Bazzmand Show
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 Jun 2009
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You're assuming this means it raises the level of competition, whereas it would stifle the level of competition.
How does it stifle competition?
You're assuming this means it raises the level of competition, whereas it would stifle the level of competition.
No, from what we know there is no limit on salary spread across the squad so PL clubs can still match anyone but they’d have to offset a mega earner with ‘low’ earners, dare I say it, academy graduates…
Turkeys voting for Christmas again!So does this mean it would be pointless for us to carry on selling our academy graduates each summer,as net spend would be taken out of the equation?I probably shouldn’t comment until I’ve a better understanding of the proposals but it’s f’kin nonsense isn’t it!?The best players will all end up in Saudi,playing in front of crowds of five thousand,for a million a week!Are they really that f’kin stupid!
You still haven’t even attempted to explain how it will stifle competition.
And please don’t tell me everyone will go to Spain or Germany again when they’ve got more strict caps that this.
If it's based on TV money, then it doesn't matter who comes up. The lowest place team will get a set amount regardless, give or take a few million based on how much they're shown on TV.Remember we would have known where the limit would be as soon as Luton confirmed their promotion.
So we had from June 2023 to June 2024 to plan for the limit changing and our wages going up. We will just have to balance that going forward like the club balance net spend for FFP. Every club in Europe is going to be doing this.
A year? To change contracts that in a certain club's case still have seven years to run? The main issue with all of this is the constant changing and then expecting clubs to adapt their long-term plans to the whims of regulators that seem to change every couple of years. That was the whole BS around our first FFP failure, with UEFA deciding that these rules apply even to contracts signed before the regulations came in. No team can build a squad if you're constantly changing the rules under which they have to operate. If you want financial rules, fine. Draw them up properly. Give people at least 3 years to prepare for them. Don't introduce something you've come up with on the back of a fag packet and then change it again next season when you realise it isn't working.Might get rid of huge bonuses, but like I said in the comment above, clubs have a years worth of time to get their ducks in a row. You can sell more, spend less, pay agents less, structure contracts differently.
I don't think Barcelona are an example for anyone, to be honest.La Liga is already operating a similar system and clubs like Barcelona have shown it’s still very flexible if you need to fuck about to lower your cap.
Wouldn’t be that sure,didn’t they say that about the golfers?Won't happen.
You're the one in favour of this. You explain how tying the top to the bottom will improve things for a club like City?
I know the theory is that it will level the playing field but you're assuming that the bottom clubs revenues will rise and therefore the standard of football. Whereas it will stifle the top teams.
Quite, there zero chance a superstar like Erling Haaland would ever play alongside academy graduates like Oscar Bobb and Rico Lewis on 20x their earnings.If you can find a mega-earner who is tempted to play in a team of academy graduates.