by Elm Park Kid »
14 Apr 2021 18:27
Snowflake Royal Elm Park Kid People can't have it both ways though - you move to a low salary model and the chances that you are competitive in the league fall dramatically. It's certainly not impossible - there are examples of clubs that have done well on a reasonable budget - but it is essentially a gamble. It's like buying cheap shares that could balloon in prices but will more likely than not become worthless. There are no guaranteed 'bargains' - no way of knowing for sure that a team put together of players that haven't been successful at our level before will be in the future. A canny management can improve the odds, but not by that much.
I know there's a few on here that believe that everyone involved in football management are clueless and that there are 'obvious' ways of building a successful team on the cheap. But they're just deluded to how difficult this all is - spending vast amounts of money over a few seasons is a legitimate tactic that has proven success for many clubs, but there's also the chance that you don't get promoted and then end up looking like a basket case. That's not a mistake, it's not being irresponsible or 'stupid' - it's a calculated gamble.
I would rather we balanced the books and avoided signing high-wage players. But I acknowledge that could mean we a Championship - League One yo-yo clubs. In terms of size, Reading should definitely be a Championship team; but when you exist in a league where so many clubs are either receiving parachute payments or rolling the dice with owners money, your size is no longer than relevant.
It's pretty simple not to sign bang average players on £25k a week for three / four years for example.
Or not to refuse to sell a decent player for £8m and then give him a three year contract on £30k a week when your finances are already bolloxed.
You look at the signings of Pogrebnyak, Drenthe, Bacuna, McShane, Baldock, Aluko etc and it's not hard to see they were serial failures, vastly over priced or on a steep decline due to age. And yet all got quite long quite high value contracts out of us.
Then you look at Laurent, McIntyre, Rinomhota, and Morrison and you can see how it should actually be done.
Sure - but then the high-wage signing of Jason Roberts arguably got us promoted.
As others had said, the issue is that the value of PL football is so high that any amount you gamble you at Championship level is instantly made to look irrelevant if you 'win'. Who cares if you turned down £8m and pay £30k a week to a defender when the tv money alone for one season of PL football is close to £100m?
Say we didn't buy/loan any of these high-wage players - we might not being doing too much worse, but I can almost guarantee you that we wouldn't be doing better.
Pretty much every club in the top 2 divisions has made a number of high profile flop signings in the past - it's just the nature of the game. If clubs could just guarantee getting decent players in on the cheap or from the academy, why would anyone sign these high-wage players? It's like I said, you're kind of assuming that everyone involved in football is stupid. I'm not sure where our average salary stands now, but last season we were only 8th! There's a lot of clubs spending a lot of money and only 3 teams can go up each season.