abu13
Well-Known Member
This is what i can't get my head around, for the sake of arguments lets say that the average wage in London is twice that of say Newcastle.
Clubs can set their ticket prices as they see fit, therefore assuming London is more affluent than Newcastle and have more disposable income then they can charge twice as much for a ticket.
Therefore two clubs could have the same attendance but one earns twice as much as the other, given that you can only spend what you earn then Newcastle are at a disadvantage straight away purely down to location and geographic economic conditions.
The only way this cold be controlled would be by having a fixed ticket price throughout the league. The ticket price would have to low enough to allow clubs like Wigan to retain their support.
The other option for me would be why not just split all gate receipts 50/50 between the clubs involved.
Now that is an argument for FFP.
Clubs can set their ticket prices as they see fit, therefore assuming London is more affluent than Newcastle and have more disposable income then they can charge twice as much for a ticket.
Therefore two clubs could have the same attendance but one earns twice as much as the other, given that you can only spend what you earn then Newcastle are at a disadvantage straight away purely down to location and geographic economic conditions.
The only way this cold be controlled would be by having a fixed ticket price throughout the league. The ticket price would have to low enough to allow clubs like Wigan to retain their support.
The other option for me would be why not just split all gate receipts 50/50 between the clubs involved.
Now that is an argument for FFP.