This is why it's so hard for us to compete with the established CL clubs in terms of squad building. A few free's and a few £30m players and we start to hit FFP limits. It's even easier for the oil clubs that can invent sponsorships and write their own cheques.
Quote from: Risso on November 27, 2023, 02:28:49 PMWhat are you basing that on?Just some stuff I read a while back. The Jack money is off the books now, so the 'net spend' narrative isn't what it was. I think the FFP maths is an awful lot tighter than people realise.
What are you basing that on?
Quote from: chrisw1 on November 27, 2023, 02:59:25 PMThis is why it's so hard for us to compete with the established CL clubs in terms of squad building. A few free's and a few £30m players and we start to hit FFP limits. It's even easier for the oil clubs that can invent sponsorships and write their own cheques.Yes, that is true, but at the same time I also think you have to give the owners/club enormous credit for getting us from a team not even good enough to be promoted via the automatic spots to one on the fringes of the Champions league fight in four years, all while NOT breaking the FFP rules (though we apparently went very close in the first 2 years we were up).The next bit is the biggest, and toughest step to take, and I honestly don't know how we take that step if we don't have any money to spend. Short of selling someone like Dougie for £100m and letting Monchi invest it in four players who we hope will all be brilliant. But that feels extremely risky, and I hope it doesn't come to that. Everyone sells their best players at some point, but I don't want us to be a Brighton where it becomes a regular occurrence. I'm sure Tom Heck is focussed on improving the commercial areas to help with FFP, but I don't think he could have made even a tiny dent by the next transfer window.
Not that I’m advocating selling either but selling Dougie/SJM would be similar to selling a homegrown player now as their transfer fees have been written off over the duration of their first contract (I think).
Quote from: Dante Lavelli on November 28, 2023, 06:05:58 AMNot that I’m advocating selling either but selling Dougie/SJM would be similar to selling a homegrown player now as their transfer fees have been written off over the duration of their first contract (I think).That's not quite how it works, but both of them will have hardly anything left value wise on the balance sheet. McGinn was so cheap that that would have been the case if we'd sold him 6 months after he signed to be honest.
That's sort of right but the important bit is that whatever their 'value' is when they sign a new deal gets redistributed over that new deal.So signs for £10m over 5 years. After 3 years value is 4m but signs a new deal over 4 years. From them their value drops by £1m a year until the end of the new contract.The only way they'd hit zero is if the contract had ended and they were free to leave but then signed a new deal.
That's basically right, yes. But for FFP purposes, you'd assume a new contract is going to mean an uplift in salary as well. And obviously you're going to have that £10m a year coming off for an extra 3 years, so it starts to get a bit like credit card debt.
Quote from: paul_e on December 01, 2023, 07:42:51 AMThat's sort of right but the important bit is that whatever their 'value' is when they sign a new deal gets redistributed over that new deal.So signs for £10m over 5 years. After 3 years value is 4m but signs a new deal over 4 years. From them their value drops by £1m a year until the end of the new contract.The only way they'd hit zero is if the contract had ended and they were free to leave but then signed a new deal.I assume we're talking about the amortisation of their purchase price here, rather than their book value? What you've described sounds like it makes perfect sense, but it also feels like it would be open to abuse by clubs who could extend the contracts of expensive players to improve their FFP numbers in the short-term? For example, you buy a £100m player on a four-year deal, who costs you £25m a year in FFP terms, but after two years you're in potential FFP trouble; to mitigate that you could give that player a new 5-year contract, and the year-three amortised cost drops from £25m (for the 3rd year of a 4-year deal for a player costing £100m) down to £10m (The 1st year of a five-year deal for a player who now "costs" only £50m).Or have I got this completely arse-end backwards?