DarrenFreemansPerm
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Thank you ^^^^
So unless they can make 8 million over the summer it is cheaper to leave the seats there ?SEATS
The 'retractable' seats were put in by a company who quoted £300K every summer to remove and replace. This company, unsurprisingly, have gone bust. Another company have looked at the system and said it will take £8 million and at least two weeks to remove the seats and another two weeks to replace them. This four weeks means that the venue cannot be used for four out of the ten weeks it is meant to be empty in the summer, thus losing revenue from athletics and live music.
But just imagine if the they were religated or just stayed up, those season ticket sales will only go one way! For me their success if build on a very brittle foundation. Again they don't own their home, with the volatility involved in football i think this will always come back to bite them, but the owners would have sold up by then!
But we’re not talking about a Darlington-esque folly when they moved from a 7k Feethams to that 25k Reynolds Arena. West Ham have always been a club with huge support, they knew they could EASILY get north of 35k there in the Premier League. You can’t pass up an opportunity to expand on the basis of “but what if we’re relegated”. In commercial terms, West Ham have got the deal of the century there, it was a no brainer. They’ve almost doubled the footfall, and even if numbers DO drop back after the initial “novelty” wears off, or if the team is gubbins, its unlikely they’ll dip much below the Upton Park levels even in a worst case scenario. It might be a horrible place to watch football, but it’s a big opportunity to take the club on to another level.
The expansion of their capacity has made a larger season ticket club but they wont be able to compete with the new breed of owners some having state backing. They certainly have the platform to become a larger brand as a club but given the ongoing negative press and violence at games it may well damage that brand long term. I think we'll find out the veracity of the gamble when it comes down to them putting their hands in their own pockets! Sadiq Khan and the OSC have put paid to the idea of a gravy train!
What is the name of the person responsible for negotiating - on behalf of the taxpayer - an annual rent of £2.5 million from West Ham?
The latest accounts show West Ham's gross income was £122million, so a £2.5 million rent is the equivalent of someone on an annual salary of £40,000 paying rent of just £800 A YEAR!
And if they get relegated the rent HALVES to a mere £1.25million per annum.
This surely has to be the worst ever deal in British sporting history?
This surely has to be the worst ever deal in British sporting history?
Don't you regret it now, knowing just what you've swapped with the Boleyn ground?I thought it was a fab deal for West Ham!!!!!
So it turns out Johnson is a fat incompetent buffoon. Who knew?
Don't you regret it now, knowing just what you've swapped with the Boleyn ground?
I guess it's wait and see how it all pans out. Regarding atmosphere, although nasty and edgy, crowd trouble always raises the atmosphere at a match. Suddenly, people seem to care more. I have always found that a little disturbing.Tricky one as we've only played a handful of games there. Most people who went to the Chelsea match last week said it was the best atmosphere they've ever known.
Hindsight is a wonderful gift and looking back, it would've been better to demolish the existing stadium and build a new one. Even though it was home, we'd outgrown the Boleyn and the only way to really keep up in the prem is to go bigger (even though we're in a relegation scrap)
Im sure if Brighton were to establish themselves as a consistant premier league club.....which i hope they do, i'm sure there will be many on here who will be crying out for a bigger stadium
Don't these politicians have teams of people doing the negotiation and they are just the figurehead who gets all the credit or otherwise
Hindsight is a wonderful gift and looking back, it would've been better to demolish the existing stadium and build a new one.
Thats what sitting at the Amex does for youI guess it's wait and see how it all pans out. Regarding atmosphere, although nasty and edgy, crowd trouble always raises the atmosphere at a match. Suddenly, people seem to care more. I have always found that a little disturbing.
What on earth are you on about?Thats what sitting at the Amex does for you
regards
DR
What on earth are you on about?