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Post by Topper Gas on Oct 10, 2020 20:28:51 GMT
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Post by yattongas on Oct 10, 2020 20:55:25 GMT
We’ve got a lot to thank Wael for , as without him at the helm in these times I think we would be a gonna as a club .
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Post by Deleted on Oct 10, 2020 21:21:20 GMT
We’ve got a lot to thank Wael for , as without him at the helm in these times I think we would be a gonna as a club . ..........Ahh yes but nevermind all that. He should have bought us million pound striker !!!
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Post by wsmjohn on Oct 10, 2020 22:13:15 GMT
Wael has given more to Bristol Rovers financially than any Bristolian director. He truly loves the club and football and we are very lucky to have him, UTG
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Post by onedaygas83 on Oct 10, 2020 22:36:53 GMT
The thing I want to know is who is funding all the wages at lower league clubs because most owners dont have the funds to bank roll players wages for a month without the club fully operating let alone the best part of a year and + I can see many clubs going bust at Christmas unless the government sort this out and fast!
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Post by yattongas on Oct 10, 2020 22:39:23 GMT
The thing I want to know is who is funding all the wages at lower league clubs because most owners dont have the funds to bank roll players wages for a month without the club fully operating let alone the best part of a year and + I can see many clubs going bust at Christmas unless the government sort this out and fast! Yep .... the sh** is gonna hit the fan
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Post by Topper Gas on Oct 11, 2020 7:55:51 GMT
The thing I want to know is who is funding all the wages at lower league clubs because most owners dont have the funds to bank roll players wages for a month without the club fully operating let alone the best part of a year and + I can see many clubs going bust at Christmas unless the government sort this out and fast! I think they received an advanced payment on the TV money in the summer? Although that must be only like a loan so debts will be still increasing.
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Post by Gas-Ed on Oct 11, 2020 8:05:25 GMT
I just can’t see how smaller clubs who scrape by month to month are going to survive. Even small but well-run clubs like Accrington Stanley must be deeply concerned about their future. If we don’t get fans back before the start of next season, I can’t see all 92 clubs surviving without help from the top. Let’s face it, there is more than enough money in the game to bail out clubs in the EFL in what are truly unforeseen circumstances.
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Post by piratesfchhh on Oct 11, 2020 8:10:59 GMT
Not sure how to best apportion it but there should have been a tax applied to transfer fees this summer to support lower league clubs.
If you can afford to spend tens of millions in this climate you can afford to give a bit
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Post by Gas Go Marching In on Oct 11, 2020 8:19:03 GMT
I just can’t see how smaller clubs who scrape by month to month are going to survive. Even small but well-run clubs like Accrington Stanley must be deeply concerned about their future. If we don’t get fans back before the start of next season, I can’t see all 92 clubs surviving without help from the top. Let’s face it, there is more than enough money in the game to bail out clubs in the EFL in what are truly unforeseen circumstances. The top clubs will bail out some of these teams but only if B Teams are introduced in lower leagues, I'm sure of it.
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Post by gasincider on Oct 11, 2020 9:01:43 GMT
The thing I want to know is who is funding all the wages at lower league clubs because most owners dont have the funds to bank roll players wages for a month without the club fully operating let alone the best part of a year and + I can see many clubs going bust at Christmas unless the government sort this out and fast! Why the government? It should be the greedy barstewards in the Premier League.
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Post by Wembley_Gas on Oct 11, 2020 9:45:36 GMT
The thing I want to know is who is funding all the wages at lower league clubs because most owners dont have the funds to bank roll players wages for a month without the club fully operating let alone the best part of a year and + I can see many clubs going bust at Christmas unless the government sort this out and fast! Why the government? It should be the greedy barstewards in the Premier League. Perhaps it is because it is the government that is deciding which businesses or entertainments are subject to stricter conditions that inhibit their ability to perform? No one is telling Cinemas that they must open and pay staff to play films to empty auditoriums, in fact the government is actually encouraging limited numbers to attend showings but they are the ones denying at least some match day revenue to clubs that have had to take their biggest earners off furlough - double standards. The government is also the one suggesting premier clubs bail out the rest or the pyramid, have they told Starbucks to bale out greasy joes cafe? Sainsbury’s to support the corner shop ? etc...
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Post by barumgas on Oct 11, 2020 9:53:56 GMT
The thing I want to know is who is funding all the wages at lower league clubs because most owners dont have the funds to bank roll players wages for a month without the club fully operating let alone the best part of a year and + I can see many clubs going bust at Christmas unless the government sort this out and fast! We might win the league if most clubs fail
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Post by Topper Gas on Oct 11, 2020 10:12:04 GMT
I just can’t see how smaller clubs who scrape by month to month are going to survive. Even small but well-run clubs like Accrington Stanley must be deeply concerned about their future. If we don’t get fans back before the start of next season, I can’t see all 92 clubs surviving without help from the top. Let’s face it, there is more than enough money in the game to bail out clubs in the EFL in what are truly unforeseen circumstances. The top clubs will bail out some of these teams but only if B Teams are introduced in lower leagues, I'm sure of it. There's no real evidence the majority of the Premiership clubs are supporting Man C's views, or the Government will let the Premiership force it though. I still don't get how the likes of Chelsea have spent £200m on transfer fees, mostly to foreign clubs, when the rest of the football is in such a perilous financial position in this country.
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Post by badengas on Oct 11, 2020 10:40:09 GMT
We’ve got a lot to thank Wael for , as without him at the helm in these times I think we would be a gonna as a club . ..........Ahh yes but nevermind all that. He should have bought us million pound striker !!! He still might.
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Post by LJG on Oct 11, 2020 11:17:39 GMT
The top clubs will bail out some of these teams but only if B Teams are introduced in lower leagues, I'm sure of it. There's no real evidence the majority of the Premiership clubs are supporting Man C's views, or the Government will let the Premiership force it though. I still don't get how the likes of Chelsea have spent £200m on transfer fees, mostly to foreign clubs, when the rest of the football is in such a perilous financial position in this country. Why do you keep taking about the government? You understand that the FA is a private organisation right? Not a public body.
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Post by Topper Gas on Oct 11, 2020 11:22:33 GMT
There's no real evidence the majority of the Premiership clubs are supporting Man C's views, or the Government will let the Premiership force it though. I still don't get how the likes of Chelsea have spent £200m on transfer fees, mostly to foreign clubs, when the rest of the football is in such a perilous financial position in this country. Why do you keep taking about the government? You understand that the FA is a private organisation right? Not a public body. www.bt.com/sport/news/2020/september/sports-minister-urges-top-flight-clubs-to-support-efl-and-those-most-in-need
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Post by Deleted on Oct 11, 2020 11:26:12 GMT
The top clubs will bail out some of these teams but only if B Teams are introduced in lower leagues, I'm sure of it. There's no real evidence the majority of the Premiership clubs are supporting Man C's views, or the Government will let the Premiership force it though. I still don't get how the likes of Chelsea have spent £200m on transfer fees, mostly to foreign clubs, when the rest of the football is in such a perilous financial position in this country. Chelsea had ring fenced their budget from the window they were banned, they also had that topped up by the money received from Eden Hazard’s sale. I’m not sure what relevance there is to buying from foreign clubs?
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Post by LJG on Oct 11, 2020 11:27:12 GMT
Right? And? Where in that article does it say the government have the power to control the organisation of the football league and whether B teams are entered? In fact where in that article does it say the government have any power over any potential financial bail out by the premier league? It doesn't. Because they don't.
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Post by neilv93 on Oct 11, 2020 11:31:19 GMT
The thing I want to know is who is funding all the wages at lower league clubs because most owners dont have the funds to bank roll players wages for a month without the club fully operating let alone the best part of a year and + I can see many clubs going bust at Christmas unless the government sort this out and fast! Why the government? It should be the greedy barstewards in the Premier League. www.telegraph.co.uk/football/2020/10/11/world-exclusive-man-utd-liverpool-driving-project-big-picture/ - £100 million one-off gift to the FA to cover its coronavirus losses, the non-league game, the women’s game, the grassroots
- 8.5 per cent of annual net Premier League revenue to go on operating costs and “good causes” including the FA
- From the remainder, 25 per cent of all combined Premier League and Football League revenues to go to the EFL clubs
- Six per cent of Premier League gross revenues to pay for stadium improvements across the top four divisions, calculated at £100 per seat
- New rules for the distribution of Premier League television income, overseas and domestic, including proposals that base one portion on performance over three years in the league
- The abolition of the League Cup and the Community Shield
- 24 clubs each in the Championship, League One and League Two reducing the professional game overall from 92 clubs to 90 (PL reduced to 18 teams)
- A women's professional league independent of the Premier League or the FA
- Two sides automatically relegated from the Premier League every season and the top two Championship teams promoted. The 16th place Premier League club in a play-off tournament with the Championship’s third, fourth and fifth placed teams.
- Financial fair play regulations in line with Uefa, and full access for Premier League executive to club accounts
- A fan charter including capping of away tickets at £20, away travel subsidised, a focus on a return to safe standing, a minimum away allocation of eight per cent capacity
- Later Premier League start in August to give greater scope for pre-season friendlies, and requirement for all clubs to compete once every five years in a summer Premier League tournament
- Huge changes to loan system allowing clubs to have 15 players out on loan domestically at any one time and up to four at a single club in England
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