected and considered.
What Sunderland cannot afford is even the slightest drift back towards the thinking that underpinned the Black Cats Bar-Newcastle United episode - a moment that laid bare a disconnect between boardroom decision-making and supporter sentiment. For all the progress since, that misstep still lingers in the collective memory, a reminder that trust can be undermined with alarming speed through poor judgement, yet takes years of consistent, considered action to rebuild.
The reality is straightforward. Sunderland’s resurgence has not been driven solely by ownership, recruitment or coaching. It has been underpinned by a fanbase that carried the club through its lowest point in League One and refused to abandon ship. That relationship is not unconditional. There is, quite clearly, a line - and decisions of this nature place the club uncomfortably close to it.
This is not just about a corporate box. It is about institutional priorities and how Sunderland balances progress with principle. There is no doubting that Louis-Dreyfus has been a net positive for Sunderland. There is no serious argument against that. But there is a growing risk that he is steering Sunderland Association Football Club towards becoming Sunderland Association Football Corporation
Some decisions in football can be rationalised without undue difficulty. Others, even when the underlying reasoning is understood, still leave an uneasy residue. Sunderland’s decision to withdraw the Bradley Lowery Foundation’s long-standing use of a corporate box falls into that latter category.
It is important to set out the facts with clarity. The club has not withdrawn its support from the foundation. A revised arrangement is now in place - a table of 10 across six fixtures in the Montgomery Suite, alongside two smaller, quieter matchday experiences for vulnerable children in more appropriate environments. Sunderland also continues to provide access to sensory rooms for autistic children, though that provision serves a different purpose. That continued backing is meaningful and should be acknowledged. It does not, however, alter the central point: this is a reduction.
It is also worth pausing on what the Bradley Lowery Foundation represents. Established in Bradley’s name following his battle with neuroblastoma, it has developed into a charity providing both practical and emotional support to families navigating some of the most difficult circumstances imaginable. From funding equipment and experiences to creating moments of respite, its work is rooted in compassion, dignity and a clear sense of purpose.
The matchday element has always carried particular emotional resonance. For many families, these are not routine outings. They are rare opportunities to step away from hospital appointments, uncertainty and sustained strain, and to share something positive together. The privacy and familiarity of a dedicated box played a role in that - not simply as a physical space, but as something consistent and dependable.
That is why the reaction cannot be reduced to logistics or numbers. It speaks to what those experiences have represented, repeatedly, over a sustained period of time. For years, that box offered something genuinely special for seriously ill children and their families. It was never simply a hospitality provision. It became embedded within the foundation’s work and, by extension, within Sunderland’s identity as a club that understood its place within the community. That is why this decision is difficult to reconcile.
It also does not exist in isolation. There has been a steady accumulation of concerns in recent months - corporate restructuring, season ticket renewals, direct debit issues and a growing perception among some long-serving supporters, including elderly fans, that they are being marginalised. Each case, taken individually, may have an explanation. Taken collectively, they begin to suggest a shift in emphasis that supporters are entitled to interrogate.
The financial context is obvious. Sunderland are back in the Premier League and operating at a level that demands sharper commercial pragmatism. Corporate hospitality is a significant revenue stream, and the reported value attached to this box underlines the scale of that reality. There is nothing inherently problematic in that. Indeed, much of the club’s recent progress has been driven by a willingness to make difficult, at times ruthless, decisions. That approach has been a defining characteristic of the current ownership model.
It would be wrong not to recognise the broader picture. Under Kyril Louis-Dreyfus, Sunderland have been revitalised. The club is in a demonstrably stronger position - structurally, financially and on the pitch - than it was just a few years ago. There is no doubting the positive impact of his tenure. That, in itself, is why this decision carries greater significance. While decisiveness and a certain ruthlessness can be invaluable on the football side - in recruitment, in strategic planning and in driving performance standards - that same disposition does not translate in the same way when applied to supporters or community-facing initiatives. There is a distinction to be drawn, and it is a meaningful one.
Football clubs, particularly Sunderland, do not exist purely as commercial entities. They are civic institutions, embedded within and reflective of the communities they represent. That has always been part of Sunderland’s identity and, at its best, one of its defining strengths. There was a time when Sunderland was widely regarded as the “caring club”. That reputation was earned through sustained actions rather than messaging. This shouldn't be allowed to erode through incremental decisions.
Interim CEO Tom Burwell is due to meet with supporters in the near future. That conversation will be significant - not simply in articulating the rationale behind recent decisions, but in demonstrating that the club remains aligned with the values that have historically defined it. Supporters do not expect perfection, but they do expect to feel respected and considered.
What Sunderland cannot afford is even the slightest drift back towards the thinking that underpinned the Black Cats Bar-Newcastle United episode - a moment that laid bare a disconnect between boardroom decision-making and supporter sentiment. For all the progress since, that misstep still lingers in the collective memory, a reminder that trust can be undermined with alarming speed through poor judgement, yet takes years of consistent, considered action to rebuild.
The reality is straightforward. Sunderland’s resurgence has not been driven solely by ownership, recruitment or coaching. It has been underpinned by a fanbase that carried the club through its lowest point in League One and refused to abandon ship. That relationship is not unconditional. There is, quite clearly, a line - and decisions of this nature place the club uncomfortably close to it.
This is not just about a corporate box. It is about institutional priorities and how Sunderland balances progress with principle. There is no doubting that Louis-Dreyfus has been a net positive for Sunderland. There is no serious argument against that. But there is a growing risk that he is steering Sunderland Association Football Club towards becoming Sunderland Association Football Corporation
) but £25,000 is probably less to KLD than 50p is to a lad on £1000 a week.