Just out of interest do you miss the Formula 1 of the 70s and 80s aswell, when it was much more dangerous plus the glamour girls? Things move on. I'm nostalgic about the surges of the North Stand and the "danger" of the aways of my youth but would I want it back? Probably not.
I'm sure there are F1 fans who would vastly prefer that to watching noiseless hybrid turbos procession round a car park in a corrupt rich persons plaything like in Sochi or Qatar.
In reality there are good and bad things about all eras.
Take snooker from that time. I recently watched the iPlayer documentary about Higgins, White and the Matchroom Mob. Some of it was awful. The cigarette adverts are literally from another era. You've got White and Kirk Stevens addicted to coke, Alex killing himself with drink. And yet, it gripped the nation in a way that the English Open on Eurosport never will. Only O'Sullivan plays like that now, say what you like aboit White and Higgins, you didn't have to be a snooker player to appreciate it, they were box office entertainment. So then Hearn and satellite media saw this and started to monetise it, and the clean cut, dedicated players came to the fore and it was somehow both more a marketable product and less good.
Same with cricket. Look back at batsman facing the likes of Lillee or Holding, helmetless, within an inch of losing their lives but also, occasionally, taking it back to the quicks and hooking them for 4 and six, wearing not much more than some flares and basic padding. Incredibly glamourous, violently dangerous and often (if Tavere or Boycott were batting) surrounded by four and a half days of absolute nothingness. So what did we do? We stripped out the four and half days of nothing, wrapped the batters in cotton wool so no one sued and distilled cricket down to 20 overs of sixes, yorkers and bouncers. All killer, no filler, no danger and brought to you in conjunction with Mastercard, Ford and Vitality.
Football cannot be distilled down to a product. It has to keep the working man involved, Again, Sky took it on because of the fans not in spite of them. Look at lockdown football. How shit was that? Very. The fans must stay in touch with the game and the game must stay in touch with the fans.
None of that at all gives a bunch of pissed up dildos the right to hit each other at a football ground though.