I would actually say however that what we're doing isn't running the club in a 'responsible way', to have a 'vision' implies some sort of long term foresight, yet as a club we've lurched from MoN to Houllier, to McLeish to Lambert, a yo yoing of footballing 'styles' and 'visions' if ever you could find them, now we've lurched between one extreme of overspending to another of extreme of underspending. That's a very dangerous game to play. What we need at the club is a long term vision that involves smooth transition (as talked about in another thread), but the club seems incapable of doing so. This is the reason why we are were we are, when other clubs seem to have developed over the last few years.
Quote from: Dribbler on December 31, 2013, 02:23:17 PMI would actually say however that what we're doing isn't running the club in a 'responsible way', to have a 'vision' implies some sort of long term foresight, yet as a club we've lurched from MoN to Houllier, to McLeish to Lambert, a yo yoing of footballing 'styles' and 'visions' if ever you could find them, now we've lurched between one extreme of overspending to another of extreme of underspending. That's a very dangerous game to play. What we need at the club is a long term vision that involves smooth transition (as talked about in another thread), but the club seems incapable of doing so. This is the reason why we are were we are, when other clubs seem to have developed over the last few years.Where's this lurching between one extreme of overspending to another extreme of underspending?From the final year of MON's reign (2009/10) our annual net transfer spend has been £3m, (£11m), (£7m), £23m, £17m. The net incomes from player trading in the GH and TSM years were due to the silly amounts we got for Milner, Young, and Downing. I don't think that's the pattern of a club 'lurching' from extreme overspending to extreme underspending.The issue has been the wages. MON was signing shit players like Habib Beye and giving them 4 year contracts at £40k per week and then not playing them. When the going rate for a reserve is £40k per week, any player of any calibre you sign is going to take that as his starting point and work upwards from there. To sort that problem out, you have to get rid of those on the silly contracts and bring in players who don't have such expectations in terms of their own salaries - ie ones from the lower leagues or from overseas.When the going rate for a reserve at the club is more manageable, then you can start bringing in better quality players on more sensible salaries. This isn't preparing for the Championship - it's running our football club in such a way that if Randy walked away tomorrow we wouldn't be totally fcuked!
Had an impact? It was the biggest change in football since Abramovich rocked up at Chelsea. The number of clubs on a financial planet so seperate from everybody else increased. There are now three teams in this league who nobody else can compete with financially. How on Earth can you underplay a mid-table side suddenly becoming the richest in the world?
You're right to point out the silly wages and contracts we've handed out over the years, especially under MoN, but we've now gone too far in the other extreme. That's why i call it call lurching. We shouldn't have found ourselves in that position in the first place, but once we did we should have tried to transition ourselves into a position of greater financial sustainability a little more organically in a way that wouldn't have had such potentially perilous consequences on the pitch.
Surely nobody didn't think another money no object owner would arrive on the scene. Equally unlikely was that it would be at a club as far behind us as Manchester City.
I wonder how much appeal was added to the acquisition of Citeh by the brand new tax payer funded stadium. I wonder if the arabs would have been so quick to jump in if they had personally to fund the rebuilding of Maine Road.