That will soon change if they gave the job to Tim Sherwood

That will soon change if they gave the job to Tim Sherwood
To be fair to the owner you can't have the tail wag the dog.agreenwood wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 9:02 amHell of a pitch to the next manager is that. In other words, the next manager needs to come in and try she save them from relegation with a squad Parker just said was “ underequipped at this level”.
Isn't the owner in a mood because he can't get permission for a new stadium or something like that, meaning he'd have to fund Bournemouth for the entire time he remains as owner if they want to stay in the PL?Paul Waine wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 12:09 pmBournemouth have massive debts - all owed to the owner. The latest set of accounts say that the owner would only ask for the loan to be repaid when the club was able to repay. But, I've read something a few weeks ago that said the owner had now decided that he wants his loan repaying.
Bournemouth have been a regular user of Macquarie to accelerate the money from outgoing transfers. I wonder if the owner has been in touch with MSD about a loan - to be used to repay some of the money the club owes him?
Bit late in the transfer window to be bringing in a new manager/coach.
I think this has been the case for a long time. The only thing that will save football as we know it (captain) is for it to implode on itself financially and get back to some kind of reality. This time may come sooner than some think though as I was reading a recent article about Sky Sports and their PL viewing figures are dropping steadily. If this trend continues then advertisers will vote with their feet and suddenly Sky will start looking at how much they pay out.ClaretTony wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 9:16 amWas looking at some of the figures yesterday, the PL has moved way beyond us now.
gone past £1 billion net and likely to go some way beyond similar with £2 billion mark for overall spend which is likely to be trashed -so much of it is on the never/never - clubs are likely to get burned (though a number will be able to accommodate that)agreenwood wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 9:12 amSpending in PL this season has been frightening. Half the league might top £100m by Thursday.
.... which could in turn see them f... off to a European Super League then we can have our football back.welsbyswife wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 1:08 pmThe only thing is that if Sky does decide that it isn't worth offering so much for the broadcast rights to a point where it pulls out that will add more pressure for individual clubs to stream games and charge for their own content that way. That would disproportionately benefit the big clubs as opposed to the collective arrangement we currently have. Even if that is flawed because it is so heavily weighted to the top flight.
I have previously suggested that sustained Premier League status was more important to the economy of the town than the needs of the club. I still stand by thathouseboy wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 12:57 pmI think this has been the case for a long time. The only thing that will save football as we know it (captain) is for it to implode on itself financially and get back to some kind of reality. This time may come sooner than some think though as I was reading a recent article about Sky Sports and their PL viewing figures are dropping steadily. If this trend continues then advertisers will vote with their feet and suddenly Sky will start looking at how much they pay out.
I have nothing personally against the big clubs but what we really need to see is one of them in serious financial trouble to the point of collapse with reduced Sky money and see where that takes us. Of course the billionaires may stay on for a while but maybe even they will jump ship if and when the over hyped PL loses its shine.
We all want to be in the top league but the reality is most clubs can’t afford to compete, even some alleged big ones, and for that reason alone relegation did not cause me any loss of sleep and what we are watching this season so far from our club is far superior to pretty much anything we’ve seen in the last few years. I would like us to win the Championship this season (and we are looking more and more capable) but it’s a poisoned chalice. If we do, or even if we win promotion at all, it’s back to playing teams who live in a different universe and just hoping to ‘finish 17th’ in order to keep earning the money that is never enough for us to compete anyway.
I readily admit to writing this with complete bias as I have loathed the PL and all it stands for pretty much since it started, and certainly in the last 15 years, but I hope it does make some sense. If I didn’t love Burnley FC so much I think I would have turned my back on the game years ago, at least in this country.
Could you show me where you explained this concept please?Chester Perry wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 3:33 pmI have previously suggested that sustained Premier League status was more important to the economy of the town than the needs of the club. I still stand by that
it is all on the MMT - around the economic benefit, there is a growing amount of serious academic study about it - most famously Liverpool commissioned Deloitte to look at the economic befits Champions League participation brought to the Merseyside region (over £400m a year in around 2018) it was used to support planning applications to enlarge Anfield and make changes to local infrastructureHipper wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 3:52 pmCould you show me where you explained this concept please?
If about actual finance, does the money the club get really go to the town? Most of it, I would have thought, goes to the players and management and they generally do not live in the town. In terms of attendance money, is it possible that a successful Championship club, who might also have a cup run or two, could get more people into the town then the lesser number of matches in the Premier League.
Or is it about prestige, name on the map type of thing?
The latter!.......and all that prancing about.claretonthecoast1882 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 9:00 amIs this because of the 9-0 result or his s**t jackets/cardigans
I’m not sure he was a crap player? He would have done a job for us at his peak.
Defo pal. Very decent in my opinion.LeadBelly wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 6:31 pmAye, not crap at all, he was a very decent player. Donkey-work midfielder of the type all teams need but often not recognised.
486 senior club appearances over c 20 years including 128 Charlton, 15 Chelsea, 55 Newcastle, 113 WHU, 50 Spurs, 119 Fulham
Plus 18 senior England caps (and a smattering of age group caps prior to that).
I kind of agree and kind of don’t. Yes a football league side keeps the town in the public eye, although with the massive media bias now toward the PL it means that EFL teams get far less mention now than they used to. But some towns, notably Burnley, do get known because of their football club. In fact I think Burnley are a town only known for football and very little else. So it does great in that sense. Does it bring money in? Well visiting fans do bring money in and of course the PL has bigger clubs with more visitors but does it make that much? I’m not certain.Chester Perry wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 3:33 pmI have previously suggested that sustained Premier League status was more important to the economy of the town than the needs of the club. I still stand by that
with you on the last pointhouseboy wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 11:15 pmI kind of agree and kind of don’t. Yes a football league side keeps the town in the public eye, although with the massive media bias now toward the PL it means that EFL teams get far less mention now than they used to. But some towns, notably Burnley, do get known because of their football club. In fact I think Burnley are a town only known for football and very little else. So it does great in that sense. Does it bring money in? Well visiting fans do bring money in and of course the PL has bigger clubs with more visitors but does it make that much? I’m not certain.
I know you quoted after your post about Deloitte carrying out surveys etc but what are the criteria based on? I fail to see any major advantage to a town/city financially for having a PL side other than anything accidental like bigger attendances and more visiting fans and what they bring I would imagine would be relatively small in the overall scheme. I certainly don’t think or believe that places get major investors as a result of having a PL team so I’m not sure where that argument comes from.
I do not believe however that PL status benefits the town more than the club. Burnley FC have benefitted to the tune of tens (hundreds) of millions of pounds from the PL, I would like to know if the town made anywhere near that, I suspect the answer is merely a small fraction.
Anyway it’s an interesting argument (but I still loathe the money machine that is the PL).![]()
I fear you are correct there. I think for teams like Burnley to "compete" in the PL the European Super League needs to happen to level up the next tier.ClaretTony wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 9:16 amWas looking at some of the figures yesterday, the PL has moved way beyond us now.
Public dissent is not a good look.agreenwood wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 8:58 amSounds like the owner didn’t like him asking for money to spend.
Was there a figure for grief tourism? Must contribute billions in Blackburn.Marty Dobson wrote: ↑Wed Aug 31, 2022 7:09 pmThere's a sign in front of St Peters center that says Tourism is worth £2.5 million annually.to Burnley. A pitiful figure if true and puts the football club influence on the local economy in context.