Quote from: peter w on September 14, 2010, 11:22:53 AMQuote from: jembob on September 13, 2010, 08:50:51 PMThe commentators tonight pointed out that Stoke City have a stronger subs' bench than us. That's your legacy MON, you dithering arse.Yeah, right.Or is it the legacy of the whole club - MON and the board - for this summer?So its down to Mon leaving and the Boards prevarications and nothing to do with the 4 seasons Mon was in control ?
Quote from: jembob on September 13, 2010, 08:50:51 PMThe commentators tonight pointed out that Stoke City have a stronger subs' bench than us. That's your legacy MON, you dithering arse.Yeah, right.Or is it the legacy of the whole club - MON and the board - for this summer?
The commentators tonight pointed out that Stoke City have a stronger subs' bench than us. That's your legacy MON, you dithering arse.
Quote from: sfx412 on September 14, 2010, 11:44:07 AMQuote from: peter w on September 14, 2010, 11:22:53 AMQuote from: jembob on September 13, 2010, 08:50:51 PMThe commentators tonight pointed out that Stoke City have a stronger subs' bench than us. That's your legacy MON, you dithering arse.Yeah, right.Or is it the legacy of the whole club - MON and the board - for this summer?So its down to Mon leaving and the Boards prevarications and nothing to do with the 4 seasons Mon was in control ?No, Stoke's bench has nothing to do with MON's 4 years in charge. We didn't buy a player in the summer and let some go. They bought Pennant and Gudjohnsen who were on the bench. They also bought others who were playing. That all happened in the summer and not during the previous 4 years. That to me, and anyone else who presumably can add up, shows that it was a summer of inactivity, managers departure, and a woeful board response to that that has caused the current situation.
All this just because some people just can't accept that old melted candle face has proved to be a better manager than Martin O'Neill!I know it hurts, and I can't stand the tax dodging twunt either, but fourth place and playing in the CL group stages tomorrow night tells me I'll just have to bite the bullet on this one.
Quote from: Villadawg on September 13, 2010, 06:47:25 PMWhy couldn't they include the signing-on fee as part of the overall player acquisition cost and include it in the £37.3m? If they were giving a player like Modric a £2m signing on fee couldn't they just agree a contract with "modric ltd", and pay it on a straight-line basis over the term of his initial contract? Again, have you actually got any proof that this is what they are doing?
Why couldn't they include the signing-on fee as part of the overall player acquisition cost and include it in the £37.3m? If they were giving a player like Modric a £2m signing on fee couldn't they just agree a contract with "modric ltd", and pay it on a straight-line basis over the term of his initial contract?
No I haven't any proof they are doing that, just as you presumably have no proof that they aren't. I've never claimed to have any certainty about how much Spurs pay their players, you have. My suspicion is based on the discrepancy between the high cost of player purchases, their large and experienced squad and the seemingly low "staff costs". It doesn't appear to make sense. The statement in their accounts that "The costs associated with the acquisition of player and key football management staff registrations are capitalised as intangible fixed assets." leads me to think that agent fees and signing-on fees may be classified in this way and would then be fully amortised on a straight-line basis. That could explain the discrepancy. BTW: There is nothing dodgy about accounting in this way, they're perfectly entitled to do so.
Quote from: hilts_coolerking on September 13, 2010, 06:53:20 PMQuote from: Villadawg on September 13, 2010, 06:47:25 PMWhy couldn't they include the signing-on fee as part of the overall player acquisition cost and include it in the £37.3m? If they were giving a player like Modric a £2m signing on fee couldn't they just agree a contract with "modric ltd", and pay it on a straight-line basis over the term of his initial contract? Again, have you actually got any proof that this is what they are doing?No I haven't any proof they are doing that, just as you presumably have no proof that they aren't. I've never claimed to have any certainty about how much Spurs pay their players, you have. My suspicion is based on the discrepancy between the high cost of player purchases, their large and experienced squad and the seemingly low "staff costs". It doesn't appear to make sense. The statement in their accounts that "The costs associated with the acquisition of player and key football management staff registrations are capitalised as intangible fixed assets." leads me to think that agent fees and signing-on fees may be classified in this way and would then be fully amortised on a straight-line basis. That could explain the discrepancy. BTW: There is nothing dodgy about accounting in this way, they're perfectly entitled to do so.
Of course its the truth. He left 5 days before the start of the season and took all the staff with him. What other truth do you need? And you suggest he's a principled man?
I think the thing is that even if O'Neill had been treated abysmally and his position made untenable, the decent thing to do would have been to put the team and the fans first and keep going until a replacement could be found. As it was, whatever the reason behind his decision to quit, he decided it was more important for him to go instantly, regardless of the negative effect it would have, which he would have been well aware of.
how pathetic is that.After 4 seasons of Mon's dealings the reason Stoke had a more convincing bench was because Randy didn't spend in the summer.Inredible. I wonder why he didn't spend? Oh yes the manager we had quit 5 days, 5 days, before kick off.