Archie's penalty Bloody hell, you people
by Ferris » 08 Jul 2011 09:30
Archie's penalty Bloody hell, you people
by Royal Rother » 08 Jul 2011 09:33
RoyalBlueAvon RoyalRoyal Rother Because, quite clearly it works.
Ok, I'm a patient man, so I'll explain...
If the average operating loss without selling players is £4m then if we budgeted for no operating loss it stands to reason we'd have £4m less to spend on players wages, management and infrastructure.
And I'm hopeful you'd agree that if we took that course of action the chances of challenging for promotion would be much reduced.
The reason we don't go down that route, and why we are able to budget for an operating loss, is because we are pretty secure in the knowledge that, due to the excellence of the adademy and scouting network / recruitment policy (and the vision and long-term investment in those areas), we will always have good players who can be sold at an excellent profit to make up for the shortfall.
That my friend, whether you get it or not, is GOOD BUSINESS!!
You may well be right, however football is about so much more than just "GOOD BUSINESS". It is about passion, excitement, the pain of failure and the joy of victory. We don't turn up every week just to check that the club are still solvent.
Exactly. Maybe we should drop out of the standard football league structure and form the 'Good Business' league because, regardless of all the horror stories/warnings of clubs going to the wall in their dozens, few in the football league appear to want to play by the same rules as us.
As for the 'look where we've come from, wonderful stadium etc. argument' - yes, we have come on a long way but so have numerous other clubs. The Mad Stad is no longer so unusual. Lots of clubs now have decent stadiums. If you stand still, others catch up and then overtake you.
by muddyfeet » 08 Jul 2011 09:35
by Royal Rother » 08 Jul 2011 09:39
under the tinRoyal Rother What shortcomings does the club have in those areas then?
The concensus on here is that the club is operating at an annual £2M loss.
If the club generates an extra £2M in ticket sales, perimeter advertising, executive boxes................
by Avon Royal » 08 Jul 2011 09:44
Royal Rother We were one of the first of the smaller clubs to get a new stadium.
We were one of the first of the smaller clubs to invest in a proper Academy.
We are now reaping the rewards of those investments.
Other less well run clubs gamble huge sums of money on players that they don't really have just to compete with us.
Whatever the ineffectiveness of the penalties for financial mismanagement, the benefits our approach give rise to will continue to rack up over the next few years as new regulations on wages kick in and as the economic cutbacks have a deeper effect on people's disposable income.
by RobRoyal » 08 Jul 2011 09:45
No Fixed Abode Reading fans getting fleeced. The irony.
by brendywendy » 08 Jul 2011 09:47
Harpers So Solid Crewunder the tinRoyal Rother What shortcomings does the club have in those areas then?
The concensus on here is that the club is operating at an annual £2M loss.
If the club generates an extra £2M in ticket sales................
So we spend £3m on a player for example, to generate £2m, not sure that stacks up. We have a solid fanbase of about 18-000 people they are not all full paying adults, from the figure I just mentioned in my last post we would need attendances of 24000 to obtain the extra £2m you talk about, and like it or not that is not going to happen at the moment.
by Sir Dodger Royal » 08 Jul 2011 09:50
by Uke » 08 Jul 2011 09:52
under the tinUkeunder the tin Sure, operating costs in any business need to be kept under control, but it is not in any sense "good business" to take your eye off your income streams.
They didn't, transfer fees are the club's income stream
That might be your opinion, mate, but some of us view capitalising player assets merely papers over the shortcomings in the traditional income areas like ticket sales, corporates, merchandising etc.
by RobRoyal » 08 Jul 2011 09:52
by brendywendy » 08 Jul 2011 09:54
by Royal Rother » 08 Jul 2011 09:54
Avon RoyalRoyal Rother We were one of the first of the smaller clubs to get a new stadium.
We were one of the first of the smaller clubs to invest in a proper Academy.
We are now reaping the rewards of those investments.
Other less well run clubs gamble huge sums of money on players that they don't really have just to compete with us.
Whatever the ineffectiveness of the penalties for financial mismanagement, the benefits our approach give rise to will continue to rack up over the next few years as new regulations on wages kick in and as the economic cutbacks have a deeper effect on people's disposable income.
Wigan were one of the first of the smaller clubs to get a new stadium.
Wigan invested in an academy.
Wigan invested in their team.
Wigan are now reaping the rewards of those investments.
by Snowball » 08 Jul 2011 09:54
by Uke » 08 Jul 2011 09:54
under the tinRoyal Rother What shortcomings does the club have in those areas then?
The concensus on here is that the club is operating at an annual £2M loss.
If the club generates an extra £2M in ticket sales................
by brendywendy » 08 Jul 2011 09:56
Yet no need to worry as we will always have a massive hole in the balance sheet according to RFC, which is down to creative accountancy and is complete bol***ks.
Enjoy boys because it could well be long, boring season of no achievement. However of course we will again have a massive hole in the balance sheet next season. What a load of old tosh. Time for the Madman to clear off and time also for the Reading fans to really give the Club a lot of stick if results are poor.
by Uke » 08 Jul 2011 09:58
brendywendy the key is reinvenstment.
if a good proportion of the money raised, from mills, and most probably long- 12 million total? isnt spent on reinforcing the squad, then ill be as annoyed as the next man.
the fact is the model works. we buy small, sell big, and supplement through the academy.
people who say the team will suffer- ive not seen it yet,as we seem to have maintained our competetiveness. and the second JM sees there is a possibility of it going tits up, he will act- as he did twice with rodgers. once when he gave him millions to spend on the likes of mills. and again when he moved decisively to stop teh rot.
by Gordons Cumming » 08 Jul 2011 10:01
by Dick Habbin's hairdo » 08 Jul 2011 10:02
Snowball I woke up this morning realising how little I cared about Mills going.
Call it instinct or intuition, but it doesn't feel bad at all.
He just (from my perspective) "wasn't a Reading player"
I feel sure we will find 1-2 decent FBs and probably a LB soon
and I sincerely believe we won't miss Mills.
I'm not expressing myself very well, but of all the RFC players he's the least
I "relate to". He scores a goal, I'm please for the club, not him, whereas Kebe,
Long, Hunt, HRK, Elwood (already) feel "part of Reading FC". It's a family thing.
by Snowball » 08 Jul 2011 10:07
Dick Habbin's hairdoSnowball I woke up this morning realising how little I cared about Mills going.
Call it instinct or intuition, but it doesn't feel bad at all.
He just (from my perspective) "wasn't a Reading player"
I feel sure we will find 1-2 decent FBs and probably a LB soon
and I sincerely believe we won't miss Mills.
I'm not expressing myself very well, but of all the RFC players he's the least
I "relate to". He scores a goal, I'm please for the club, not him, whereas Kebe,
Long, Hunt, HRK, Elwood (already) feel "part of Reading FC". It's a family thing.
It's soft and girlie - but my sentiment, too.
5 million for a centre half who has one great game in ten and is a bit of an arse, too. Thank you very much, we'll be having that.
by under the tin » 08 Jul 2011 10:09
brendywendy
if we had a wide and loyal fan base we could do it
but you only had to see the moaning, and talk of not renewing season tickets last year when we looked like wed finish midtable to see that we dont have that at all.
we may have had some extra money, but JM had to reduce season ticket prices by so much, just to maintain a 2/3 full ground.
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