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Saturday 30 May 2026 6:00 am  |  Updated:  Friday 29 May 2026 11:19 am

How do professional footballers keep their divorces private?

By: Oliver Lock and Caroline Holley

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A messy divorce can dominate headlines, so how do pro footballers go about it?

For footballers and other high-profile athletes, relationship breakdown may start as a personal matter, but where there is fame, wealth, public interest and commercial pressure, it can quickly become something much larger. A messy divorce can dominate headlines, distract from performance, and affect relationships with clubs, sponsors, agents and other commercial partners.

The risks are particularly acute in professional sport because an athlete’s public image is often part of their commercial value. Sponsorships, ambassadorial roles and club relationships may depend not only on performance, but also on off-pitch behaviour and brand fit. A private rift that becomes an acrimonious public spat can therefore have consequences far beyond the courtroom.

Building a strong squad

When a crisis goes public, a joined-up approach is vital. A sportsperson’s team of advisers could include a family lawyer, reputation management lawyer, publicist and even digital investigators to deal with media enquiries, prevent paparazzi intrusion, and address the misuse of private information, such as leaked photos or videos. A coordinated response matters: statements to the press, social media posts and steps taken in legal proceedings can all impact each other.  

Where there is an international angle, trusted overseas advisers should be brought on board sooner rather than later to advise on differences in publication, defamation and privacy laws. There is little point in shutting down a story successfully in one country, only to have it published in full in another.   

Swift steps may also need to be taken to secure divorce jurisdiction in the sportsperson’s preferred country, as financial outcomes can vary dramatically between countries. For athletes with global profiles, or connections to more than one country, this must be factored into the approach from the outset.

Speed matters, but so does judgement. The aim is usually to reduce the temperature, protect privacy, and prevent the dispute becoming more damaging than it needs to be. That may mean seeking to stop publication of a story, correcting inaccuracies or agreeing a short, controlled statement. In other cases, the best course may be to say very little publicly, while dealing firmly with the legal and practical issues behind the scenes.

The best defence is early planning

Where allegations of domestic abuse, coercive behaviour, harassment, or the threatened misuse of intimate material arise, urgent applications to the Family Court for protective orders may be required. Whether the sportsperson in question is seeking protection or responding to allegations made against them, any emergency proceedings need to be handled carefully and in coordination with the wider legal and communications strategy.

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The best time to manage the risks of a messy divorce is well before the relationship is in crisis. For footballers and others in the public eye, pre-nuptial and post-nuptial agreements are much more than just wealth protection tools. A well-drafted “pre-nup” or “post-nup” will set out a framework for what happens if the relationship ends, reducing the risk of a dispute becoming hostile, prolonged or public. That can be particularly important where there are very substantial earnings and commercial interests at stake.

Pre-nups and post-nups can also include confidentiality clauses restricting the other party from sharing any private information, including family photographs, messages and financial details. They can set expectations around the use of social media and require that any public statements are agreed jointly. Where there are children, provisions can also be directed at protecting their privacy and reducing the risk of the children being drawn into any media coverage.

Divorce on the table

For unmarried couples, cohabitation agreements perform a similar role. Although there is no “common law marriage” in England and Wales, disputes can still arise around property ownership at the end of a relationship. Like pre-nups and post-nups, cohabitation agreements can clarify property ownership arrangements and expectations if the couple splits. They can also include confidentiality provisions where a partner has access to sensitive information.

Keeping disputes away from the courts should also be considered at the outset. Mediation and arbitration clauses are increasingly the norm in pre-nups, post-nups and cohabitation agreements, ensuring that any future dispute is resolved in an entirely private forum, rather than in a court room. There has been a shift towards greater transparency in the Family Court system in recent years, prompting more high-profile couples to turn to non-court dispute resolution when they separate.

For professional footballers and other athletes, the lesson is simple: preparation matters off the pitch as much as on it. The right planning cannot avoid the pain of relationship breakdown, but it can reduce the risk of a private conflict becoming a public spectacle. In a world where reputation, performance and commercial value are closely intertwined, that preparation can make all the difference.

Caroline Holley and Oliver Lock are partners at law firm Farrer & Co

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