- Aug 8, 2005
- 27,246
I'm possibly going to start a unpopular thread here, but it seems to me that football is missing the glaring the problem with "project re-start".
All of us, I suspect few have been untouched, have been affected in some way by Covid-19 economically and with the furloughing scheme due to gradually end over the coming 2 months many more of us will suffer further. I don't mind admitting that so far I was one of the lucky ones that only had my pay reduced by 25% for 3 months but I still have a job, for now.
However across the country in businesses where income has dramatically reduced employers have had to make difficult decisions about employees and either reduced worker numbers or reduced pay or hours.
Football, as an entertainment product, has all but been shut down, and whilst they have valiantly carried on, due to the TV money, which I believe has been reduced, they have still lost significant revenue and yet I do not believe that players anywhere (certainly in the top divisions) have taken a pay reduction or suffered financially at all. No doubt in the lower leagues they have suffered.
Surely at some point club owners will need to look at this, and maybe it is further down the line, but all I see is talk of transfers for vast sums of money still and players been paid £100k a week or whatever. It seems so far away from what is happening in the real world, will it ever catch up, or is it still sustainable? Or is it just that economically at the highest level it will be some time before tv companies suffer any economic downside?
All of us, I suspect few have been untouched, have been affected in some way by Covid-19 economically and with the furloughing scheme due to gradually end over the coming 2 months many more of us will suffer further. I don't mind admitting that so far I was one of the lucky ones that only had my pay reduced by 25% for 3 months but I still have a job, for now.
However across the country in businesses where income has dramatically reduced employers have had to make difficult decisions about employees and either reduced worker numbers or reduced pay or hours.
Football, as an entertainment product, has all but been shut down, and whilst they have valiantly carried on, due to the TV money, which I believe has been reduced, they have still lost significant revenue and yet I do not believe that players anywhere (certainly in the top divisions) have taken a pay reduction or suffered financially at all. No doubt in the lower leagues they have suffered.
Surely at some point club owners will need to look at this, and maybe it is further down the line, but all I see is talk of transfers for vast sums of money still and players been paid £100k a week or whatever. It seems so far away from what is happening in the real world, will it ever catch up, or is it still sustainable? Or is it just that economically at the highest level it will be some time before tv companies suffer any economic downside?