Thunder Bolt
Silly old bat
Great spot [MENTION=249]edna krabappel[/MENTION]
So, about those "one or two players", Harry
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I am interested about how Wolves, Villa, Derby, Sheff Wed etc..are managing to keep to the FFP rules (big-spending and PL-type wages in the Championship)
Quality digging there..!
I like this bit at the end:
"I don't know what the solution would be. I don't know how it all works out and what the guidelines to fair play are. That's up to people who run the football club. Managers have very little say in transfer dealings and transfers these days.
"QPR is a great club with great support. I'm sure this will drag on and I don't know the jurisdiction of it all. I don't know how it happened and how it was allowed to happen"
So he just doesn't know ANYTHING, but it's really unfair..
Wednesday are struggling to comply now, being in the third year of the rolling cycle, after two huge spending years. Hence they couldn't go bananas on spending again this summer just gone. Got that off of owlstalk.
This is a great article on the QPR situation:
https://www.fansnetwork.co.uk/football/queensparkrangers/news/46804/coming-home-to-roost-–-column
Wow. He's a walking farce."The team I got promoted with, people like Bobby Zamora, Joey Barton, [Armand] Traore, Clint Hill, Rob Green in goal, Nedham Onuoha, they were there already. They weren't players that I brought in. They got promoted with a team of players that were already there. It was only one or two signings [that I made].
Maybe Wolves haven't been spending so much in recent years, so they're able to give it a go this time, whereas you'd expect Derby et al to be cutting back, as they appear to have been going for it for years.Wolves are chancing it big time but seems to be working out well
"But that season Harry Redknapp gave first team appearances to 39 players. He presided over a squad with a wage bill of £77.3m for the season, the highest amount ever paid by a second tier club in the history of football in this country"This is a great article on the QPR situation:
https://www.fansnetwork.co.uk/football/queensparkrangers/news/46804/coming-home-to-roost-–-column
Maybe Wolves haven't been spending so much in recent years, so they're able to give it a go this time, whereas you'd expect Derby et al to be cutting back, as they appear to have been going for it for years.
Derby also had to cut down. Wolves are chancing it big time but seems to be working out well, **** knows about villa.
What you seem to be saying is that after a few years of FFP legislation, some sides are in danger of paying the price of their on-going gamble. Those whose gamble failed are now having to take drastic action to avoid being fined - with this impacting on their ability to compete.
We really could see a shift in the group of teams pushing for promotion couldn't we. Is this where those teams coming down will benefit from the impact of (even bigger) parachute payments as established Championship "big clubs" are being forced to cut back?
I think you're right.
Derby, like Wednesday, have been on a huge wages/fees spending spree for several seasons. Their Ex PL players would be on wages at a multiple of those we were paying in 2016/17 and we probably made an unprecedented loss. Derby are still at, with new recruits such as Huddlestone on big money.
Whereas Wolves only really got going this summer. They're unrecognisable from the first eleven we outclassed at Molyneux last Easter.
This is a great article on the QPR situation:
https://www.fansnetwork.co.uk/football/queensparkrangers/news/46804/coming-home-to-roost-–-column
That is a great article, very well-explained and no real fan bias there, other than love for his club.
There is no easy way out of this, the fine is ridiculously large, I can only assume because the FL never thought they would have to impose it, that the threat itself was sufficient. Fines are much lower now, and a fine of 8-9m would probably have been paid. There's no way QPR can pay £58m without ceasing to be a viable football team - and as the point of FFP is to stop teams going bust, pushing them that way through a fine for failing FFP is punitive and self-defeating in the extreme. the FL doesn't want to back down, but I bet there is a lot of hand-wringing about why they ever decided it was a good idea to levy that size of fine.
"Obviously £58m is an unworkable and disproportionate fine" - no it isn't!
"While it would make sense to apply the new rules retrospectively" - no it wouldn't. How can that possibly make sense?
" Simply put, you cannot legally impose fines on a business that threaten the existence of the business itself." - what bullshit.
"A fine of £58m for a business of QPR’s current turnover, the club will argue, is disproportionate" The fine was made when they were earning PL TB money, plus the parachute payments. The only reason it now seems disproportionate is because they didn't ****ing pay it!
Is this shit written by a QPR fan? Oh, yes it is
I agree with you up until there. They knew the rules, and decided they were wealthy enough to ignore them. The fine should be over £50m. Although I do think you make a good point, that if a fine would push them into administration, maybe a couple of relegations could be offered as an alternative.Personally, I think they should pay a smaller fine
Nonsense, it's completely biased.That is a great article, very well-explained and no real fan bias there, other than love for his club.
The fine matches the overspend. Normal clubs don't throw money around like that.There is no easy way out of this, the fine is ridiculously large
Then how were they able to justify a £70m loss in their bid for promotion? That's £70m on top of the parachute payments they were receiving.There's no way QPR can pay £58m without ceasing to be a viable football team
To not impose the fine would encourage other teams to break the rules, so it would lead to more teams going bust.and as the point of FFP is to stop teams going bust, pushing them that way through a fine for failing FFP is punitive and self-defeating in the extreme.
Remember the fine is supposed to be paid by clubs that are promoted - that's clubs that receive the huge PL windfall, so it's affordable.the FL doesn't want to back down, but I bet there is a lot of hand-wringing about why they ever decided it was a good idea to levy that size of fine.
Yes. [MENTION=31]El Presidente[/MENTION] is clearly the best qualified pwrson to talk about this. I assume he's busy on the telly or radio currently.