clauskipapereyesRobRoyal The funny thing is that all of our sales have represented, to me, pretty good business on the part of the club. How we've managed to get £5.5m for Kitson and £3m for SHunt is beyond me. And £2m for a sadly past-it Sonko... amazing. To see Doyle going was gutting, but it was inevitable and it was a great price. The problem is that without proper re-investment this "good business" can ruin a club.
They're only good business if the impact to the quality of the squad is mitigated by bringing someone in, wouldn't one agree?
+1 would indeed agree. With the original poster too. But much as it's good to see us finally sign some players, we look some way off matching our Premier League squad. To the point that team didn't cost us much, I think the way they gelled and things worked out was a real one-off. Having made it to the position we were in further investment was the only way forward and sadly I think we're trying to repeat a miracle on the cheap rather than reinvest that income. Successful business reinvest, but we don't seem to want to and pessimism is therefore getting the better of me
Clauski, the observation about the cost of that team to us is not the suggestion that cheaping out is the best way. But it is a counterpoint to the naive statement "you get what you pay for". Strap's chart makes no undisputable point other than these players cost x and those players cost y.