Quote from: Handsworth Wood Villa on January 23, 2014, 06:10:00 PM2009-10 - 20th - €109.42010-11 - 24th - €99.32011-12 - 27th - €98.6We deal in £s in this country.
2009-10 - 20th - €109.42010-11 - 24th - €99.32011-12 - 27th - €98.6
I agree that revenue gives you an indication of the size of a club, and this is what the Deloitte list is trying to do, but not how well managed or successful they are.I think people are drawing inferences between size and success erroneously. The premier league teams are artificially high due to the TV rights.
Quote from: lovejoy on January 24, 2014, 09:25:43 AMI agree that revenue gives you an indication of the size of a club, and this is what the Deloitte list is trying to do, but not how well managed or successful they are.I think people are drawing inferences between size and success erroneously. The premier league teams are artificially high due to the TV rights.People will certainly interpret the list as an indication of size of club but for me it is nothing more than a barometer of how ridiculous football currently is: basically, the richer the owner and backers you have, the "bigger" your club is. If Bill Gates took over Bromsgrove Rovers and was prepared to plough in a billion or two, they'd be on the list within five years. That's the way things are at the moment, alas. Lists like this do make me wonder how the major club of the UK's Second City doesn't attract more major investment, though.
It's not a huge bombshell.But it does highlight once again the folly of the drastic cuts made over the past few years. Self sustainable, spend only what we earn has been the mantra now since 2010. The problem with that is you can't generate enough revenue to be competitive with such a dull, uninspiring side on the pitch. Because less people want to see it.
2012/13Aston Villa - £81.7mWest Bromwich Albion - £69.7mYet we couldn't afford Lukaku's wages but they could...
Quote from: KevinGage on January 24, 2014, 06:09:03 PMIt's not a huge bombshell.But it does highlight once again the folly of the drastic cuts made over the past few years. Self sustainable, spend only what we earn has been the mantra now since 2010. The problem with that is you can't generate enough revenue to be competitive with such a dull, uninspiring side on the pitch. Because less people want to see it. Under Ellis it was often said you need to speculate at least a little to accumulate, but Lerner/Faulkner is worse. There is little point in bringing down the wages to achieve a certain maximum percentage of turnover if your revenues are dropping even faster. A downward spiral that will only end in tears. To go from 109m to 82m in 4 years with all the TV revenue available would get most CEOs the sack itself, especially given his self professed priority of staying in the top 20 of this particular table.
How have our profits plummeted by 25 odd million in four years if crowds are only slightly below what they were (they've held up remarkably well given the team have served-up one of the worst home records in Europe to supporters since 2011), money on transfers has been curtailed and tv money is up? I'm guessing the real difference is the sale of a Milner, Young or Downing?