kenny dalglish
bryan robson
kevin keegan
glenn hoddle
graeme souness
wrong!
kenny dalglish
bryan robson
kevin keegan
glenn hoddle
graeme souness
The problem is not Paul Barber, it is player's wages.
In 1983, when the Albion were last in the top flight, the highest paid players in the COUNTRY were paid £70,000 a year. (Bonus point if you can name them). Since then inflation in the UK has increased prices by 290%, which would give an equivalent figure of £273,000 a year.
The highest paid player in the Premier League last season is on £13.6 million a year, and the average wage for a first team player is £1.4 million a year.
With oligarchs, middle eastern vanity projects and TV revenues around those wage levels are not going to come down, and so we end up paying as fans.
With oligarchs, middle eastern vanity projects and TV revenues around those wage levels are not going to come down, and so we end up paying as fans.
That sentence just doesn't make sense. In essence you are saying that there have been 3 significant streams of money flowing into football and, because of that, the fans have also had to up their game, financially, as well.
Logic would suggest that with those massive amounts of cash being pumped into the game, the burden on the fans should be less, not more.
Three people are to blame for modern football:
Bosman
Thatcher
Murdoch
That sentence just doesn't make sense. In essence you are saying that there have been 3 significant streams of money flowing into football and, because of that, the fans have also had to up their game, financially, as well.
Logic would suggest that with those massive amounts of cash being pumped into the game, the burden on the fans should be less, not more.
Frank Stapleton
Bryan Robson
Kenny Dalglish
Kevin Keegan
Peter Shilton
Nope.
Steve Foster
Michael Robinson.
An interesting read. I still do not agree with him regarding his handling of the travel subsidy/buses and deviating from the Club Charter and then (at least twice) changing the charter after this deviation has been pointed out is just wrong especially given our unique history. I agree he is approachable though, and whilst I do not always agree with him he doesn't shy away from discussion.
True, but the game has failed to move with the changes these people have exterted. Professional football clubs nation wide should have sat round a large table a decade ago and thrashed out some sort of maximum wage bill. I mean an ACTUAL maximum, inflation linked, not some FPP nonsense which will end up being navigated.
The Pompey of 1983 then!
True, but the game has failed to move with the changes these people have exterted. Professional football clubs nation wide should have sat round a large table a decade ago and thrashed out some sort of maximum wage bill. I mean an ACTUAL maximum, inflation linked, not some FPP nonsense which will end up being navigated.
It would have had to be done continent-wide rather than nation wide otherwise English clubs would be disadvantaged in the CL. Milan, Juve, Barcelona and Real Madrid etc would never have agreed to it.
Nope.
Steve Foster
Michael Robinson.
Fantastic interview.
Problem is with this club, and not doubt many others, there are a small vocal element of supporters that will want to protest every last little issue. They want to see the best players on the pitch and premiership football, the want a say in every last detail on how rthe club is run, but at the same time they want to pay 2nd division prices.
The harsh fact is, our football club like every other one IS a business. It has to act like one, if it wants to progress.
The changes in the bus services whilst harsh, it seems is unavoidable. Whether or not the club should have informed supporters of the change before renewing season tickets (even though when you consider the dates this was impossible) the bottom line is, if you don't like it and wouldn't have brought a season ticket had you known, the club will refund you if you contact them. I don't see what more they could be doing.
If people want to protest and not buy pies or merchandise for a one off game, let them IMO. I bet most of the people taking part will be those who don't buy merchandise or pies anyway, so I doubt the club will see much difference in taking. Most level headed Albion fans can see the bigger picture, and will just smile at the protesters, pat them on the head and carry on as normal.
Bottom line is, do you want Premiership football and the club to progress?
Yes - Unfortunately with the new rules, WE the fans have to pay for it, not Tony Bloom. The club is doing all it can to fund the club with non football activities, but there will always be a short fall that the fans have to pay for.
No - Then cancel your season ticket, stop going for a few seasons, income will fall, the club will follow, and we can all sit back in the bottom division in a quarter full stadium, whining on how JCL have deserted us and how we are the true fans that will always be there.