Not condoning the rules but the sooner we become sustainable the better.Currently we are at the mercy of others clubs in each transfer window and reliant on NSWE funding us to grow. If they lose interest, which they might, theres a risk we will sink. We’ve made great strides recently, and I dont think we are a million miles away as long as we control our spending over the next few windows.
Quote from: Dante Lavelli on Today at 07:57:26 AMNot condoning the rules but the sooner we become sustainable the better.Currently we are at the mercy of others clubs in each transfer window and reliant on NSWE funding us to grow. If they lose interest, which they might, theres a risk we will sink. We’ve made great strides recently, and I dont think we are a million miles away as long as we control our spending over the next few windows.I don’t think it’s going to be a problem becoming sustainable. The problem would be what would be left when we’d done so. Worse players, basically. With the current system of financial controls we are never going to be able to breach the ‘big six’ with any permanence. Nor will Newcastle Everton West Ham or any other ambitious club.
With the current system of financial controls we are never going to be able to breach the ‘big six’ with any permanence.Nor will Newcastle Everton West Ham or any other ambitious club.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on Today at 10:24:23 AMQuote from: Dante Lavelli on Today at 07:57:26 AMNot condoning the rules but the sooner we become sustainable the better.Currently we are at the mercy of others clubs in each transfer window and reliant on NSWE funding us to grow. If they lose interest, which they might, theres a risk we will sink. We’ve made great strides recently, and I dont think we are a million miles away as long as we control our spending over the next few windows.I don’t think it’s going to be a problem becoming sustainable. The problem would be what would be left when we’d done so. Worse players, basically. With the current system of financial controls we are never going to be able to breach the ‘big six’ with any permanence. Nor will Newcastle Everton West Ham or any other ambitious club.I think this is a pessimistic view of where we are currently.If it were any club other than us, there's no way we'd be saying that spending 90%+ of your revenue on wages is in any way sustainable. It just isn't, it's a ludicrous way to operate a football club. We've simply reached the highest height we can with the approach we've been taking basically since we came up, which is to max out what we can spend within the FFP/PSR limits. It's taken us in to Europe, but realistically we can't get any further with that approach. That's not to say we've done badly in that regard ... we've risen from being in a shit state of affairs in the Championship, in to being Champions League contenders in a very short space of time, with only really the Gerrard season as being anything like a mistake in that time.We're going to have to shift our focus to something closer to what Brentford or Brighton do - but on a bigger, better scale. Buy promising players, make them good, but be under far less pressure to sell them than a Brentford or Brighton would be. That's just the approach we're going to have to take if we want to break in to that upper echelon and stay there. Once we have the commercial income that wages cease to be an issue, we can go back to a situation where we bring in players who are closer to their peak.