SeagullinExile
Well-known member
Future Question of Sport question...
Which was the only Premier League side to not win a league fixture in 2020?
If you add 'and not get relegated' to that question i'd be happy!!
Future Question of Sport question...
Which was the only Premier League side to not win a league fixture in 2020?
League positions as is but no promotion or relegation. They will need to do something for championship teams that have overspent.
Match day bar staff, catering staff, stewards etc. won't presumably get paid. Lots of others up and down the country will be laid off/lose their jobs with reduced or no pay. If UEFA, the FA, the PL and the EFL all declare a temporary reduction in players' wages, citing force majeur surely they'd have a pretty good case. If the players/the PFA/the agents all started rushing to court, they certainly wouldn't get much support.
Agree totally
It’s my understanding that the virus can’t survive in warmer / hotter weather, so while I accept there’s no guarantees with our weather, May is usually a decent month for weather and you would hope that we pass our peak by then and while it will still be around in some capacity we should be able to resume in June. But I appreciate the weather has a part to play in making that possible.
Except the Albion have confirmed all the above mentioned match day staff will be paid for the final five matches at home, regardless of whether the matches are played or not. Well done Albion.
Future Question of Sport question...
Which was the only Premier League side to not win a league fixture in 2020?
Is that the same Crawley that told us to do one when we needed a ground to survive in the late 1990s or another one? I'd rather we helped out our friends from stad de clad...Indeed.
I would like the local "big Premier League club" to financially support their local smaller club eg - we help out Crawley if necessary (only enough to prevent any potential closure).
Of course, won't happen on so many levels.
So could they:
Finish the league as it stands, no relegation from the PL, 2 teams in the auto places come up from the Championship and next season is a 22 team PL, with 5 teams relegated at the end to re-balance.
Below therefore no teams relegated from the Championship, 2 up from League One, again, 5 team relegation next season and so on.
Europe places resolved as it currently stands, or play offs or something. That's a lot easier than relegation or promotion.
No, the Crawley that said that was Crawley Council, not Crawley Town FC.Is that the same Crawley that told us to do one when we needed a ground to survive in the late 1990s or another one? I'd rather we helped out our friends from stad de clad...
Is that the same Crawley that told us to do one when we needed a ground to survive in the late 1990s or another one? I'd rather we helped out our friends from stad de clad...
Is that the same Crawley that told us to do one when we needed a ground to survive in the late 1990s or another one? I'd rather we helped out our friends from stad de clad...
Fake news, Crawley Town FC was happy to share, Crawley Borough council was not willing to allow it. The Council paid for the building of the Stadium, and owns it, they invited BHAFC to help meet some of the costs of building, and share the Stadium with Crawley Town, BHAFC declined as they were not wanting a permanent arrangement, The Council then rejected the later request from BHAFC to use the Stadium on alternate weekends to CTFC, on a season by season basis. Nothing to do with CTFC.
League positions as is but no promotion or relegation. They will need to do something for championship teams that have overspent.
The PL should gift Derby and Massive £100m each as a goodwill gesture.
I'd quite like some money back in the way of a refund on my season ticket.
Some back of an envelope calculations:
20,000 season ticket holders paying £35 per game (on average) for 5 games would amount to £3,500,000. Which is quite a lot.
The club income each year recently has been around £140,000,000.
So to refund all the season ticket holders for lost games in full would reduce income by around 2.5%.
Is that a lot? Is it too much for the club to lose?
I guess it could increase the seasons' loss figure from around £25m to around £28m.
It would be nice, I think, to see the club make attempts to compensate. Even some combination of reduced DD, shop vouchers and a free FA cup game or two would be appreciated.
A straight-bat "no refunds, see the T&Cs" stance would be, I believe, disappointing.
I'll try and keep my chin up shall I?
I'd quite like some money back in the way of a refund on my season ticket.
Some back of an envelope calculations:
20,000 season ticket holders paying £35 per game (on average) for 5 games would amount to £3,500,000. Which is quite a lot.
The club income each year recently has been around £140,000,000.
So to refund all the season ticket holders for lost games in full would reduce income by around 2.5%.
Is that a lot? Is it too much for the club to lose?
I guess it could increase the seasons' loss figure from around £25m to around £28m.
It would be nice, I think, to see the club make attempts to compensate. Even some combination of reduced DD, shop vouchers and a free FA cup game or two would be appreciated.
A straight-bat "no refunds, see the T&Cs" stance would be, I believe, disappointing.
I'll try and keep my chin up shall I?