Don't thinks so unless the Administrators allow them to get in for free!This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The Admninistrators are not bound by any contracts entered into before they were appointed unless they agree to be bound by them! Apparently they have stated that they will not be bound by the ST contracts but will allow ST holders in for free on Saturday. Probably won't for subsequent games as they will require income to meet the wages and operating costs as they fall due I imagine!![]()
View Poll Results: What is your attitude to a new "Rangers" entering at Div1?
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Opposed - and will walk away from Scottish professional football
537 52.85% -
Opposed - but will continue to support the game.
454 44.69% -
In favour.
25 2.46%
Results 841 to 870 of 45185
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15-02-2012 08:55 PM #841
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15-02-2012 08:55 PM #842
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The league survived going from the old bumper Sky to deal to pennies from the BBC, they'd survive a drop in TV money due to there being no Rangers just the same.
Doesn't mean cutbacks wouldn't have to be made, but the idea that the league would crumble is a nonsense.
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15-02-2012 08:59 PM #843
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15-02-2012 09:01 PM #844This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
But I take it you're not joking then?
If you look at the posts on the previous page (WindyMiller etc.), you will see the extent to which Hibs benefit from TV money.
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15-02-2012 09:14 PM #845
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15-02-2012 09:26 PM #846
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15-02-2012 09:33 PM #848
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15-02-2012 09:36 PM #849
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15-02-2012 09:39 PM #850This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
They are asking for the money from RFC first, before they let them have tickets. That's only sensible.
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15-02-2012 09:52 PM #851
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15-02-2012 09:58 PM #852This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The only politician I have read who has explicitly called for HMRC to go easy on Rangers is Brian Donohoe, a backbench Labour MP.
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15-02-2012 10:00 PM #853This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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15-02-2012 10:35 PM #855
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Not joking. WindyMiller calculates TV money as £1.2m per season for Hibs. I calculate this as £63158 for each of our 19 home games. For category B matches at £22 and £12 for concessions, we would likely average £17 per walk up admission. Therefore 3715 walk ups required to cover the loss of TV money. Over recent seasons our crowds at televised matches have been lower than when playing the same teams in the absence of TV. I agree with other posters that without live TV crowds at Hibs and other SPL clubs would increase to a level which would more than compensate for the loss of TV money. Scottish football is being suffocated by the demands of TV companies. IMOP TV money has not been advantageous.
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15-02-2012 10:43 PM #856This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
3700 extra punters is a steep increase. That's about the number of walk-ups we have at the moment, no? So we would have to double the walk-ups.
Don't get me wrong, I would love to see 12-13,000 every week. Just don't know if it's likely.
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15-02-2012 11:03 PM #857
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15-02-2012 11:09 PM #858
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My thinking is on the basis of ten SPL clubs being given a huge boost by Rangers being in administration and hopefully eventual liquidation. The psycophantic media believe Sky would withdraw their current SPL agreement if Rangers are kicked out. If that happens the habit of attending matches at 3pm on Saturdays and the realistic possibility of finishing second would boost crowds. I have stopped going to early KO,s. More than likely I am not the only one.
The general opinion is that the standard of Scottish football has being going down the plughole. Television has not helped, its time to get back to basics.
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16-02-2012 12:04 AM #859
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I live in Glasgow, even at that distance making an evening kick off after work is pretty much impossible, and an early kick off a right pain in the ass if god forbid you like the slightest hint of a lie in on a day off!Last edited by ScottB; 16-02-2012 at 12:06 AM.
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16-02-2012 12:11 AM #860This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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16-02-2012 12:20 AM #861
I can't believe there are posters on here advocating we can't survive without the huns because of tv/home game revenue. I know plenty fans who don't attend OF games on a variety of principles that I don't btw agree with.
Similarly, our crowds would increase if we were more competitive as we would be from the demise of one of our rivals.
Don't do the huns job for them. C'mon HMRC!
I'd rather watch amateur quality football if it meant those **** were gone forever."Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral.' - Paulo Freire
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16-02-2012 12:26 AM #862This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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16-02-2012 04:35 AM #863
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OK, couple of points. Never saw the interview with Salmond however I cannot believe a politician would come out and defend wholeheartedly the very group who completely disagree with his main policy and unlikely to vote for his party anyhoo.
Not often I disagree with M59 but I believe the televised football matches drag down the attendances to a level lower than TV income benefits, therefore no problem for me to go back to seeing 2 or 3 games a season live on TV. I do however see a problem where kids growing up whose fathers have not a lot of interest in live football also become the same and nurture an affinity for teams from SKY and ESPN rather than a local team.
Der Hun have to be pursued for every penny they owe. We do not owe anything to these guys or their history. It is good that certain people are starting to argue against saving them at any cost. That money must be recouped in the current financial climate and I would hope the government would eventually step in and make some sort of comment.
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16-02-2012 05:39 AM #864
The attractiveness of a season ticket has been gradually eroded over a number of years due to numerous reasons, including increased seating, and TV schedules. At one point it was a good bit cheaper, than attending as an ever present walk up fan. After all seated stadia was introduced, ST's meant you could sit beside your friends, at all games, especially the "big games", and not have to queue for tickets. All our "big games" at home are now on TV, at times that are not conducive to all ST holders, with a significant reduction in our home support. The loss of Rangers, their "benefit" to Scottish football through advertising and TV revenue, would be negligible, and if more supporters attended the game, rather than watch it on TV, Hibs, IMO, would benefit more, in a more competitive league, with little or no TV coverage.
GGTTH
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16-02-2012 05:54 AM #865
So if rangers or Celtic were to be relegated for whatever reason sky have the option to pull out of the t. Deal? That's a pathetic clause for the SPL to allow and totally puts into perspective how it's one rule for them and another for everyone else. **** sky and espn give us a league without em
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16-02-2012 08:01 AM #866
If Sky want to pull out of the T V deal because of a shortage of Bigot-fests let them.
What Scottish Football needs is a decent TV deal with the BBC providing a good quality highlights program and a set number of live games in a season.
At the moment the BBC spends about one hundredth of the cash on Scottish Football than it does on the block coverage given to all aspects of the game in England.
10% of the License Fee money comes from Scotland and the SPL and politicians eager to gain some credibility from footballs current problems should be raising this inequality with the BBC.
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16-02-2012 08:22 AM #867This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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16-02-2012 08:31 AM #868
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The TV deal line is a joke - the game is currently badly broken here as it is. I'd happily see what happens without one or either of the OF and without a TV deal.
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16-02-2012 08:40 AM #869
From the bits on this thread i've looked at I can see two prevailing arguments. 1. That Hibs benefit more from the TV deal than if it wasn't there and 2. Hibs would benefit more or equally from no tv games and increased walk ups. What I would argue is that it shouldn't be a question of figures of current TV earnings and current attendance, but rather a question of how Hibs would be relative to the other SPL teams. For example, Hibs may lose 1.2 million a season from the TV deal, but so would every other SPL side. What we need is someone who can work out how the removal of Rangers and the TV deal would impact on Hibs in comparison to other SPL sides. Then we make a decision based on that. Part of me wants Rangers to die and never return, but the other part thinks what if keeping Rangers in the SPL actually benefits Hibs in comparison to the other sides. Are we better placed, or worse placed, than the other sides to handle life after Rangers? If anyone has any formula to work it out then throw it into the mix!
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16-02-2012 08:53 AM #870This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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