Ian Royal Hoop Blah, please tell me those figures are from Portsmouth's own Annual Review?
They're from Mr Musambo of Nigeria's African bank.
by papereyes » 01 Jul 2009 08:32
Ian Royal Hoop Blah, please tell me those figures are from Portsmouth's own Annual Review?
by West Stand Man » 01 Jul 2009 08:57
Carlin20 2 FA CUPS
2 CHAMPS OF ENGLAND
5 SEMIS
2 LOSING FA CUP FINALS
READING - NOTHING
West Stand Man Reading was a small provincial club and is now a big player in the football world
by handbags_harris » 01 Jul 2009 09:14
boy1985West Stand Man Reading was a small provincial club and is now a big player in the football world
handbags_harris Never got it with Portsmouth, an average sized club, won the odd trophy here and there, but their fans have a massive chip on their shoulder which begs the question, where the hell from?!.
by Hoop Blah » 01 Jul 2009 09:37
ChaneyHoop Blah Some of the key numbers for Financial Year 07-08
Revenue = £70m
Wages = £55
Short Term Debt = £43m
Long Term Debt = £22m
Other Liabilities = £70m
Total Liabilities = £137m
total wage bill of 55 quid, fooking hell no wonder we couldn`t attract players
Carlin20 Start of 2008? Say you say. This is middle of 2009. As I say, things have dramatically changed for the better.
by West Stand Man » 01 Jul 2009 10:00
handbags_harrisboy1985West Stand Man Reading was a small provincial club and is now a big player in the football world
But we're not really are we WSM? Your otherwise pretty good post is spoiled slightly by that quote.
Otherwise a comedy thread lit up by one of the many lairy, cocky, Portsmouth pikies. Never got it with Portsmouth, an average sized club, won the odd trophy here and there, but their fans have a massive chip on their shoulder which begs the question, where the hell from?! Even when they were getting 9000 in 2-0 home defeats against us (beautiful day, one of the few when Bullivant was in charge) they had this chip.
And if Oxford Utd are a bigger club than Reading, I'll eat Compo's Hat.
by Dirk Gently » 01 Jul 2009 10:08
handbags_harrisboy1985West Stand Man Reading was a small provincial club and is now a big player in the football world
But we're not really are we WSM? Your otherwise pretty good post is spoiled slightly by that quote.
Otherwise a comedy thread lit up by one of the many lairy, cocky, Portsmouth pikies. Never got it with Portsmouth, an average sized club, won the odd trophy here and there, but their fans have a massive chip on their shoulder which begs the question, where the hell from?! Even when they were getting 9000 in 2-0 home defeats against us (beautiful day, one of the few when Bullivant was in charge) they had this chip.
And if Oxford Utd are a bigger club than Reading, I'll eat Compo's Hat.
Dirk Gently
We certainly are a big player in the football world - but not in the way most supporters think.
The influence we have over other clubs and the game's administrators is much larger than it ought to be. Off the field there is an awful lot on innovation here that is watched closely and often copied by other clubs, and the business model is much admired and discussed by others in the game - look at the number of other clubs that talk about "the Reading model." Much of what has happened at this club is quite different from what has traditionally happened in the game - and that has certainly made ripples across what tends to be a pretty conservative (small "c") industry. Plus in the world of supporter activism our supporters have a fair degree of influence, too.
by Dirk Gently » 01 Jul 2009 10:24
boy1985Dirk Gently
We certainly are a big player in the football world - but not in the way most supporters think.
The influence we have over other clubs and the game's administrators is much larger than it ought to be. Off the field there is an awful lot on innovation here that is watched closely and often copied by other clubs, and the business model is much admired and discussed by others in the game - look at the number of other clubs that talk about "the Reading model." Much of what has happened at this club is quite different from what has traditionally happened in the game - and that has certainly made ripples across what tends to be a pretty conservative (small "c") industry. Plus in the world of supporter activism our supporters have a fair degree of influence, too.
Whilst that is all true it doesn't make us a 'big player' does it? We may have a lot of influence on the way other clubs run the club as a business, but on a football side I would say there can be at least 50-100 teams that can be considered bigger players than us.
Being a good role model is different to being a big player imo
by loyalroyal4life » 01 Jul 2009 10:35
by Vision » 01 Jul 2009 10:44
Victor Meldrew Shame that the thread became a slanging match between us and a Pompey fan who has nothing better to do than come on another club's site-such a good job that we have the diplomatic Spacey to fight our corner.
I don't care much about Pompey or Southampton or how Reading compares with those on grounds of chaviness or potential-having lived and worked in and around all 3 towns I would say that they are about as good or as bad as each other but as football places I would say that Pompey is more of a football town than either Reading or Southampton.
That is by the way,so as the topic says (and we have done this type of topic just about every year ) Where do we go from here?
As a fan for longer even than the earlier poster West Stand Man I have seen more changes than most but the biggest change seems to me to be a lack of soul in the sense that our club (the first team) has become what some said on here 5 or 6 years ago that they didn't want to see,i.e a team of footballing mercenaries with no real affilliation to our club but that has exactly what has happened.
We have had a load of Irish imports,Americans,Australians,Icelandics,Africans,French and even an East European and that is exactly what some of those posters didn't want to happen.
A lot of clubs have followed a similar path and paid lip-service to developing their own talent but haven't done so.
Much as I think through tightness we gave up a fantastic position in The Premiership-talk about throwing away something that had take all those years to get to-I think now where we are at is a smallish club with no great nor reckless ambition that almost through accident will be playing home-grown kids in the immediate future.
Maybe with this new approach will mean that the club will feel like Reading again and not a mixed-bag of foreigners here for the dough and hopefully the worst of the mercenaries will have gone by the time we face Forest.
FWIW I think it will be a hard slog this season where we consolidate in a mid-table position and attendances fall to about a 15,000 average but at least we will have seen more of OUR players from the Academy which for some of us will be o.k(having accepted that we have cocked up 2 years ago) and we can have this debate all over again,i.e should we be splashing out on foreign players who might get us promoted or are we happy to stay where we are which is higher than where we have been for most of our history?
by rhroyal » 01 Jul 2009 12:07
by Mad Dog's Ghost » 01 Jul 2009 12:34
by Dirk Gently » 01 Jul 2009 12:37
by rg6royal » 01 Jul 2009 12:41
by Vision » 01 Jul 2009 12:44
by maf82 » 01 Jul 2009 13:09
by West Stand Man » 01 Jul 2009 13:11
maf82 are they taking refunds on season tickets?yet again hammond,talks aload of tosh
by maf82 » 01 Jul 2009 13:14
West Stand Manmaf82 are they taking refunds on season tickets?yet again hammond,talks aload of tosh
I am sure they can be persuaded to take yours back. In fact I suspect that they might all chip in to ensure that you are not at any games.
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