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[Football] Forest docked 4 points FFP



Beanstalk

Well-known member
Apr 5, 2017
3,030
London
I've said it before and I'll bore you all by saying it again.
Chelsea have played a final and are back at Wembley for a cup semi.
If Brighton exceeded FFP and had a points deducted we'd already had the best season in our history and you cant take that away.
So does a small points deduction mean breaking the rules is worth it.
Answer YES.
But we haven't broken FFP/PSR and we've had a better 3-year-period than either Forest or Everton.

Just because you can cheat, doesn't mean that the outcome will be more positive than those who don't.

And I'll add to this, I'd be fuming at the club if we'd just plunged into the relegation zone because we'd spent £15m on Emmanuel Dennis, and £20m on Chris Wood.
 




Beanstalk

Well-known member
Apr 5, 2017
3,030
London
It's got everything to do with them
Has it?

City and Chelsea's cases are considerably more complex and the allegations considerably more serious than just overspending. The only similarity is that the rule infringements fall under the same wider umbrella term (FFP/PSR). As far as I'm aware, neither of those clubs will face the same charges as Everton or Forest. (Chelsea may in the near future but not at the moment).
 


hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
62,759
Chandlers Ford
But we haven't broken FFP/PSR and we've had a better 3-year-period than either Forest or Everton.

Just because you can cheat, doesn't mean that the outcome will be more positive than those who don't.

And I'll add to this, I'd be fuming at the club if we'd just plunged into the relegation zone because we'd spent £20m on Chris Wood.
The 11 goals Chris Wood has scored this season, include:

- an 89th minute winner, in a 2-1 win over Sheffield United.
- both goals in a 2-2 draw at home to Luton.
- all THREE goals in a 3-1 win at Newcastle.
- Forest's only goal, in a 1-1 draw at Luton.

If his signing alone had cost them the 4 point deduction, it would have been well worth it.

(Which is why the penalty is absolute pointless bollocks).
 


Beanstalk

Well-known member
Apr 5, 2017
3,030
London
The 11 goals Chris Wood has scored this season, include:

- an 89th minute winner, in a 2-1 win over Sheffield United.
- both goals in a 2-2 draw at home to Luton.
- all THREE goals in a 3-1 win at Newcastle.
- Forest's only goal, in a 1-1 draw at Luton.

If his signing alone had cost them the 4 point deduction, it would have been well worth it.

(Which is why the penalty is absolute pointless bollocks).
It's a good point. But what should the penalty be then? Go back and 8 points off of them for Wood? Well then really you'd have to replay the games in their entirety to be fair.

I don't like the giving them two back for being civil. That's rubbish. But I can't really see how else you do it?

Both Everton and Forest felt it should've just been a fine or a transfer ban. That would've been even more pointless.
 


FatSuperman

Well-known member
Feb 25, 2016
2,922
"Forest, who hired leading sports lawyer Nick de Marco to defend them, are thought to have based their case around the sale of Brennan Johnson to Tottenham Hotspur in September.

The move, worth more than £45m, took place after the accounting deadline but Forest argue selling Johnson at a later date allowed them to earn a higher fee than if they had sold him by 30 June."

So what? It's easy to use an isolated transfer as the reason they breached. They knew when the financial year end was they shouldn't have spent so much in the first place. If they wanted to spend they should have sold first. Pathetic attempt to justify it.
Very much like Red Bull going over the F1 budget due to their catering budget.
 




FatSuperman

Well-known member
Feb 25, 2016
2,922
It's a good point. But what should the penalty be then? Go back and 8 points off of them for Wood? Well then really you'd have to replay the games in their entirety to be fair.

I don't like the giving them two back for being civil. That's rubbish. But I can't really see how else you do it?

Both Everton and Forest felt it should've just been a fine or a transfer ban. That would've been even more pointless.

But none of that accounts for the fact Chris Wood took the place of a different player. For all we know, they could have used a youth player or found a freebie that scored just as important goals as Chris.
 


Official Old Man

Uckfield Seagull
Aug 27, 2011
9,101
Brighton
But we haven't broken FFP/PSR and we've had a better 3-year-period than either Forest or Everton.

Just because you can cheat, doesn't mean that the outcome will be more positive than those who don't.

And I'll add to this, I'd be fuming at the club if we'd just plunged into the relegation zone because we'd spent £15m on Emmanuel Dennis, and £20m on Chris Wood.
Full marks to TBMBE for keeping us legal, but just as an example, we purchased Harry Kane who then scored 30 goals and got us into the UCL.
We would have a season or more of European football, attract even better players and make lots of money.
Then, two years later, we get deducted 6 points.
This is just an example of the complete waste of time picking on the small club but waiting years to maybe hit the big clubs.
 


schmunk

Why oh why oh why?
Jan 19, 2018
10,352
Mid mid mid Sussex
Has it?

City and Chelsea's cases are considerably more complex and the allegations considerably more serious than just overspending. The only similarity is that the rule infringements fall under the same wider umbrella term (FFP/PSR). As far as I'm aware, neither of those clubs will face the same charges as Everton or Forest. (Chelsea may in the near future but not at the moment).
As an arcane comparison:

Everton and Forest have failed to hand in their homework one week, and admitted upfront they hadn't done it (although 'they weren't feeling very well, and their pen ran out and the shop was shut').

Man City and Chelsea have handed in their homework every week this year, but on closer inspection it's never in their own handwriting, they're insisting that they've not cheated and their parents are backing them up.
 




Beanstalk

Well-known member
Apr 5, 2017
3,030
London
As an arcane comparison, Everton and Forest have failed to hand in their homework one week, and admitted upfront they hadn't done it (although 'they weren't feeling very well, and their pen ran out and the shop was shut').

Man City and Chelsea have handed in their homework every week this year, but on closer inspection it's never in their own handwriting, they're insisting that they've not cheated and their parents are backing them up.
Yes. Though in this scenario, City and Chelsea’s parents have also allegedly given the teachers millions of pounds through an offshore company to help keep all parties happy and quiet and to keep it out of view of the school who would punish them if found out.
 


Littlemo

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2022
1,697
In the reports that they publish, have they explained how the points deductions are calculated? I think they did in Everton’s case, as the appeal rested on them throwing out the bit about not cooperating, but I guess it’s explained in there?
 


Cheshire Cat

The most curious thing..
There needs to be an unequivocal and published set of tariffs for this. And a coherent rubric for decision making.

Instead they are making it up as they go along, changing the objectives, plucking tariffs out of thin air, basing the narrative on wafer-thin foundations that are easily challenged. All slogans, huff and puff, and no evident plan let alone end game. No idea what success should look like.

It all seems a bit 'Brexitty' to me.
£10 million = 1 point?
 




Hiheidi

Well-known member
Dec 27, 2022
1,882
In the reports that they publish, have they explained how the points deductions are calculated? I think they did in Everton’s case, as the appeal rested on them throwing out the bit about not cooperating, but I guess it’s explained in there?
This is how they have broken it down.
20240318_160818.png
 


Cheshire Cat

The most curious thing..
But we haven't broken FFP/PSR and we've had a better 3-year-period than either Forest or Everton.

Just because you can cheat, doesn't mean that the outcome will be more positive than those who don't.

And I'll add to this, I'd be fuming at the club if we'd just plunged into the relegation zone because we'd spent £15m on Emmanuel Dennis, and £20m on Chris Wood.
There was a DULLARD on 5 Live quoting us and Palace losing c£100 million and getting away with it. I wasn't listening sufficiently for the details - too busy trying to not to burn a spag bol.
 






Easy 10

Brain dead MUG SHEEP
Jul 5, 2003
62,411
Location Location
Predictably this whole sorry saga is drowning in a sea of whataboutery.

The wider point is that breaches of FFP/PSR is now finally showing some TEETH, with actual shock-horror points deductions instead of slap-on-the-wrist fines - and this is what is now driving the outrage. That, and the fact that it is relatively unprecedented. Well guess what - they are now setting the precedents that will help in setting future tariffs for clubs breaching the rules. The rules, I might add, that EVERY CLUB signed up to.

You could argue that the points deductions have been too lenient, given that Forest and Everton have narrowly swerved the guillotine at the expense of other clubs who cut their cloth, and went down as a result. And I'm annoyed at the appeals process cutting the punishment. But at least this is a start.

If you are going to take the piss with spending, then as everyone has seen, you will now reap the consequences. Its already in the post for Chelsea when their incredible splurge is due for review. City have arseholed up the whole process with their lawyers for years, but I live in hope that they'll meet their Waterloo at some point.

Meantime, I'm liking seeing consequences. Its a mess, but it needed doing.
 


Green Cross Code Man

Wunt be druv
Mar 30, 2006
20,748
Eastbourne
Predictably this whole sorry saga is drowning in a sea of whataboutery.

The wider point is that breaches of FFP/PSR is now finally showing some TEETH, with actual shock-horror points deductions instead of slap-on-the-wrist fines - and this is what is now driving the outrage. That, and the fact that it is relatively unprecedented. Well guess what - they are now setting the precedents that will help in setting future tariffs for clubs breaching the rules. The rules, I might add, that EVERY CLUB signed up to.

You could argue that the points deductions have been too lenient, given that Forest and Everton have narrowly swerved the guillotine at the expense of other clubs who cut their cloth, and went down as a result. And I'm annoyed at the appeals process cutting the punishment. But at least this is a start.

If you are going to take the piss with spending, then as everyone has seen, you will now reap the consequences. Its already in the post for Chelsea when their incredible splurge is due for review. City have arseholed up the whole process with their lawyers for years, but I live in hope that they'll meet their Waterloo at some point.

Meantime, I'm liking seeing consequences. Its a mess, but it needed doing.
Agree in sentiment, but all we will be left with is the established big clubs along with no foreseeable way to break into the group. Chelsea only have a successful history in the last 20 odd years as they bought it with Russian tears. No-one else can now do that, buy success and earn a load of $$$ whilst picking up an army of (annoying) plastic fans who continue to help any profit the club may end up with, albeit not in their current kamikaze model. And that will probably sew up the top spots for the most part except for the odd and less frequent outlier like Leicester. So we may end up with a less and less competitive league.
 


AlexBH

Well-known member
Nov 19, 2017
614
It seems arbitrary how they dish out these points deductions. What about Man City? I’d be absolutely fuming if I were a Forest fan.
 






Jim in the West

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Sep 13, 2003
4,952
Way out West
I suspect it's lower than Everton's deduction as they took into account Forest's argument around the timing of the sale of Brennan Johnson to Spurs as mitigation, having showed how it was in their best interest to hold out for a few months to receive a far better price for the player, rather than to sell earlier to meet this deadline but receive a far lower fee in return.

Their argument was simply why should they be forced to sell early when it damages them financially, and if that (later) sale was taken into account, they would have met the criteria.

If clubs are forced to accept low fees in order to meet a deadline whilst negotiating with other clubs over the sale of their assets, then it hands the initiative to the buyer, who can use that as leverage to pay a lot less than an asset may be worth, punishing the selling club as they would be left with the dilemma of accepting an unrealistic, undervalued bid and passing, or getting a fair / true value for their asset but fail.
I can’t believe Forest really relied on that argument….it’s illogical - they were only “forced” to accept a lower bid as a result of their crazy spending earlier in the year. If the Premier League begins to accept those sort of excuses, the whole concept of FFP begins to crumble.
 


Anger

Well-known member
Jul 21, 2017
538
The points deducted should be made available to other clubs in need as an additional form of retribution.

P***** would obviously be barred from making any such claim on account of their previous poor track record with financial propriety and the rules of common decency, but other clubs in need (those who have not flouted FFP) could make their claims.
 


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