Quote from: Risso on April 05, 2012, 11:47:25 AMQuote from: NeilH on April 05, 2012, 11:29:13 AMQuote from: Mazrim on April 05, 2012, 08:49:37 AMI expect ticket, commercial sales and the general mood and confidence around the club to be appalling in the summer if McLeish is not replaced. This will hit Villa hard financially and would have to be addressed. A lot has been said about calamitous season ticket sales and that the club must act to prevent this, but let’s say for argument sake for lose 7000 season ticket holders going into next season, that’s a drop in revenue of approx £3,1M. If we sell one of our £60K p/w earners and don’t replace him, we save approx £3,1M and thus negate the cost of lost season tickets. The same Noddy maths can be applied to ‘at the gate’ sales. Let’s say that we drop approx 5,000 per match on individual tickets sold. Over the season that would pan out to approx £5M lost revenue. If we sell one of our £70K p/w week earners, we save approx £3,6M and thus take a loss of only £1,4M...... As you can imagine, you only have to get a couple more big earners off the books and not replace them and we’ve broken even.Now I know that this is pretty basic stuff, but it does go to highlight, that IF the only focus of the club is to reduce cost, then they can more than afford a calamitous drop in supporters turning up at the stadium whilst still ticking over.Neil, that overlooks the fact that there's a huge deficit in he accounts that needs to be turned round, and cutting costs is only one half of the equation. There's no point in cutting them if income drops off as well. We undoubtedly needed to cut costs, but we need income to rise as well. I appreciate that my very basic calculations hardly explain the complex nature of our accounts, but it does demonstrate that a large drop in season ticket sales could be absorbed if enough high earners are shifted off the books. In fact if we culled enough of them and sold Bent we would go a long way to offsetting the mess we are in......... I’m in no way agreeing, it’s just being purely subjective.On the other hand, if we sacked McLeish it would cost us significantly in compensation with little prospect that our income would further be enhanced.
Quote from: NeilH on April 05, 2012, 11:29:13 AMQuote from: Mazrim on April 05, 2012, 08:49:37 AMI expect ticket, commercial sales and the general mood and confidence around the club to be appalling in the summer if McLeish is not replaced. This will hit Villa hard financially and would have to be addressed. A lot has been said about calamitous season ticket sales and that the club must act to prevent this, but let’s say for argument sake for lose 7000 season ticket holders going into next season, that’s a drop in revenue of approx £3,1M. If we sell one of our £60K p/w earners and don’t replace him, we save approx £3,1M and thus negate the cost of lost season tickets. The same Noddy maths can be applied to ‘at the gate’ sales. Let’s say that we drop approx 5,000 per match on individual tickets sold. Over the season that would pan out to approx £5M lost revenue. If we sell one of our £70K p/w week earners, we save approx £3,6M and thus take a loss of only £1,4M...... As you can imagine, you only have to get a couple more big earners off the books and not replace them and we’ve broken even.Now I know that this is pretty basic stuff, but it does go to highlight, that IF the only focus of the club is to reduce cost, then they can more than afford a calamitous drop in supporters turning up at the stadium whilst still ticking over.Neil, that overlooks the fact that there's a huge deficit in he accounts that needs to be turned round, and cutting costs is only one half of the equation. There's no point in cutting them if income drops off as well. We undoubtedly needed to cut costs, but we need income to rise as well.
Quote from: Mazrim on April 05, 2012, 08:49:37 AMI expect ticket, commercial sales and the general mood and confidence around the club to be appalling in the summer if McLeish is not replaced. This will hit Villa hard financially and would have to be addressed. A lot has been said about calamitous season ticket sales and that the club must act to prevent this, but let’s say for argument sake for lose 7000 season ticket holders going into next season, that’s a drop in revenue of approx £3,1M. If we sell one of our £60K p/w earners and don’t replace him, we save approx £3,1M and thus negate the cost of lost season tickets. The same Noddy maths can be applied to ‘at the gate’ sales. Let’s say that we drop approx 5,000 per match on individual tickets sold. Over the season that would pan out to approx £5M lost revenue. If we sell one of our £70K p/w week earners, we save approx £3,6M and thus take a loss of only £1,4M...... As you can imagine, you only have to get a couple more big earners off the books and not replace them and we’ve broken even.Now I know that this is pretty basic stuff, but it does go to highlight, that IF the only focus of the club is to reduce cost, then they can more than afford a calamitous drop in supporters turning up at the stadium whilst still ticking over.
I expect ticket, commercial sales and the general mood and confidence around the club to be appalling in the summer if McLeish is not replaced. This will hit Villa hard financially and would have to be addressed.
Quote from: john e on April 04, 2012, 08:39:14 PM 'i kept us up' and act the big hero, Villa fans are playing into his hands by banging on about going downHave to agree with this.He'll give it the big 'un about how he saved us against all odds. Fans hatred, injuries, balancing the wages etc, etc.
'i kept us up' and act the big hero, Villa fans are playing into his hands by banging on about going down
Quote from: Rip Van Bentfletch on April 05, 2012, 07:46:49 AMQuote from: john e on April 04, 2012, 08:39:14 PM 'i kept us up' and act the big hero, Villa fans are playing into his hands by banging on about going downHave to agree with this.He'll give it the big 'un about how he saved us against all odds. Fans hatred, injuries, balancing the wages etc, etc.I'm sorry guys but that's a crock of sh1te.You could count on one hand the number of people in football who think the Villa should be relegated given the other teams in this division. A 'par' result for our squad is midtable mediocrity. Against that, AML has massively underachived. Relegation would be akin to gross incompetence.
Quote from: Ad@m on April 05, 2012, 02:01:34 PMQuote from: Rip Van Bentfletch on April 05, 2012, 07:46:49 AMQuote from: john e on April 04, 2012, 08:39:14 PM 'i kept us up' and act the big hero, Villa fans are playing into his hands by banging on about going downHave to agree with this.He'll give it the big 'un about how he saved us against all odds. Fans hatred, injuries, balancing the wages etc, etc.I'm sorry guys but that's a crock of sh1te.You could count on one hand the number of people in football who think the Villa should be relegated given the other teams in this division. A 'par' result for our squad is midtable mediocrity. Against that, AML has massively underachived. Relegation would be akin to gross incompetence.Aren't all three of you effectively saying the same thing?
Excellent piece Brian, I suspect we are of roughly the same vintage and I am increasingly subscribing to the view that I would rather see us relegated, our awful awful manager got rid of and the kids given a chance to impress next season with a few judicious signings than wallow on in the Premier League vying to finish somewhere between 10th and 15th with a bunch of players I just can't identify with nor care one jot about for the most part. When I first started watching us properly in 1974, we were in the second division and there was a real cult feeling to following the Villa. I felt it again when we were in the second division in the late 80s - some of my best memories of attending matches come from both eras, particularly away games - and I suspect it needs to happen again to have any hope of my feelings for the Villa being fully re-invigorated. At the moment, so much of it is just so meaningless. As Brian points out, the same could sadly be said of about 90% of football these days. The game has almost completely lost its soul and has to grab at increasingly fleeting moments such as what has happened to players like Muamba and Petrov to try and show it does still really care