Spurs would be "infinity" per silverware, whatever metric you used.Unfortunately, using wages as a baseline metric for achievement still hide the true gulf in achievement between clubs.
Again, the point of playing football at this level is to win silverware. Everything else is just filler in the end.
So if we must compare clubs based on finances, it must be per trophy. And net spend per trophy is arguably the best way to normalise (and contextualise) performance across vastly different financial structures and levels of resource.
Using any other category can make the Spurs of the world look “well run” and “high achieving”, when they are nothing of the sort.
No, the Spurs value would be the total they spent (as a zero factor would be multiplied by 1 to find true value in the benchmark).Spurs would be "infinity" per silverware, whatever metric you used.
I was suggesting that trophies per wages spend would be a better metric than trophies per net spend.
The link between wages and success has been proved many times over, so it's an easy one to do. It's not perfect, but compared to net spend it's much more accurate.
After all, Southampton have a bigger five year net spend than we do - but clearly they don't have a better squad, and that's reflected in the fact that their wage bill is much, much smaller.
Unfortunately, using wages as a baseline metric for achievement still hide the true gulf in achievement between clubs.
Again, the point of playing football at this level is to win silverware. Everything else is just filler in the end.
So if we must compare clubs based on finances, it must be per trophy. And net spend per trophy is arguably the best way to normalise (and contextualise) performance across vastly different financial structures and levels of resource.
Using any other category can make the Spurs of the world look “well run” and “high achieving”, when they are nothing of the sort.
We haven't got the highest wage bill eitherI didn't keep listening but heard Murphy earlier mention that wages have to be included in net spend calculations. Hmm, looking for a new stick Danny, now we are way down your precious spend table..??
Did they possibly have outside help.Their 79 points in 1999 wouldn't have won the title in any season since.
You can over multiple seasons, that increases the universe to a statistically significant level, and as winning silverware is the point of football at this level, using any other confining factor is just giving people like Levy and the Glazers a means of obfuscating underachievement and waste.:) You can't compare anything per trophy in any meaningful way, the denominator is too small to provide any useful statistical insight. There just aren't enough trophies to go around.
He's a blue.Nice to have a bit of truth and balance at last…he won’t last ;))
Funny the points total is never mentioned when discussing the treble…Their 79 points in 1999 wouldn't have won the title in any season since.
No, the Spurs value would be the total they spent (as a zero factor would be multiplied by 1 to find true value in the benchmark).
But beyond that analysis accounting, the point of net spend per trophy (which should include wages by common accounting methods, by the way) would be to do exactly what you are referencing: show that clubs like Southampton and Spurs have poor achievement and financial waste at this level.
And the overall link to spending is even stronger than simply wages (capital investment included), so factoring in the many variables makes it a more accurate benchmark.
You can over multiple seasons, that increases the universe to a statistically significant level, and as winning silverware is the point of football at this level, using any other confining factor is just giving people like Levy and the Glazers a means of obfuscating underachievement and waste.
You’ve just answered your own question. ;-):) Exactly which common accounting method would add wages to net spend? Amortisation plus wages would be more meaningful, but the result would still be less meaningful on a per trophy basis as a determination of relative performance.
Agreed. All of my posts are about *if we must compare finances for purposes of benchmarking performance*, which I have said I don’t think we should.Agree about silverware being what counts, but beyond that, it's mainly the memories. City have given us so many -and not just the great ones since the takeover.
Before that we've got the relegations, the last-gasp promotions...
What have fucking Spurs got? Their highlight of last season was not selling Harry Kane to us and beating us with a nine man defence. Other than that just mediocrity, season after season (with the odd narrow failure thrown in).
What?Agreed. All of my posts are about *if we must compare finances for purposes of benchmarking performance*, which I have said I don’t think we should.
And you have put perfectly why points and table position over multiple seasons is a very poor means of benchmarking performance.
I think you’ve missed basically every other post I have made not only in this thread but on the forum. ;-)What?
It's a sport mate. Success on the pitch is how you measure success. All this relentless calculator effort to "prove" we're the best mathematically is missing the wood for the trees.
I think we're agreeing in part - the post I replied to was talking about net transfer spend. I was that IF we had to compare, wages is a better metric - as it's by far the biggest outlay.No, the Spurs value would be the total they spent (as a zero factor would be multiplied by 1 to find true value in the benchmark).
But beyond that analysis accounting, the point of net spend per trophy (which should include wages by common accounting methods, by the way) would be to do exactly what you are referencing: show that clubs like Southampton and Spurs have poor achievement and financial waste at this level.
And the overall link to spending is even stronger than simply wages (capital investment included), so factoring in the many variables makes it a more accurate benchmark.
You can over multiple seasons, that increases the universe to a statistically significant level, and as winning silverware is the point of football at this level, using any other confining factor is just giving people like Levy and the Glazers a means of obfuscating underachievement and waste.