Tom Hark Preston Park
Will Post For Cash
- Jul 6, 2003
- 72,359
'Paul Barber wrote a veritable essay about it in his programme notes' Surely some mistake?
Deputy Chairman OUT!
Deputy Chairman OUT!
Indeed. I liked this particular bit...
For last Saturday’s game against Leicester at the Amex, Brighton & Hove Albion’s chief executive, Paul Barber, wrote a veritable essay about it in his programme notes, in which his sighs at the misrepresentation of the £5m payment are almost audible.
“This is an entirely normal contractual agreement for very senior and highly sought after executives,” huffs Barber of the Scudamore golden handshake, in comments reproduced in the Brighton Argus, “and it has been designed by the Premier League’s board to protect the league’s commercial interests and those of it’s shareholders – including our club!”
Paul? Take your jaunty little exclamation mark and do one, there’s a good chap.
Ouch.
Well, I'm glad it has been designed by the Premier League’s board to protect the league’s commercial interests and those of it’s shareholders. Because it hasn't been designed to protect the interests of future supporters. My two children - both under 10 - wanted to come to their first Albion game next month. When I went to buy the tickets for ONE game for the 3 of us, the total came to just under £150. No way am I paying that, so we're off to another game somewhere else. Admittedly, not Premier League, but we'll have a great day and I won't go home feeling like I've just been mugged by a bunch of multi-millionaires - all in the league’s commercial interests and those of it’s shareholders, naturally.
£150 is prohibitive. Everton at home for adult and two kids is £71 in the south or north but looks practically sold out.
Yes - it is practically sold out now, which suggests the ticket price model is broadly aligned with market forces, regardless of how I might feel about it.
The tickets I was looking at were over near the family area in the East, plus I needed to add Bronze and Junior Seagull memberships (admittedly as a 'one-off').
Indeed. I liked this particular bit...
For last Saturday’s game against Leicester at the Amex, Brighton & Hove Albion’s chief executive, Paul Barber, wrote a veritable essay about it in his programme notes, in which his sighs at the misrepresentation of the £5m payment are almost audible.
“This is an entirely normal contractual agreement for very senior and highly sought after executives,” huffs Barber of the Scudamore golden handshake, in comments reproduced in the Brighton Argus, “and it has been designed by the Premier League’s board to protect the league’s commercial interests and those of it’s shareholders – including our club!”
Paul? Take your jaunty little exclamation mark and do one, there’s a good chap.
Ouch.
Well, I'm glad it has been designed by the Premier League’s board to protect the league’s commercial interests and those of it’s shareholders. Because it hasn't been designed to protect the interests of future supporters. My two children - both under 10 - wanted to come to their first Albion game next month. When I went to buy the tickets for ONE game for the 3 of us, the total came to just under £150. No way am I paying that, so we're off to another game somewhere else. Admittedly, not Premier League, but we'll have a great day and I won't go home feeling like I've just been mugged by a bunch of multi-millionaires - all in the league’s commercial interests and those of it’s shareholders, naturally.
The membership isn't worth it for a single game, just racks up the overall cost. If they get the bug though...you'll be skint pretty soon!
Indeed. I liked this particular bit...
For last Saturday’s game against Leicester at the Amex, Brighton & Hove Albion’s chief executive, Paul Barber, wrote a veritable essay about it in his programme notes, in which his sighs at the misrepresentation of the £5m payment are almost audible.
“This is an entirely normal contractual agreement for very senior and highly sought after executives,” huffs Barber of the Scudamore golden handshake, in comments reproduced in the Brighton Argus, “and it has been designed by the Premier League’s board to protect the league’s commercial interests and those of it’s shareholders – including our club!”
Paul? Take your jaunty little exclamation mark and do one, there’s a good chap.
Ouch.
Well, I'm glad it has been designed by the Premier League’s board to protect the league’s commercial interests and those of it’s shareholders. Because it hasn't been designed to protect the interests of future supporters. My two children - both under 10 - wanted to come to their first Albion game next month. When I went to buy the tickets for ONE game for the 3 of us, the total came to just under £150. No way am I paying that, so we're off to another game somewhere else. Admittedly, not Premier League, but we'll have a great day and I won't go home feeling like I've just been mugged by a bunch of multi-millionaires - all in the league’s commercial interests and those of it’s shareholders, naturally.
That's my concern!
I would willingly buy the memberships based on the premise of attending multiple games over the course of a season but as you say, attending multiple games as a non-STH really isn't financially viable or indeed VFM.