*I didn't realise she was a cougar compared to Emi.
The greatest correlation between money and success in football is the wage bill - the higher your wage bill the higher you finish. I think everything the club does in the transfer market is with this in mind; ie: creating enough revenue to support the highest possible wage bill and then getting the best value for money out of that wage bill. You can already see from our wages to turnover ratio that we push this to the legal limit. Emi is rumoured to be on £200k a week and we probably think we can get a really good, younger keeper from abroad for half that, or maybe even less, while the fee will increase our revenue and help support an even higher wage bill. The measure of the success of this policy is our league position over the last two years and the strength in depth of our squad.
Quote from: Percy McCarthy on May 18, 2025, 11:41:23 PMThe greatest correlation between money and success in football is the wage bill - the higher your wage bill the higher you finish. I think everything the club does in the transfer market is with this in mind; ie: creating enough revenue to support the highest possible wage bill and then getting the best value for money out of that wage bill. You can already see from our wages to turnover ratio that we push this to the legal limit. Emi is rumoured to be on £200k a week and we probably think we can get a really good, younger keeper from abroad for half that, or maybe even less, while the fee will increase our revenue and help support an even higher wage bill. The measure of the success of this policy is our league position over the last two years and the strength in depth of our squad.It’s late and I’m tired but isn’t that just pushing the can down the road. We get rid of Emi to release his big wages and also receive a fee but then we replace his big wages on, for example, Asensio and Rashford. I suppose in that scenario you’re slowly chipping away at the wages to turnover ratio so instead of it being 97% it’ll be 92% (this is a guess and not at all mathematically worked out). All well and good as long as we’re relatively successful in maintaining a competitive team as well as increasing turnover by whatever means in the future.
Quote from: Bent Neilsens Screamer on May 19, 2025, 12:08:31 AMQuote from: Percy McCarthy on May 18, 2025, 11:41:23 PMThe greatest correlation between money and success in football is the wage bill - the higher your wage bill the higher you finish. I think everything the club does in the transfer market is with this in mind; ie: creating enough revenue to support the highest possible wage bill and then getting the best value for money out of that wage bill. You can already see from our wages to turnover ratio that we push this to the legal limit. Emi is rumoured to be on £200k a week and we probably think we can get a really good, younger keeper from abroad for half that, or maybe even less, while the fee will increase our revenue and help support an even higher wage bill. The measure of the success of this policy is our league position over the last two years and the strength in depth of our squad.It’s late and I’m tired but isn’t that just pushing the can down the road. We get rid of Emi to release his big wages and also receive a fee but then we replace his big wages on, for example, Asensio and Rashford. I suppose in that scenario you’re slowly chipping away at the wages to turnover ratio so instead of it being 97% it’ll be 92% (this is a guess and not at all mathematically worked out). All well and good as long as we’re relatively successful in maintaining a competitive team as well as increasing turnover by whatever means in the future.Yeah, that’s it really (kicking the can). Trying to be as good as we can and working on making the revenue catch up.
It felt like another emotional farewell, not least because one of the lads in the dressing room surely informed Martinez that if he completed the game against Spurs he would surpass Mark Bosnich for the most Premier League minutes ever played by an Aston Villa keeper.The clean sheet was a welcome bonus, marking the first time the Argentinean had recorded three consecutive shutouts in the league since March 2022.That significant defensive improvement has sparked this ridiculous Villa run, with the aberrative defeat to Palace in February a watershed moment. They have conceded as many goals in the nine subsequent league games as they did in those 90 regrettable minutes, since which no side has won more games or accrued more points.There are deeper reasons behind it – the return of players from injury, improvement in how they work off the ball, a lower defensive line and overall better structure – and Unai Emery deserves immense credit for turning around a season that threatened to peter out.The frustration that even Champions League qualification will not offset the need to make at least one significant sale is understandable. Martinez, whose stock remains high despite a poor season on a personal level, may yet be sacrificed. But his role in everything up to and including this final push will not be forgotten.