Do you have a link to this mate? The only thing I can find is a vague mention that FIFA were 'thinking about it'
Seems unlikely with some european teams playing across the summer and most leagues starting on different dates.
Do you have a link to this mate? The only thing I can find is a vague mention that FIFA were 'thinking about it'
Do you have a link to this mate? The only thing I can find is a vague mention that FIFA were 'thinking about it'
That's gross though. For example in 2017 it was 119 gross and 30 operating. Both important measures but it's the sort of gloss a CEO puts in a statement.
Five clubs voted against the move Spurs voted for it
Manchester City, Manchester United, Crystal Palace, Watford and Swansea City were the clubs against the move
Levy is obsessed with a new stadium to increase income to allow Spurs to compete with the top clubs, it’s the Arsenal model. Its short term pain for long term gain. Unlike Arsenal who had a site close to the existing ground Spurs built on the current site, this need a plan which would take 2.5 seasons So season 1 start the build and loose some of the existing structure Season 2 move to Wembley permission granted by PL, no brainer. So how to get round the half season? Well ask PL to play a first few games away, no issue been done before. The next part of the plan involves how to get away with the addition few months required. Simple, blame it on safety that’s always a good one. A blind man can see this is a lie. If the issue was safety the ground would have ready for the Liverpool game. The cranes removed, public areas around the ground would have been made safe, yes tarmac layed, safety barriers installed, pitch layed and ready to play on, the test events completed seats installed etc So stop talking rubbish the facts are before your eyes, just either are taken in by the PR or just choose to ignore what everyone else can see. I said on here before the season started, before safety-gate that the stadium was months away from completion and you said otherwise. Levy was faced with a problem when he saw the fixtures, before they were released, that the City home game was clashing with the NFL weekend, should he come clean and ask the PL to make adjustments so that there was no home game that weekend? Problem being it would highlight to the PL that the stadium was months away, not weeks, to opening. So in true Levy fashion he ignored it. The man has lumbered Spurs with a huge debt approaching £600m that will hamper the team for many years But at least when you have a piss you will be able to admire the nice tiling, eat cheese and drink very expensive beer from the longest bar, near the biggest club shop and watch the goals conceded on the biggest screens. Wake up Jim the man has treated you and Spurs fans with contempt and much worse than that the rest of the PL and their fans. His decisions resulted in the farce of a pitch at Wembley that could have led to injuries fortunately justice was done and the Champions got the 3 points deserved
Well, if you really want to get into the detail.........!!
In 2017, profit from operations excluding football trading and before exceptional items and depreciation was £118m.
After exceptional items and depreciation, it was £78m.
After football trading, it was £70m.
After interest it was £58m.
After tax, it was £41m.
One point worth bearing in mind: depreciation of tangible assets rose from £15m in 2016 to £39m in 2017. There's no detail on that figure but the only explanation for the huge hike that makes any sense to me is that the value of the old stadium had to be wiped from the accounts. That's not an adjustment that Spurs will have to make again.
So the stadium is free then?
£6m of the £39m is enabling the Northumberland Development Project, which will be higher next year at a guess.
Spurs own statement said they had extended their borrowing facility to £637m. That's frightening. Of course they may not use it but their debt was £366m at the end of June.
This is Man Utd territory with the difference being that Man Utd generate revenues of £600m per annum and can handle a certain level of debt repayment.
I think you need to look up the meaning of “unilateral” This was a democratic vote by all the members of the PL each had a vote 5 said no the rest including Spurs yes So Spurs got what they wantedIndeed. As I already said, I wasn't claiming that Spurs were hard done by. Merely pointing out that, because of Spurs' particular need for financial prudence at this time, the unilateral early transfer window closure worked against them.