Projects that are similar to MyFootballClub exist in both England and in at least 11 other countries. The People's Club was launched in October 2007 and is a similar scheme looking to allow fans to acquire and run a lower-level English football club. Ownaclub.com, a comparable project founded in 2009, has a similar objective with the key difference being that rather than requiring fans to pay an annual subscription, a one-off payment secures a permanent share of any acquired club. One of the latest projects in the UK is Mydalefc, planning to start a new
Woking based football club on level 10 of the
English football league system, the project starting March 2013 asks fans to contribute £20 allowing them to help make decisions about the club ahead of its registering with the Surrey County Football Association, planned to happen between late 2014 and early 2015. The fans are planned to own at least a 20% share in the club, Mydalefc plans to have 500 to 1000 payments, giving the club £10,000 to £20,000 from fan payments only. Another UK-based project is Fivepoundfootballclub, an active community which aims to take charge of a lower league club in the UK, excluding England due to the higher cost required for success in that country. Members are required to donate £5 to the investment fund on joining. As of June 2011, this community had drawn up a shortlist for investment consisting of four clubs in the Welsh League system. Projects outside the UK include: •
India: TRAVANCORE ROYAL SPORTS SOCIETY in India is behind India's first fan owned football club Travancore Royals, TRAVANCORE ROYALS was officially inaugurated on 28 November 2018 and is based in Trivandrum, Kerala, India. Sports and Management Research Institute (SMRI) are the promoters of fans owned football clubs in Asia. •
Brazil: MTDF, or "Meu Time de Futebol," was launched in January 2008 with the aim of acquiring a club in the second tier of
Brazilian football by the end of 2008. •
Denmark: Mitsuperligahold, which was launched in August 2007 with the aim of acquiring a club in the second tier of professional Danish football, the
First Division. •
France:
Web F.C. allows its members, called "entraînautes," to vote on strategic and tactical decisions relating to a lower-level French club in the
Ligue de Basse-Normandie through a website. Unlike MyFootballClub's members, members of Web F.C. do not have to pay a fee to participate in the decision-making, but the more they participate, the more value his or her vote is accorded. • The founder of Web F.C., Frédéric Gauquelin, later set up United Managers. 2,000 subscribers manage
Avant-Garde Caennaise in the 6th Tier of the
French football league system#Regional leagues of the French football league system. •
Germany: Deinfussballclub.de was launched in April 2008 with the aim of acquiring 49% of
SC Fortuna Köln; a club that plays in the German
Oberliga Nordrhein-Westfalen, a lower-level professional league. deinclub.tc-freisenbruch by
TC Freisenbruch, a club which was founded in
Essen in 1902 and is managed completely by the fans. The team currently plays in the ninth division of the
German football league. Since July 2016, the club is managed via a webpage, where the fans can make their decisions about, for example, the starting line-up or the prices for the jersey. For a small amount of money once a month, the fans become "team managers" (
not members of TC Freisenbruch) on this webpage and are a part of Germany's most exciting football project. They get exclusive information about the team, video and photo material and of course also data from performance tests or training sessions. It is also the decision of the fans to dismiss the manager of the club. At the moment, the team is trained by
Mike Möllensiep. •
Israel: Web2Sport currently operates
Hapoel Kiryat Shalom, a
Tel Aviv club that plays in
Liga Gimel, the sixth tier of
Israeli football. Web2Sport allows voting on numerous club functions, including the composition of the club's starting lineup. •
Italy: Squadramia, which was started in January 2008, is an online community that seeks 20,000 members to buy an
Italian football club. In late 2008 the web community purchased Santarcangelo Calcio 1926 a team in the Italian Serie D, the fifth tier of the Italian football system. •
Japan:
Fujieda MYFC is a team funded by online subscribers and currently play in the
J2 League. The team which is based in
Fujieda,
Shizuoka, is the first of its kind in Japan. •
Poland: KupimyKlub.pl is a Polish project, was launched in May 2008. The purchase of the club is planned for season 2008/09 in the Polish league. •
Romania: Clubulmeudefotbal started on 7 July 2007 as an online community that seeks 50,000 members that are willing to pay an annual membership fee of 50 Euros and aims to buy a Romanian football club. •
Russia: MyFootballClub.ru has a proposed start date of 2007-12-10, but is not affiliated with MyFC. •
Spain: miclubdefutbol.com proposes to raise funds and buy a Spanish lower league club, as does Mi Equipo Favorito, which was launched in January 2008 with the aim of acquiring a club in a Spanish league. •
United States: In 2007, two efforts to crowd-own a team were underway, but have since become dormant: MySoccerClubUSA, which would have allowed fans who pay a fee to join a website which will start a club from scratch to play in either the
United Soccer Leagues (USL) or the
National Premier Soccer League (NPSL), and SaveTheVictory.org, which attempted to raise enough money to purchase the now-defunct
San Francisco-based USL club,
California Victory. ==See also==