Decision thinking for leaders in sport.
AGC is preparing a body of writing on how high-stakes sports decisions should be tested before commitment.
The first AGC Insights will be published in the coming weeks. They will challenge premature certainty, document the patterns that cause sports projects to fail, and set out the discipline required to protect decisions before exposure compounds.
This is not content marketing. It is a record of how AGC thinks about decision risk in sport.
Be notified when AGC Insights publish.
A short, infrequent dispatch. No marketing. No filler. Sent only when a new piece is published.
AGC does not publish to sound active.
AGC Insights exist for one reason: to shape how serious leaders think about sports decisions before commitment.
The audience is small and specific. Governments, federations, investors, rights-holders, and senior advisors operating in environments where weak decisions become expensive and politically difficult to reverse.
Each piece will examine a pattern, a failure mode, or a discipline that protects decision quality. Some will be short. Some longer. All will be written to be useful inside a board pack, an investment committee, or a government discussion.
If a piece is not useful to that audience, AGC will not publish it.
01
Decision-first, not topic-first.
Each piece begins with a decision a leader actually has to make. Not a theme, trend, or industry observation.
02
Evidence over opinion.
Claims must be grounded in observed pattern, structural logic, or stated assumption. Where evidence is incomplete, that will be made explicit.
03
Named patterns, not vague themes.
If a failure mode is recurring, it will be named, defined, and explained. Not described in general language.
04
Useful inside a real decision room.
If a piece would not be useful to a board, an investment committee, or a government considering a real commitment, it will not be published.
05
Brevity over volume.
AGC Insights publish when there is something worth saying. Not on a schedule. Not for visibility.
Six categories under preparation.
AGC Insights will be organised around the decision environments where the cost of weak scrutiny is highest.
Decision Risk
How hidden assumptions, premature commitment, and weak scrutiny become expensive after the fact.
TOPICS
Hidden assumptions • Decision gates • The cost of momentum • Pattern recognition • Why feasibility studies fail
Sports Infrastructure
How stadiums, sports cities, training centres, and venue projects should be tested before commitment.
TOPICS
Stadium economics • Sports cities • Venue utilisation • Operating cost realism • Lifecycle exposure
Governance &
Compliance
How authority, accountability, and decision control behave under real institutional pressure.
TOPICS
Decision authority • Board structure • Accountability under pressure • Compliance exposure • Stakeholder fragmentation
Major Events
How event hosting, bid decisions, and delivery commitments expose organisations to risk that surfaces too late.
TOPICS
Host bid economics • Delivery pressure • Budget realism • Broadcast expectations • Legacy commitments
Commercial Survivability
The difference between attention and revenue, and what it takes for sports commercial models to survive real market conditions.
TOPICS
Sponsorship logic • Rights value • Revenue concentration • Market behaviour • Fan engagement vs revenue
Investor Readiness
What investor diligence actually examines, and why many sports propositions fail before capital conversations begin.
TOPICS
Investor diligence patterns • Capital structure • Risk allocation • Narrative integrity • Documentation readiness
Get AGC Insights when they publish.
A short, infrequent dispatch sent only when a new piece is published. No marketing. No filler. The list is small by design.
Insights inform thinking.
Diagnostics protect decisions.
AGC Insights help leaders think more clearly about decision risk. AGC diagnostics test whether a specific decision is ready to proceed.
If your organisation is about to commit capital, credibility, or public trust to a sports decision, the first step is not more reading. It is structured scrutiny.