Stato
Well-known member
- Dec 21, 2011
- 7,385
If you order the 20 EPL teams by current wage bill, the league should look like this:
1) Man Utd, 2) Man City, 3) Arsenal, 4) Chelsea, 5) Liverpool, 6) Spurs, 7) Villa, 8) West Ham, 9) Newcastle, 10) Everton,
11) Forest, 12) Palace, 13) Fulham, 14) Brighton, 15) Wolves, 16) Bournemouth, 17) Brentford, 18) Burnley, 19) Sheff Utd, 20) Luton
Doing the same for net transfer spend over the last five years:
1) Chelsea, 2) Man Utd, 3) Arsenal, 4) Spurs, 5) Newcastle, 6) Man City, 7) Villa, 8) West Ham, 9) Liverpool, 10) Forest,
11) Palace, 12) Sheff Utd, 13) Wolves, 14) Fulham, 15) Bournemouth, 16) Burnley, 17) Brentford, 18) Everton, 19) Luton, 20) Brighton
And for ten years:
1) Man Utd, 2) Man City, 3) Chelsea, 4) Arsenal, 5) Newcastle, 6) Spurs, 7)Liverpool, 8) West Ham, 9) Villa, 10) Palace,
11) Bournemouth, 12) Wolves, 13) Everton, 14) Fulham, 15) Forest, 16) Burnley, 17) Sheff Utd, 18) Brighton, 19) Brentford, 20) Luton
And from this, here is the table that 'should be', calculated by taking each team's mean average position from the three spend indicators above. I've also added columns to show where each team currently sits in the table and how far above or below they are compared to where their spend suggests they should be. The latter uses NSC's favourite red, amber, green system to show under/over achievement. Obviously the higher the number, the higher the over achievement measured against these spend variables.
Seems to suggest that, although those billions can't hurt, City's dominance may not be only about the money. There are two teams who have chucked more at it and finished quite far behind.
Also, and this may have been suggested before, but those blokes who run Brighton must know a little bit about what they're doing...
1) Man Utd, 2) Man City, 3) Arsenal, 4) Chelsea, 5) Liverpool, 6) Spurs, 7) Villa, 8) West Ham, 9) Newcastle, 10) Everton,
11) Forest, 12) Palace, 13) Fulham, 14) Brighton, 15) Wolves, 16) Bournemouth, 17) Brentford, 18) Burnley, 19) Sheff Utd, 20) Luton
Doing the same for net transfer spend over the last five years:
1) Chelsea, 2) Man Utd, 3) Arsenal, 4) Spurs, 5) Newcastle, 6) Man City, 7) Villa, 8) West Ham, 9) Liverpool, 10) Forest,
11) Palace, 12) Sheff Utd, 13) Wolves, 14) Fulham, 15) Bournemouth, 16) Burnley, 17) Brentford, 18) Everton, 19) Luton, 20) Brighton
And for ten years:
1) Man Utd, 2) Man City, 3) Chelsea, 4) Arsenal, 5) Newcastle, 6) Spurs, 7)Liverpool, 8) West Ham, 9) Villa, 10) Palace,
11) Bournemouth, 12) Wolves, 13) Everton, 14) Fulham, 15) Forest, 16) Burnley, 17) Sheff Utd, 18) Brighton, 19) Brentford, 20) Luton
And from this, here is the table that 'should be', calculated by taking each team's mean average position from the three spend indicators above. I've also added columns to show where each team currently sits in the table and how far above or below they are compared to where their spend suggests they should be. The latter uses NSC's favourite red, amber, green system to show under/over achievement. Obviously the higher the number, the higher the over achievement measured against these spend variables.
Expected Position on Spend | Team | Actual Position | Difference |
1 | Man Utd | 8 | -7 |
2 | Chelsea | 7 | -5 |
3= | Arsenal | 2 | 1 |
3= | Man City | 1 | 2 |
5 | Spurs | 5 | 0 |
6 | Newcastle | 6 | 0 |
7 | Liverpool | 3 | 4 |
8 | Villa | 4 | 4 |
9 | West Ham | 9 | 0 |
10 | Palace | 12 | -2 |
11 | Forest | 17 | -6 |
12 | Wolves | 13 | -1 |
13 | Everton | 15 | -2 |
14 | Fulham | 14 | 0 |
15 | Bournemouth | 11 | 4 |
16 | Sheff Utd | 20 | -4 |
17 | Burnley | 19 | -2 |
18 | Brighton | 10 | 8 |
19 | Brentford | 16 | 3 |
20 | Luton | 18 | 2 |
Seems to suggest that, although those billions can't hurt, City's dominance may not be only about the money. There are two teams who have chucked more at it and finished quite far behind.
Also, and this may have been suggested before, but those blokes who run Brighton must know a little bit about what they're doing...