Levy just seems like a horrible little knob. Always has done, in all his dealings...
He’s a ****ing ****.
I half expect him to Bill the NHS for the stadium use.
Levy just seems like a horrible little knob. Always has done, in all his dealings...
I share the feelings of my fellow NSCers on this subject, but as someone working in Dementia healthcare, I have found Spurs to be very generous towards one of the gentlemen I look after, a lifetime Spurs fan. Players past and present have written and sent photos to him, and Poch himself was great in sending a signed letter and merchandise free of charge. All I had to do was ask. Haven't tried contacting Jose M. yet, but I'd be surprised if he didn't respond just as positively. I'm no Spurs apologist, but I just wanted to point out a different side to them. And as we know as Albion fans, the best thing to come out of White Hart Lane was Bobby Smith!
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My experience of them was very different.
We did a walk around all London Club Grounds over a 2 day period to raise money for a couple of Charities supporting children with Cancer.
I have quite decent contacts within a lot of clubs and Spurs donated virtually nothing. They gave us a pendant. Only West Ham gave less. They gave nothing.
Arsenal Chelsea Millwall and QPR gave the most. Brighton gave more than both Spurs and West Ham.
So I was shocked by how little Spurs donated.
Contract is a contract, yes he MAY choose to donate some of his earnings to charitable causes and probably does but I'd tell them to take a hike!
Why doesn't 'a contract is a contract' apply to players who seemingly everyone is demanding take a pay cut because they can afford it, even when they are donating to charitable causes?
When you consider he’s being paid £8.5m for doing nothing it doesn’t seem that crazy.
Interesting anecdote, sad how WHUFC were also poor.
I would’ve guessed that Millwall were generous.
I can think of a few players in that category.
Why doesn't 'a contract is a contract' apply to players who seemingly everyone is demanding take a pay cut because they can afford it, even when they are donating to charitable causes?
Chelsea even brought out their PL Trophy and let all the walkers individually and collectively get their photo taken with it. One of my mates dropped the lid and you could see them panicking that it might be dented
See later post, as in business those that earn the most take the deepest cut and this industry should be no different
That doesn't follow, though, that just reinforces the double standards.
Poch is getting 8.5m - over £160,000 per week. According to this article: https://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/every-premier-league-clubs-average-20916779 (first most obvious link on google for weekly wage averages, from November) puts it above the average wage at every football club in the premier league (and more than double the average wage at Tottenham).
For him 'a contract is a contract'.
For players, some of whom, yes, will be comfortably above the average, some below the average, and for many at the lower end of the table even being above their club's average is still less than Pochettino 'should take the deepest cuts because they earn the most'.
Both pochettino and the players are among the highest earners at their clubs, both Pochettino and the players have contracts.
If your argument is 'a contract is a contract' neither should take pay cuts, if your argument is 'those that earn the most should take the deepest cut' then both should take pay cuts.
Exactly. They have sacked him. Just because they are paying the severence figure over time doesn't mean they can wriggle out of some of it.But he's been sacked, it's like agreeing severance pay and then six months later the company that sacked you asks for help, are you really going to feel up to that?
But he's been sacked, it's like agreeing severance pay and then six months later the company that sacked you asks for help, are you really going to feel up to that?