Man City's match day income compared to ours is your best comparison. Not a London club, not particularly expensive in contrast either.We made £18.1m and they made £71.9m. So we could keep a Diaby or a Luiz. Pretty significant I'd say.
Why would you compare a stadium built in 2002, renovated in 2016 and undergoing further works now, with one from 2001, 1994, 1993 and the 70s? They also play more games usually, owing to the Champions League. Last season would have been the first time we had more home games than them in years.If we rebuilt Villa Park and only at 42,000, we'd still generate more income than the current set up owing to the improvements modernity brings. Using Man City, is helpful to show those benefits at a similar level of capacity and price.
Quote from: Ads on October 10, 2024, 11:50:46 AMMan City's match day income compared to ours is your best comparison. Not a London club, not particularly expensive in contrast either.We made £18.1m and they made £71.9m. So we could keep a Diaby or a Luiz. Pretty significant I'd say.Without wishing to open up this rabbit hole again, £18.1m doesn’t sound to be a correct comparison.That gives a nett average ticket price of £22.00 inc corporate seats.
Quote from: Stu82 on October 10, 2024, 12:16:46 PMQuote from: Ads on October 10, 2024, 11:50:46 AMMan City's match day income compared to ours is your best comparison. Not a London club, not particularly expensive in contrast either.We made £18.1m and they made £71.9m. So we could keep a Diaby or a Luiz. Pretty significant I'd say.Without wishing to open up this rabbit hole again, £18.1m doesn’t sound to be a correct comparison.That gives a nett average ticket price of £22.00 inc corporate seats.Don’t Villa account for these things differently to everyone else. I’m sure I saw something a year or so back in one of the yearly accounts match threads that seemed to suggest that our hospitality and other stuff was included in our commercial income and not matchday revenue.
Quote from: AV82EC on October 10, 2024, 12:37:20 PMQuote from: Stu82 on October 10, 2024, 12:16:46 PMQuote from: Ads on October 10, 2024, 11:50:46 AMMan City's match day income compared to ours is your best comparison. Not a London club, not particularly expensive in contrast either.We made £18.1m and they made £71.9m. So we could keep a Diaby or a Luiz. Pretty significant I'd say.Without wishing to open up this rabbit hole again, £18.1m doesn’t sound to be a correct comparison.That gives a nett average ticket price of £22.00 inc corporate seats.Don’t Villa account for these things differently to everyone else. I’m sure I saw something a year or so back in one of the yearly accounts match threads that seemed to suggest that our hospitality and other stuff was included in our commercial income and not matchday revenue.Yes it does, I think the way we record income is different, hence the larger than expected gap in revenue between the two clubs.
If we are staying at Villa Park long-term, then probably the option that makes most sense is to somehow get hold of the land needed to upgrade Witton Lane first. There is more of an option to do a Liverpool style rebuild then, and add a third tier and extended concourses behind the existing structure, get the capacity up in there first before doing the North Stand. It would mean capacity would never drop below what it is now, and eventually get us up towards 60k, and crucially no period away from Villa Park.Can't see it happening though, for all of the reasons already mentioned. With Atairos on board and building their stake it's feeling more and more inevitable to me that they are looking for a multi-purpose venue closer to the city centre. Anywhere close to New St, Moor St, Snow Hill and the new HS2 terminal has the potential to become the number one entertainment venue in the country - just need to find the land.
Quote from: Stu82 on October 10, 2024, 12:50:45 PMQuote from: AV82EC on October 10, 2024, 12:37:20 PMQuote from: Stu82 on October 10, 2024, 12:16:46 PMQuote from: Ads on October 10, 2024, 11:50:46 AMMan City's match day income compared to ours is your best comparison. Not a London club, not particularly expensive in contrast either.We made £18.1m and they made £71.9m. So we could keep a Diaby or a Luiz. Pretty significant I'd say.Without wishing to open up this rabbit hole again, £18.1m doesn’t sound to be a correct comparison.That gives a nett average ticket price of £22.00 inc corporate seats.Don’t Villa account for these things differently to everyone else. I’m sure I saw something a year or so back in one of the yearly accounts match threads that seemed to suggest that our hospitality and other stuff was included in our commercial income and not matchday revenue.Yes it does, I think the way we record income is different, hence the larger than expected gap in revenue between the two clubs.Thanks Stu. As I was writing that reply I was trying to convince myself I hadn’t dreamt it.
Quote from: Risso on October 10, 2024, 09:59:55 AMQuote from: Ads on October 10, 2024, 09:12:32 AMIf we had to share at the Molineux, they might let us put in temporary stands in the corners to increase the attendance. Issue with the Albion is it's 26,000, so no room for all season ticket holders. At least at the Custard Bowl, we'd have space for all season ticket holders.Leicester should be 40,000 by then. The main benefits to that being, it's a short train ride or hop up the M69, but mainly, it's closer to me.Croke Park is a fine stadium and would enable us to accommodate all those on the season ticket waiting list, plus it's just a short hop from BHX.
Quote from: Ads on October 10, 2024, 09:12:32 AMIf we had to share at the Molineux, they might let us put in temporary stands in the corners to increase the attendance. Issue with the Albion is it's 26,000, so no room for all season ticket holders. At least at the Custard Bowl, we'd have space for all season ticket holders.Leicester should be 40,000 by then. The main benefits to that being, it's a short train ride or hop up the M69, but mainly, it's closer to me.
If we had to share at the Molineux, they might let us put in temporary stands in the corners to increase the attendance. Issue with the Albion is it's 26,000, so no room for all season ticket holders. At least at the Custard Bowl, we'd have space for all season ticket holders.
Two thousand for us riff-raff? Cheers, you shouldn't have...
Where to play isn't really an issue, it's just down to preference. I suspect the decision will be based on potential for corporate hospitality, which I suspect Cov would win out?We have 27k season ticket holders. So that, plus an away allocation of 3k as per Premier League rules, means a 30k seater is the minimum.Coventry have a 32k capacity, so that gives you additional for corporate or non-ST fans.
so its fag packet - but there match day turn over is 72m - they have a capacity of 53k - so make approx 1,350 per seat per season. So with our capacity of 42k * 1350 per seat comes to about £57m
Quote from: Dogtanian on October 10, 2024, 04:16:11 PMWhere to play isn't really an issue, it's just down to preference. I suspect the decision will be based on potential for corporate hospitality, which I suspect Cov would win out?We have 27k season ticket holders. So that, plus an away allocation of 3k as per Premier League rules, means a 30k seater is the minimum.Coventry have a 32k capacity, so that gives you additional for corporate or non-ST fans.But what I don't get is this- why do that when playing at a Villa Park without a North stand would already be a 36,000 seater venue and probably have enough premium etc plus the added advantage of being our home? And if they can acquire more property behind the Witton that opens up the prospect of building behind the existing stand allowing the current one to remain open for a good chunk of the hypothetical construction?