Quote from: Rigadon on Today at 11:26:57 AMIt's not all doom and gloom, but that still doesn't make it 'fair'.But what we seem to be asking for wouldn't make it "fair" either. Just unfair in a way that helps us rather hindering us Ask a Brentford or Palace fan whether giving a couple more teams the leeway to spend another half a billion each on their squads would make the league more fair or not.
It's not all doom and gloom, but that still doesn't make it 'fair'.
Quote from: Dave on Today at 11:41:07 AMQuote from: Rigadon on Today at 11:26:57 AMIt's not all doom and gloom, but that still doesn't make it 'fair'.But what we seem to be asking for wouldn't be "fair" either. Just unfair in a way that helps us rather hindering us Ask a Brentford or Palace fan whether giving a couple more teams the leeway to spend another half a billion each on their squads would make the league more fair or not.I'd be happy with it being a level playing field - teams should be able to spend the same amount on transfers and wages, not having it linked to revenue streams in the Far East.
Quote from: Rigadon on Today at 11:26:57 AMIt's not all doom and gloom, but that still doesn't make it 'fair'.But what we seem to be asking for wouldn't be "fair" either. Just unfair in a way that helps us rather hindering us Ask a Brentford or Palace fan whether giving a couple more teams the leeway to spend another half a billion each on their squads would make the league more fair or not.
Quote from: The Edge on Today at 09:54:34 AMQuote from: Smithy on Today at 07:29:46 AMWas chatting about FFP/PSR in the pub at the weekend, and someone made a point that I'm not entirely sure I have a good argument against. FFP was brought in to stop clubs going bankrupt (or face the risk of it), which is preventing wealthy owners from investing amounts that they would like to, and closing the shop to those who built commercial juggernaughts in the pre FFP days.So, if the aim is to stop clubs going bankrupt and spending beyond their means, why not have all financial transactions underwritten by owners and their personal wealth? A bit like when parents will sometimes underwrite a loan for their kids in the early days of their financial independence. The money still gets paid by the club, but if at any point they CAN'T pay it, the liability automatically transfers to the club owner in a personal capacity (or their business if a business owns the club). That liability can be for transfers AND wages.It removes the possibility of a club being bankrupted by careless spending, or going out of business due to their debts, as at no point would a default on money owed be "owed" by the club itself.I don't know enough to know why this is a bad idea and why it wouldn't work in practise (aside from the obvious that it would open the purse strings massively for rich clubs and leave the rest behind). Though I'm sure there are reason why it wouldn't work. Just thought it is was an interesting thought experiment as an alternative to FFP if the genuine aim is "protect clubs from going bust".I had an idea similar to this and we also chatted about it in the pub but I can't remember if I posted it on here. My idea was that any investor into a club must agree a bond depending on the club and the size of it's operations. They would agree the amount with the PL and put it in place before they are allowed to take over a club. This would then be used to keep said club going financially should they decide to leave. Let's face it no top Premier league club is going to go bust because owners would usually only be selling up to a bigger investor at a profit and they would redeem their bond and the new owners would have to then have a similar agreement with the FA. The other thing I would do is ban all state ownership of clubs otherwise a club like Newcastle with no financial restraints would just blow everyone out of the water and we'd be back to square one. I'm just spitballing tbh as I have a very limited understanding of big finance but the system as it stands has just guaranteed the Greedy6 domination. Having said all that Palace have built a very good team under the current restraints but it's highly unlikely they will challenge for the title any time soon.Newcastle would catch Man City and that would be that.
Quote from: Smithy on Today at 07:29:46 AMWas chatting about FFP/PSR in the pub at the weekend, and someone made a point that I'm not entirely sure I have a good argument against. FFP was brought in to stop clubs going bankrupt (or face the risk of it), which is preventing wealthy owners from investing amounts that they would like to, and closing the shop to those who built commercial juggernaughts in the pre FFP days.So, if the aim is to stop clubs going bankrupt and spending beyond their means, why not have all financial transactions underwritten by owners and their personal wealth? A bit like when parents will sometimes underwrite a loan for their kids in the early days of their financial independence. The money still gets paid by the club, but if at any point they CAN'T pay it, the liability automatically transfers to the club owner in a personal capacity (or their business if a business owns the club). That liability can be for transfers AND wages.It removes the possibility of a club being bankrupted by careless spending, or going out of business due to their debts, as at no point would a default on money owed be "owed" by the club itself.I don't know enough to know why this is a bad idea and why it wouldn't work in practise (aside from the obvious that it would open the purse strings massively for rich clubs and leave the rest behind). Though I'm sure there are reason why it wouldn't work. Just thought it is was an interesting thought experiment as an alternative to FFP if the genuine aim is "protect clubs from going bust".I had an idea similar to this and we also chatted about it in the pub but I can't remember if I posted it on here. My idea was that any investor into a club must agree a bond depending on the club and the size of it's operations. They would agree the amount with the PL and put it in place before they are allowed to take over a club. This would then be used to keep said club going financially should they decide to leave. Let's face it no top Premier league club is going to go bust because owners would usually only be selling up to a bigger investor at a profit and they would redeem their bond and the new owners would have to then have a similar agreement with the FA. The other thing I would do is ban all state ownership of clubs otherwise a club like Newcastle with no financial restraints would just blow everyone out of the water and we'd be back to square one. I'm just spitballing tbh as I have a very limited understanding of big finance but the system as it stands has just guaranteed the Greedy6 domination. Having said all that Palace have built a very good team under the current restraints but it's highly unlikely they will challenge for the title any time soon.
Was chatting about FFP/PSR in the pub at the weekend, and someone made a point that I'm not entirely sure I have a good argument against. FFP was brought in to stop clubs going bankrupt (or face the risk of it), which is preventing wealthy owners from investing amounts that they would like to, and closing the shop to those who built commercial juggernaughts in the pre FFP days.So, if the aim is to stop clubs going bankrupt and spending beyond their means, why not have all financial transactions underwritten by owners and their personal wealth? A bit like when parents will sometimes underwrite a loan for their kids in the early days of their financial independence. The money still gets paid by the club, but if at any point they CAN'T pay it, the liability automatically transfers to the club owner in a personal capacity (or their business if a business owns the club). That liability can be for transfers AND wages.It removes the possibility of a club being bankrupted by careless spending, or going out of business due to their debts, as at no point would a default on money owed be "owed" by the club itself.I don't know enough to know why this is a bad idea and why it wouldn't work in practise (aside from the obvious that it would open the purse strings massively for rich clubs and leave the rest behind). Though I'm sure there are reason why it wouldn't work. Just thought it is was an interesting thought experiment as an alternative to FFP if the genuine aim is "protect clubs from going bust".
Quote from: aev on Today at 08:30:52 AMForest seem to be building a decent squad.I guess they can do this as they have been sensible with the wages they are offering.Forest took a gamble. They pissed all over PSR and just took the hit they knew was coming. It certainly paid off for them.
Forest seem to be building a decent squad.I guess they can do this as they have been sensible with the wages they are offering.
Taking all that away, and say fine, accept this fuckwittery as it is from UEFA, I still have a fundamental issue with grasping how we are in such a hole. End of last season widely reported our wage bill was at £250M, so roughly needing a turnover of £325M. With sales and CL money, surely we're going to hit very very close to £320-350m last season, would be around that marker. Since then we've sold or released or reduced the best part of £750k a week off that wage bill, so let's go with £35m reduction as a ballpark. At that figure we'll need a turnover around £280m, not counting in the sales we've made etc. It will be fascinating to see, with a bet spend in the bottom 6 last 3 years nearly, how were not easily compliant next summer, and if so if UEFA remove any of the draconian measures they've put in this summer.
I thought there was a proposal that clubs would only be allowed to spend a multiple of whatever the club with the lowest earnings was. I'm not sure if that makes things better or worse. Although I think we voted against it.As it stands a club like ours needs somewhere between 5-10 years of making good management appointments, with no mistakes on major player recruitment, to sell players you'd prefer to keep for profit, to perform above your abilities on the pitch & make massive improvements in all revenue streams. And if we try to improve our chances of competing by selling the women's team, we're considered to be cheats.Whilst a club like Man Utd, can stink the place out, appoint shit managers, overpay fees & salaries for players who underperform & are then sold at massive losses. All whilst serving massive debts. But they can still spend multiples of what we can & to cap it off, then ask for public funding to build a new stadium.
Quote from: aev on Today at 11:43:00 AMQuote from: Dave on Today at 11:41:07 AMQuote from: Rigadon on Today at 11:26:57 AMIt's not all doom and gloom, but that still doesn't make it 'fair'.But what we seem to be asking for wouldn't be "fair" either. Just unfair in a way that helps us rather hindering us Ask a Brentford or Palace fan whether giving a couple more teams the leeway to spend another half a billion each on their squads would make the league more fair or not.I'd be happy with it being a level playing field - teams should be able to spend the same amount on transfers and wages, not having it linked to revenue streams in the Far East.So all that means is that European clubs become more attractive to players, the best players stop coming to (or staying in) the Premier League, other leagues become more popular, more money flows elsewhere and we're checking in every few weeks to see how Morgan Rogers is getting in at Leipzig or Marseille.Or if you mean UEFA should make that a rule, if the thing that we want is for Villa to become even bigger and even more successful, the last thing we want us for equivalent seized clubs in other leagues to be pulled up to our current financial level.
Quote from: john2710 on Today at 10:55:24 AMI thought there was a proposal that clubs would only be allowed to spend a multiple of whatever the club with the lowest earnings was. I'm not sure if that makes things better or worse. Although I think we voted against it.As it stands a club like ours needs somewhere between 5-10 years of making good management appointments, with no mistakes on major player recruitment, to sell players you'd prefer to keep for profit, to perform above your abilities on the pitch & make massive improvements in all revenue streams. And if we try to improve our chances of competing by selling the women's team, we're considered to be cheats.Whilst a club like Man Utd, can stink the place out, appoint shit managers, overpay fees & salaries for players who underperform & are then sold at massive losses. All whilst serving massive debts. But they can still spend multiples of what we can & to cap it off, then ask for public funding to build a new stadium.It's because they have the luxury of having the biggest worldwide network of plastic glory hunters who are paying memberships for MUTV and buying a new replica shirt every time they sign the latest messiah. Liverpool are in the same position. I hate that them bastards can stink the league out for over 10 years and still dwarf our spending power because of it. And if they ever get one penny of government funding for a new stadium I will rally football fans from far and wide so we can storm parliament then raze it to the ground.
I think there are several fundamental considerations. My comments are about them rather than the detail and our precise position right now:Everyone recognises there needs to be some rules to prevent clubs going out of business whilst also providing some vague sense of being a 'level playing field' - views will differ on far the PL is from that.There are various mechanisms used - like the proportion of salary/squad costs to turnover; total losses in a defined period; etc. Every approach has flaws and will be studied intently and 'gamed' as much as possible - as we have done when trading players to and from a club for our mutual (financial) benefit.Though there has to be the potential for a club to invest to improve. In football, as in every other sector, this means a period of investment when expenditure will exceed revenue whilst the the capability of the business is being developed - in football terms - the squad and coaching staff are upgraded and it take time to deliver improved results (recognising that investment does not guarantee success).What I think the various football regulators are not adequately taking account of is the financial health of each club as it embarks on a period of investment. This plus the ages old issue of the general rules of solvency and being a 'going concern' not applying to football clubs until suddenly they do and then the club in question collapses.To illustrate the point - as many here have commented - we are debt-free and we have owners that have huge financial resources. It's important to note they have the money to invest, not just access to the money to invest (i.e., someone one else's money). We should be capable of making great progress if not restricted by the rules in place.Contrast this this Man U or Chelsea who are laden with debt to the point that would sink other commercial enterprises, yet they can invest at a level far greater than us because the rules only consider what happens in a defined period - not what was the financial health of the club at the outset and now.Ignoring the underlying 'health' of each club strikes me as the greatest flaw in the rules applied by the PL and UEFA. IMO it's tough to draw any conclusion other than it is done to protect the 'big clubs' by insulating them from challengers who have the resources to overtake them - whether done explicitly or otherwise it is corrupt. UTV.[/list]