by Royals and Racers » 08 Apr 2020 09:07
by Hound » 08 Apr 2020 09:30
by Nameless » 08 Apr 2020 09:49
NamelessOld Man Andrews English football has needed a hitting of the reset button for a while now, especially at Football League level.
Would be very much in favour of all Football League clubs having a salary cap each season like in the NFL with all players given a 1 year contract so thay they then become available the following summer for clubs to bid for. Start each club within in Championship, League 1, League 2 with a set cap dependant on the league they are in.[/quote
Surely that would mean the end of Academy’s and indeed any incentive to produce youth players, ending the future supply of players.
In US sport youth development is outsourced to the universities. Who would spend 10 years developing young players if they got 1 year’s use of them then lost them for nothing ?
by genome » 08 Apr 2020 10:05
Having wiped the slate, clubs would be bought back from administration by the same owners and staff re-employed. Reading, for instance, would re-form as Reading 2020, just as Middlesbrough have 1986 in their full company name, since being resurrected by Steve Gibson.
by WestYorksRoyal » 08 Apr 2020 10:05
by Nameless » 08 Apr 2020 10:53
by Nameless » 08 Apr 2020 10:57
by Sanguine » 08 Apr 2020 11:02
Nameless Wage caps would need to be global
Enforce one here and everyone would disappear to countries where there wasn’t one.
It’s why so many overseas players are in England’s - there is a differential between what they earn here and what they earn in the rest of the world.
Now it might be a good thing to turn English football into a low cost, low skill affair but maybe not...
Rugby gets round the issue of players chasing the money by the international eligibility rules but that wouldn’t work in football.
by SCIAG » 08 Apr 2020 11:03
by One87One » 08 Apr 2020 11:06
by Nameless » 08 Apr 2020 11:22
One87One If they allow every Championship club to enter admin to clear their debts, then they have to let all Football League clubs do the same. I'm fully in favour of wage caps at all levels of world football. The game is completely out of control.
by WestYorksRoyal » 08 Apr 2020 11:58
SanguineNameless Wage caps would need to be global
Enforce one here and everyone would disappear to countries where there wasn’t one.
It’s why so many overseas players are in England’s - there is a differential between what they earn here and what they earn in the rest of the world.
Now it might be a good thing to turn English football into a low cost, low skill affair but maybe not...
Rugby gets round the issue of players chasing the money by the international eligibility rules but that wouldn’t work in football.
Yep, wage cap works in US sports because the NBA, NFL and MLB are also the highest paying leagues in their sports (and even then it's a team salary cap, rather than for individuals).
by Sanguine » 08 Apr 2020 12:03
WestYorksRoyal
The massive flaw in this plan is that our Big 6 would never agree to it. But if they hypothetically did, the rest of the world could well follow.
by Franchise FC » 08 Apr 2020 13:00
by Notts Royal » 08 Apr 2020 13:49
by tmesis » 08 Apr 2020 22:16
by Franchise FC » 09 Apr 2020 07:56
tmesis I don't think you need salary caps. All you need to do if prevent clubs that are in debt from increasing that debt by signing more players.
If there's one thing I'd love to have from the US sports, it's not salary caps, it's the ability to "cut" players from the squad. If unwanted players could be released on a free it would help hugely, especially after relegation.
Fans here would hate salary caps. Imagine if we dropped into League Two after administration, for example. We might be getting 8000 a week at our games, but be limited to a budget of a club pulling 3500 a game. Fans would be hugely frustrated at not being able to use a financial advantage of being a "bigger club" to our benefit.
by Greatwesternline » 09 Apr 2020 08:19
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