by theoilmerchant » 11 Nov 2012 11:44
by Royal Lady » 11 Nov 2012 12:10
by theoilmerchant » 11 Nov 2012 12:16
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 11 Nov 2012 13:47
theoilmerchant Also makes the case that if we introduced standing in England again, would it lead to cheaper prices?
by theoilmerchant » 11 Nov 2012 14:23
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 11 Nov 2012 19:35
theoilmerchant What do you mean by witten by an idiot? I wasn't stating that it would be the case, I was merely opening up debate as to whether it would be case
by theoilmerchant » 11 Nov 2012 20:02
by Alexander Litvinenko » 11 Nov 2012 20:12
theoilmerchant I wasn't stating that it would be the case, in fact the opposite. Im not saying introducing standing will reduce prices to such an extent but merely stating clubs should reduce prices, big difference. Plus the whole message is that we get it bad here and that the German fan is treated as a King.
by theoilmerchant » 11 Nov 2012 20:29
Alexander Litvinenkotheoilmerchant I wasn't stating that it would be the case, in fact the opposite. Im not saying introducing standing will reduce prices to such an extent but merely stating clubs should reduce prices, big difference. Plus the whole message is that we get it bad here and that the German fan is treated as a King.
Because of the fundamental fact that German fans OWN their football clubs. Apart from the two old ex-works teams, all German clubs have the 50+1 ownership rules, which mean that 50% of the shares plus one have to be owned by the club's fans.
That changes the whole emphasis of the club - it belongs to the supporters and is there for them, and it can't be taken over (plus the rules on debt mean that it can't run up massive, unpayable debts. Quite different to England where clubs can be owned by rich individuals with no link to the club or its community, and can be bought and sold without any reference to its supporters, and the misdeeds of an owner can condemn it to financial oblivion.
In terms of financial regulation and ownership models the German model work and is brilliant - the English one is fatally flawed.
by Alexander Litvinenko » 12 Nov 2012 10:02
theoilmerchant Exactly, I completely agree it is something not only England should follow, but the whole footballing world. The way things are run in Germany is admirable. But the problem is, will it ever happen in England? It's hard to see that being the case
by theoilmerchant » 12 Nov 2012 18:50
Alexander Litvinenkotheoilmerchant Exactly, I completely agree it is something not only England should follow, but the whole footballing world. The way things are run in Germany is admirable. But the problem is, will it ever happen in England? It's hard to see that being the case
the difficulty is how you get there from where we are now. A lot will depend on the DCMS enquiry due to report soon - their first report came out with some good intentions, but the "joint response" of the football authorities (FA's, PL & FL but written almost exclusively by the Premier League) will almost kill football as we know it if accepted, as it give the PL more say over the game than the FA. The DCMS second report is awaited, and there'll be massive rections in the FA etc as a result, I'm sure.
But the short answer, I'm afriad, is "no". Football ought to be run fr the benefit of its key stakeholders, but I'm afraid in England these days it's owned and run by a few rich people for the benefit of a few rich people - and without government legislation I can't ever see that changing. And I can't see any government having the balls to take on the money and the dirty-tricks of teh Premier League and their media machine to impose that.
The only possible route to change is from the bottom up, through supporter ownership, but because of the sums involved that will be a long slow road - and all the time supporter-owned clubs will be at a massive disadvantage as they'll be managing the books properly while competing against sugar-daddies who can burden clubs with enormous debt.
by Jobbo no.11 » 12 Nov 2012 22:26
by Long_Boi » 13 Nov 2012 00:41
by Alexander Litvinenko » 13 Nov 2012 09:48
Long_Boi .....
When all is said & done football fans do get badly treated by clubs, but they let it happen & so like any relationship then this is the case the Status Quo will continue. That is unless someone makes a stand, says this not acceptable& stop going to games.
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