Good read from The Oatcake here, with debt figures.
I know most are only rumours but it seems like they're being linked with every half decent player in the Premiership and Bruce himself seemed to be saying on Sky yesterday that he's looking to have a big overhaul in the summer.
How can they do this if they're 66m in debt as the Guardin suggested.
Any Sunderland fans know the proper situation. Haven't seen CF around for a while he usually gives a balanced opinion.
If anybody missed it the current net debts for the Premiership clubs are as follows.
Arsenal Debt 136m Wages 110m
Villa Debt 110m Wages 80m
Brum Debt 16m Wages 38m
Blackburn Debt 21m Wages 47m
Blackpool Debt 9m Wages 13m
Man C Debt 41m Wages 133m
Man you Debt 590m Wages 131m
Newcastle you Debt 150m Wages 47m
Stoke C Debt 8m Wages 45m
Sunderland Debt 66m Wages 54m
Bolton Wanderers Debt 93m Wages 46m
Chelsea Debt 734m Wages 174m
Everton Debt 45m Wages 54m
Fulham Debt 190m Wages 49m
Liverpool Debt 123m Wages 121m
Spurs Debt 65m Wages 67m
WBA Debt 10m Wages 23m
West Ham Debt 34m Wages 54m
Wigan Debt 73m Wages 39m
Wolves Debt 0m Wages 30m
Comments on us are
Stoke’s achievement in establishing themselves in the Premier League is thanks financially to the backing of Peter Coates and his family fortune from bet365 online gambling. After returning in 2005 to buy back the club he has always supported, Coates has put in £43m, much of it towards buying players for Tony Pulis to keep Stoke up. The wage bill is climbing steadily, as it tends to do once promoted clubs grow in ambition.Having been the owner when Stoke went down to the third tier in 1998, Coates knows it can quickly change.Outlook Healthy, with the Coates family committed to backing the club.
Sunderlands is
Difficult not to wonder whether this is how US private equity investor Ellis Short imagined owning a Premier League club would be, when chairman Niall Quinn met him at the US Masters golf and sold him the idea of Sunderland. The £47m Short paid last year to bankroll a high wage bill and £28m losses followed £67.5m paid in and converted into shares the previous year,when Sunderland needed to be bailed out of probable financial crisis.Outlook Even with Short’s financialsupport, losses do not look sustainable. Sunderland have to wrestle the wage bill down, while remaining competitive
I can see that there problems are nothing compared to the likes of Wigan, Bolton and Fulham who look like they're a pull out away from crisis but still they seem to be playing a dangerous game.
Hats of to Wolves, The Baggies and ourselves for being so sensible in the market. I'll be interested to see how far these clubs can take these debts before they explode. I know Man you are a worldwode brand but theyre 590m in debt and no doubt rising with the likes of Sneidjer joining them. It all seems very unfair.
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