beorhthelm
A. Virgo, Football Genius
- Jul 21, 2003
- 36,019
- Thread starter
- #61
I don't get your point.
read Richie's blog then.
I don't get your point.
read Richie's blog then.
Those who are at the game, in the (relatively) cheap seats and travel to support the team are real fans like you and I. It's them who are protesting, and it's them that I have tremendous sympathy for, and empathy with. I would have thought we'd be pretty united (no pun intended) in that considering what we'd been through ourselves.
Indeed. Although there is an inverse snobbery thing going on here. Wrexham or Chester we are allowed to sympathise with given thier lowly status. Not so Man U as they are too big a club and we should therefore delight in thier downfall.
The offer document reveals that on 30 June last year the club entered into a £2.9m-per-year agreement with SLP Partners, a company related to the Glazers. Since 1 July 2006 a further total of £10m has been paid in "management and administration fees".
"During the period from 1 July 2006 to the date of this offering memorandum, management and administration fees of approximately £0.6m, £1.8m, £1.4m, £3.1m and £3.1m were paid to our affiliates," it said.
As I said in an earlier post, nice work if you can get it.
Can't agree with that. We were protesting about an owner who was trying to close our club down and walk away with any money left afterwards. As far as I can tell the Manu U fans are protesting about the owner of the club profiting from it's success, also the amounts they pay themselves may sound big but they are tiny compared to the profits that the club continues to make. The fact is that they've already won a trophy this season and are challenging for 2 others. Their manager says he has all the money to spend that he wants. The club continues to be profitable despite the debt it has. If Man U fans were so anti their club becoming a PLC and then being bought this way then they were pretty quiet about it when they were winning all those Premiership titles with the money raised from going public.I just think that if ANYONE in the country should be able to sympathise with how tricky that scenario is, it should be us. There are plenty of Man Utd "fans" that you can tear apart for being the plastics in pubs around Brighton, but to assume that all of them is just ignorance. Those who are at the game, in the (relatively) cheap seats and travel to support the team are real fans like you and I. It's them who are protesting, and it's them that I have tremendous sympathy for, and empathy with. I would have thought we'd be pretty united (no pun intended) in that considering what we'd been through ourselves.
i'd accept there is a degree of reverse snobbery, but there really isnt much of a problem for fans to worry about at ManU and certinaly no "downfall". like Liverpool, the absolute worse case is if the debt wasnt paid the bank would take possession and new owners would be found. in fact would the bank even bother to find a new owner immediatly? they are money prints, even more if there isnt another managment team involved.
the news of ManU's impending death is a little premature.
the amounts they pay themselves may sound big but they are tiny compared to the profits that the club continues to make.
...and based on teh experience of the Tampa Bay Bucs, don't ever expect them to sink a whole load of cash into one of their teams. They spend as little as they can get away with.
Without selling their best player last summer they would have made a £40m LOSS, not a profit at all.
Debts are now £700m
Last years turnover was less than £300m
Profits (after getting £80m for Ronaldo) was £40m
That is not a sustainable business plan.
The background of running Tampa suggests they are not in it just to take all the money and run.
and the profit before servicing the debt? or rather how well covered is the debt?
I often read on here that the Albion could have died if we lost at Hereford in THAT season. One could argue that hyperbole is not entirely down to Man U fans as I don't believe we would have gone under as Doncaster and the like have shown.
As Gritt suggests above, the Glazers are legally removing money from the club much like Archer tried with us. I'm sympathetic even if Man U protests aren't exactly the miners strike, the fact they are doing something is commendable.
If only 2700 fans could be bothered to watch us play in the Football league, imagine how few would have ben bothered to watch us play Conference football.
What he said. They voted for this, this was what they wanted, this is how they became what they are now and why football is what it is now. You reap what you sow.
Assuming that they let us play Conference, as they are not adverse to demoting teams with financial problems. Boston got thrown down the ladder after being relegated from League Two. If relegation had led to financial problems, we could have been going the same way. Weren't Dover thrown down about 3 divisions from the Conference for financial problems?
I honestly can't remember now, but by the time we went to Hereford for that final game, did we know by then that we'd be playing at Priestfield the following season ? Or did that arrangement come about during the summer ?
I think we knew we had an agreement with Gillingham, and that the FL had reversed their earlier position whereby they'd said we couldn't groundshare outside of Sussex. But I don't know if the Non-League had confirmed whether they were happy with it.