Another English club with a past history of success falls into administration, how many more on the brink through chasing EPL big bucks 🤔
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Another English club with a past history of success falls into administration, how many more on the brink through chasing EPL big bucks 🤔
Apparently Rooney is on £90,000 per week so it's hard to feel sorry for him or the club...
Only out of interest. I wonder if the administration ‘rules/processes’ in England are the same as here?
Farce. Given the money sloshing about down south.
Deserve everything that financial mismanagement reaps.
This will cheer up the Forest fans!
His wages are heavily, if not completely, subbed by 32Red betting company as discussed on the other Derby thread.
I saw Derby in a pre-season game at Meadow Lane, it was the weekendimmediately after the story in the hotel room about him broke. Derby were extremely short of players to make a team up. Rooney refused to bring in trialists to bolster the ranks in order to make a point to the club owner. Can't say I blame him for that. The fans still seem to be right behind him over there. Owner, Mel Morris's name is mud though, as one might expect.
The level of money involved in the premiership compared to the championship is so significant, some owners will take a speculate to accumulate approach in the hope the vast wealth of the top flight will pay the bills and loans from the championship days. This has backfired MASSIVELY for Derby County.
This will also keep happening to the clubs that have spent time in the premiership, spent a fortune while in the top flight and subsequently been relegated and failed to get back up quickly. I’m looking at the Welsh two as potential followers.
While the money in the English top flight is incredible, it’s killing the clubs in the lower tiers, and the house of cards is slowly crashing down on the English game.
When the likes of Everton/Arsenal - even Crystal Palace/West Brom outspend the likes of Bayern Munich and Real Madrid, you know something’s up.
Incidentally, the accounts last year from English clubs are stark.
Man City - £126m loss
Arsenal - £54m loss
Liverpool - £46m loss.
That’s with the incredible TV revenue they receive. Naturally, Covid has an impact, but if you look across the water, Bayern were very disappointed with their accounts as they only recorded a €17m profit.
Bayern, who have made big signings over the years haven’t recorded a single loss since 2003, and that was a loss of €2m. Over that period they’ve won 2 champions leagues, and countless other trophies - more success than any English club. In the summer there, they were fretting on whether to spend €10m on a player, as they didn’t want to risk making a loss, even with hundreds of millions in reserves.
Some call it cheap, but I call it responsible, which is night and day from the English game/Barcelona. Man Utd are hundreds of millions in debt, and win nothing.
The English clubs should really take a leaf out of many continental teams, and see making a loss as a dreadful thing, otherwise there will be more, bigger scalps than Derby County.
Agree with all of this.
Interesting to note too that (I think) Bayern's cheapest match tickets are around just 15 euro whilst the least expensive Derby tickets are around £33. I know which team I'd rather watch. As for losses, Derby County's chairman was complaining about losing £3m a month three years ago.
I think what's developing is a situation where there will be more and more 'yo-yo' clubs between the Premiership and Championship with other clubs finding it hard to compete financially with clubs dropping down with a parachute payment. I get the feeling that a few club chairmen won't mind too much not having to finance a new season in the Premiership. I know a few Forest fans certainly who would prefer to be competitive in the Championship in the future rather than getting their ass kicked in the Premier every week.
I detest the Premier actually. It is ruining football and the teams outside of it are largely being abandoned. It won't end well for many.
Should've been relegated for this last season and they clung on as long as they could to shaft Wycombe.
Bayern have the pick of the whole nation in terms of players, English clubs actually have to compete with eachother. That is a big money saver for Bayern. If a good player wants to stay in germany, there is only 1 team. In English, they can chose from at least 6.
"Derby lost £14.7m in 2016 and £7.9m in 2017. And they were heading for further heavy losses in 2018, which would have breached the EFL's profit and sustainability rules allowing a cumulative £39m loss over a three-year period, until they confirmed Morris had bought the Pride Park stadium from the club for £80m." The EFL gave them, and Sheffield Wednesday, a free pass in the form of a meaningless fine for gerrymandering their accounts. I feel sorry for the clubs that were relegated from the Championship whilst so called big clubs were effectively let away with cheating.