KZNSeagull
Well-known member
Invest for the future of the club - definitely keep him.
Was Wood really that good? hardly memorable.
Was Wood really that good? hardly memorable.
The same Nugent who has looked like dog ploppy every time he's played at The Amex.
The same Nugent who slotted home 10 of his 22 goals from the spot.
In 18 more games.
Basically I'm not having Nugent in a swap for Leo, no matter how much money Leicester are prepared to throw at the deal.
Yep. But he wasn't a striker.The only person who thought Bridcutt was worth £8 million was Poyet with his Real Madrid quote. Funny that he then didn't want to pay it....
Exactly.Deal of the century
Because we're going to do what with the money? Spend half of it on yet another bang average central midfielder and then spend the rest of it on loans for other teams cast offs...
For the third time in recent years we have a decent striker and yet again everyone is desperate to see the back of him
As above, what are we going to do with it? We're running at a loss of £8m a year to try and win promotion. There's no point halving that loss with no hope of promotion. We'd need a replacement signed before we could let him go.6.5m? Yes please.
Deal of the century
Because we're going to do what with the money? Spend half of it on yet another bang average central midfielder and then spend the rest of it on loans for other teams cast offs...
For the third time in recent years we have a decent striker and yet again everyone is desperate to see the back of him
To be fair if we failed to get promotion I think we’d be foolish not to accept that offer as long as Oscar could reinvest the 4 million profit in the summer.
Pretty crappy timing from Leicester and the press in the lead up to such an important game for us though, couldn’t they wait a week before potentially unsettling our star striker!
Depends on the potential fee, and who you could get with the money. Austin, Rhodes and Ings are all better footballers than Leo, would command similar fees, and are respectively 3, 4 and 6 years younger.
We're running at a loss of £8m a year to try and win promotion.
Barber said we were on target to meet FFP this year, which means the losses wouldn't be over £8m. They were higher the year before.It was around that in League one; currently the football club operation's losses are running at £14.8m/pa, excluding anything attributable the stadium itself and the Lancing Training facility (because the football club doesn't own either).
Why do people want the money just so long as £xm can be invested in a replacement.
It doesn't make sense.
Why replace the player who fits into the system, with someone who may not, just for the sake of having a couple of million left over.
How much will that couple of million be worth in a misfiring team, next year?
Exactly. He's clearly Premier league class and Leicester are sensibly planning for next season with what would be a cheap option if he was honestly the difference between staying up and relegation next season. He's probably the hottest property outside the top division with the possible exception of Danny Ings and Keiran Trippier.
Or closer to home, selling a sulking Liam Bridcutt doesn't appear to have done us much harm either.You are wrong. It makes perfect sense, and is how football works. You either trust your management team to make the right calls, or you have the wrong people. Sometimes (not always) it IS the right decision to cash in on a player and reinvest.
Take Burnley for example. Over the last two years, to outsiders, did it look good business, to cash in on Jay Rodriguez and Charlie Austin, pocket a load of cash, and replace them with Danny Ings and Sam Vokes?