Three French players isn't much of a revolution. In 1984 we had Six.
Quote from: ktvillan on July 25, 2015, 07:33:21 PMQuote from: brian green on July 25, 2015, 06:19:42 PMOn this matter of when to buy, the transfer window is in effect an auction. In my own line of business I attend anything between two and eight auctions a week across East Anglia. Like all sales, the seller wants to get the most money he can, the buyer wants to pay the least. From a lifetime of experience you learn that the dynamic of a sale is a price peak between a third and a half way through a sale, but then as buyers spend their money the prices begin to fall and are at their lowest just before the end of a sale but the last few transactions the prices rise very sharply as panic buys kick in. It's not rocket science. You survey the entire range of what is on offer, whatever it might be, horses, properties, potatoes, cars and you don't dive in and chase the market if there are alternatives later in the day that are as good but cheaper. The richest men at the car auctions are those who buy in the last hour of a sale, leave their purchases overnight and put them in the first hour of the following day's sale. It is not failing to prepare it is using your money to best advantage. In horse dealing the practice has the great name of "pinhooking".I don't think your analogy quite fits Brian. If you're still hanging around at the car or horse auction when the race has already started, you might get a good deal, but you aint going to win the race. The analogy is fine if you recognise that both horse racing and motor racing are also run over seasons.If you're a jockey lacking a ride with the choice of jumping on the first nag that goes past just to make sure you're in the first race, you're doomed to fail in that race and all those that follow. Wait a bit longer and the owner of a half decent horse with a bit of potential walks past looking worried because he can't find a jockey, we'll happy days, everyones a winner.Or you've just turned up in F1 and you need an engine supplier.Take the overpriced package from Renault (shit for those that don't follow F1), knowing that you're going to be at the back of the field all season, or wait to tie up a deal with Mercedes (currently supplying engines to 4 of the top 6) after a couple of races knowing that you'll at worst be competitive in the middle the field for the rest of the season.
Quote from: brian green on July 25, 2015, 06:19:42 PMOn this matter of when to buy, the transfer window is in effect an auction. In my own line of business I attend anything between two and eight auctions a week across East Anglia. Like all sales, the seller wants to get the most money he can, the buyer wants to pay the least. From a lifetime of experience you learn that the dynamic of a sale is a price peak between a third and a half way through a sale, but then as buyers spend their money the prices begin to fall and are at their lowest just before the end of a sale but the last few transactions the prices rise very sharply as panic buys kick in. It's not rocket science. You survey the entire range of what is on offer, whatever it might be, horses, properties, potatoes, cars and you don't dive in and chase the market if there are alternatives later in the day that are as good but cheaper. The richest men at the car auctions are those who buy in the last hour of a sale, leave their purchases overnight and put them in the first hour of the following day's sale. It is not failing to prepare it is using your money to best advantage. In horse dealing the practice has the great name of "pinhooking".I don't think your analogy quite fits Brian. If you're still hanging around at the car or horse auction when the race has already started, you might get a good deal, but you aint going to win the race.
On this matter of when to buy, the transfer window is in effect an auction. In my own line of business I attend anything between two and eight auctions a week across East Anglia. Like all sales, the seller wants to get the most money he can, the buyer wants to pay the least. From a lifetime of experience you learn that the dynamic of a sale is a price peak between a third and a half way through a sale, but then as buyers spend their money the prices begin to fall and are at their lowest just before the end of a sale but the last few transactions the prices rise very sharply as panic buys kick in. It's not rocket science. You survey the entire range of what is on offer, whatever it might be, horses, properties, potatoes, cars and you don't dive in and chase the market if there are alternatives later in the day that are as good but cheaper. The richest men at the car auctions are those who buy in the last hour of a sale, leave their purchases overnight and put them in the first hour of the following day's sale. It is not failing to prepare it is using your money to best advantage. In horse dealing the practice has the great name of "pinhooking".
Quote from: Villa in Denmark on July 25, 2015, 08:44:20 PMQuote from: ktvillan on July 25, 2015, 07:33:21 PMQuote from: brian green on July 25, 2015, 06:19:42 PMOn this matter of when to buy, the transfer window is in effect an auction. In my own line of business I attend anything between two and eight auctions a week across East Anglia. Like all sales, the seller wants to get the most money he can, the buyer wants to pay the least. From a lifetime of experience you learn that the dynamic of a sale is a price peak between a third and a half way through a sale, but then as buyers spend their money the prices begin to fall and are at their lowest just before the end of a sale but the last few transactions the prices rise very sharply as panic buys kick in. It's not rocket science. You survey the entire range of what is on offer, whatever it might be, horses, properties, potatoes, cars and you don't dive in and chase the market if there are alternatives later in the day that are as good but cheaper. The richest men at the car auctions are those who buy in the last hour of a sale, leave their purchases overnight and put them in the first hour of the following day's sale. It is not failing to prepare it is using your money to best advantage. In horse dealing the practice has the great name of "pinhooking".I don't think your analogy quite fits Brian. If you're still hanging around at the car or horse auction when the race has already started, you might get a good deal, but you aint going to win the race. The analogy is fine if you recognise that both horse racing and motor racing are also run over seasons.If you're a jockey lacking a ride with the choice of jumping on the first nag that goes past just to make sure you're in the first race, you're doomed to fail in that race and all those that follow. Wait a bit longer and the owner of a half decent horse with a bit of potential walks past looking worried because he can't find a jockey, we'll happy days, everyones a winner.Or you've just turned up in F1 and you need an engine supplier.Take the overpriced package from Renault (shit for those that don't follow F1), knowing that you're going to be at the back of the field all season, or wait to tie up a deal with Mercedes (currently supplying engines to 4 of the top 6) after a couple of races knowing that you'll at worst be competitive in the middle the field for the rest of the season.Except you, and others, are missing a rather important point that in football, if you fail to compete in the current race, you may not even be "at the races" the following season. Or at least not at the same level. And as a result you may not be bidding at the same auctions for quite a while.
Interesting if this goes through all 3 (Ayew, Amavi, Gueye) are with the same agent . Trying to establish if N'Tep is too
Quote from: silhillvilla on July 26, 2015, 10:52:45 AMInteresting if this goes through all 3 (Ayew, Amavi, Gueye) are with the same agent . Trying to establish if N'Tep is tooIts not Eric Hall I hope!
Don't suppose we still have any contact with Houlier with all these French based players, but someone's got some knowledge of football over there, of course it's probably the scouting team, But we do seem to be fishing a lot in FranceWhich I have no problem with as I haven't generally heard of most of the players we are linked with no matter where in the world they are
Quote from: Ron Manager on July 26, 2015, 01:51:23 PMQuote from: silhillvilla on July 26, 2015, 10:52:45 AMInteresting if this goes through all 3 (Ayew, Amavi, Gueye) are with the same agent . Trying to establish if N'Tep is tooIts not Eric Hall I hope!Mark McKay of excelfoot , trying to find out if he manages N'Tep, I don't think he does though. Euro rate is helping aswell with these deals .