if Lerner and co were still at the helm it would have been a very different approach. American owners...most of them it seems really want to NFLallise football. With all their wealth and you'd think brains they'd grasp that there is more to it than money. Culture, Community, history and love are all what make football what it is. That doesn't exist in mercenary players playing the game in Kuala Lumpur in air-conditioned stadiums in front of a crowds that have very little understanding about the spectacle they have attended. I suppose you could say the owners wont care about that as long as the money keeps rolling in. People will tire of it. Not much demand for the Harlem Globetrotters these days is there?
The Premier League are in a bit of a bind. They have signed TV deals a commercial arrangements with sponsors that assumes a 20-teamstable league and - implicit - the presence of the so-called Giants. It will find the money drops off quickly, so its ability to wave a big stick at the scabs is somewhat limited.,
So what exactly was the criteria for inclusion in this fabulous league? Could it be levels of debt they are all in?
Quote from: Mister E on April 19, 2021, 10:43:55 AMThe Premier League are in a bit of a bind. They have signed TV deals a commercial arrangements with sponsors that assumes a 20-teamstable league and - implicit - the presence of the so-called Giants. It will find the money drops off quickly, so its ability to wave a big stick at the scabs is somewhat limited.,Sky would probably sue the PL if they kicked them out.I think the only way this can be stopped for English teams is if their fans - the likes of Liverpool and ManU throw a total wobbler and protest and boycott etc.
Just reading that the club owners behind the ESL want to focus on 'Fans of the Future' rather than 'legacy fans'.'Legacy Fans' are those who pre-dated their involvement in these clubs.Wow. The contempt is mind blowing. Is it really a good idea to write off the very people who made your club what it is?
Quote from: Brend'Watkins on April 19, 2021, 10:55:03 AMif Lerner and co were still at the helm it would have been a very different approach. American owners...most of them it seems really want to NFLallise football. With all their wealth and you'd think brains they'd grasp that there is more to it than money. Culture, Community, history and love are all what make football what it is. That doesn't exist in mercenary players playing the game in Kuala Lumpur in air-conditioned stadiums in front of a crowds that have very little understanding about the spectacle they have attended. I suppose you could say the owners wont care about that as long as the money keeps rolling in. People will tire of it. Not much demand for the Harlem Globetrotters these days is there?Have you seen the demand for tickets for NFL games in London though, and that's a relatively parochial sport with limited world wide appeal compared to football.
The threat of stopping players from playing in the World Cup for their countries would be legally challenged, as the players will argue that they are being forced into this Super league by their clubs.
Quote from: Bobby Boy on April 19, 2021, 10:56:25 AMJust reading that the club owners behind the ESL want to focus on 'Fans of the Future' rather than 'legacy fans'.'Legacy Fans' are those who pre-dated their involvement in these clubs.Wow. The contempt is mind blowing. Is it really a good idea to write off the very people who made your club what it is?Fans of the future are people sitting in an apartment block in Shanghai or Oman or Seoul or suchlike who have never stepped foot into a football stadium, but will sit there in their football shirt watching a live stream of The Manchester Devils vs The Milan Pizzaboys after paying $25 for the stream.
Quote from: sickbeggar on April 19, 2021, 10:48:12 AMDepends on the finances of these breakaway clubs. I imagine the likes of Chelsea and City are okay, but Arsenal, Man U, Tottenham etc.. Over in Spain, rumours Barca are not in good shape... Probably Italy as well. Can they afford to lose their place at the trough while they set this league up? The PL will take a big financial hit if they left straight away, but they'd survive.The whole point is yes they can, JP Morgan have pledged £3.5bn for the clubs. That's £300m each before they've kicked a ball. I imagine that with the potential world wide income they're eyeing up, they'd double or triple that if they had to.
Depends on the finances of these breakaway clubs. I imagine the likes of Chelsea and City are okay, but Arsenal, Man U, Tottenham etc.. Over in Spain, rumours Barca are not in good shape... Probably Italy as well. Can they afford to lose their place at the trough while they set this league up? The PL will take a big financial hit if they left straight away, but they'd survive.
I would have thought preventing players playing for their national teams is the easiest thing to implement.