by PieEater » 10 Aug 2011 20:57
by SpaceCruiser » 10 Aug 2011 21:04
Pseud O'Nym Hull are a great example of a failure. During their 2 years in the Prem
by brendywendy » 10 Aug 2011 21:22
its a pretty small group of teams managing to consolidate.maybe fulham too. All spending massively more money on transfers and wages than we could have afforded.even the money that coppel refused to spend 2nd prem season wouldnt have got close.tomrfcurz It's true. Perhaps Sunderland and Bolton may be two other examples. 2nd tier sides who've gone up, slowly invested, then more then see the benefits in staying as a solid PL team
by Hoop Blah » 10 Aug 2011 21:38
PieEater Stoke and Wolves were doing OK financially in the prem, of the others mentioned they are basket cases.
In the OK group I'd put Stoke, Wolves, West Brom and maybe Blackburn. Of those potentially fooked if relegated there's Wigan (£73m), Bolton (£93m), and Fulham (£190m)
Harpers So Solid Crew How much do you believe Coppell had to play with, and do you think any signings at that price might have made the difference. It has also been shown that many of the players sold after relegation were not really up to Prem standard, so why would they have continued to improve with RFC?
by Royal Rother » 10 Aug 2011 21:59
by Terminal Boardom » 10 Aug 2011 22:00
Royal Rother Coppell said at the time of relegation that he had thought that 1, the squad he had was amply good enough to stay up and 2, that signing new players might just upset the applecart in the dressing room and not have an overall positive effect on the team.
And of course he might have been right.
by brendywendy » 10 Aug 2011 22:04
by Friday's Legacy » 10 Aug 2011 22:11
tomrfcurz It's true. Perhaps Sunderland and Bolton may be two other examples. 2nd tier sides who've gone up, slowly invested, then more then see the benefits in staying as a solid PL team
by Hoop Blah » 10 Aug 2011 22:15
Royal Rother Coppell said at the time of relegation that he had thought that 1, the squad he had was amply good enough to stay up and 2, that signing new players might just upset the applecart in the dressing room and not have an overall positive effect on the team.
And of course he might have been right.
by Jimmy the Tree » 10 Aug 2011 22:26
by Royal Rother » 10 Aug 2011 22:27
In 2009 Mr Coates “Going forward it must be our aim to make Stoke City football club self-financing, so that it is not overly reliant on new funds being continually introduced by a benefactor.”
In short, the club is aiming for self-sufficiency, but still needs some help for the moment. However, if Stoke City do become a permanent fixture in the Premier League, then they should no longer have to rely on Coates to prop up transfers or the wage bill. A laudable intention, but the jury’s still out on that one, as we have seen how difficult it is for other clubs to wean themselves off their financial support.
This is where the investment in new training facilities and academy might help, as Stoke City could then start to develop its own youth policy and attract young players from other clubs. The average age of the first team is currently one of the highest in the Premier League, as grizzled old professionals battle to remain in the top tier, but that could change with a focus on in-house coaching and development.
by Royal Rother » 10 Aug 2011 22:31
Hoop BlahRoyal Rother Coppell said at the time of relegation that he had thought that 1, the squad he had was amply good enough to stay up and 2, that signing new players might just upset the applecart in the dressing room and not have an overall positive effect on the team.
And of course he might have been right.
Not that I don't believe you RR but I don't recall any of that. At least not in the cold light of day after the initial responses to relegation.
I clearly remember Coppell stating that he thought he'd got it wrong and that it was a repeat of mistakes he'd made at Palace.
by Pseud O'Nym » 10 Aug 2011 22:38
SpaceCruiserPseud O'Nym Hull are a great example of a failure. During their 2 years in the Prem
2 years? I thought they were there for only 1 year?
by Hoop Blah » 10 Aug 2011 22:42
by Royal Rother » 10 Aug 2011 22:46
by Hoop Blah » 10 Aug 2011 22:54
by floyd__streete » 10 Aug 2011 23:00
Simon's Church I'd rather keep the players we've got and win just as much as them over the next few years thanks.
by floyd__streete » 10 Aug 2011 23:02
Royal Rother Coppell said at the time of relegation that he had thought that 1, the squad he had was amply good enough to stay up and 2, that signing new players might just upset the applecart in the dressing room and not have an overall positive effect on the team.
And of course he might have been right.
by Simon's Church » 10 Aug 2011 23:06
floyd__streeteSimon's Church I'd rather keep the players we've got and win just as much as them over the next few years thanks.
Top half of the Prem and an FA Cup final? That is a world more than what we will acheieve any time soon.
by Royal Rother » 10 Aug 2011 23:09
floyd__streeteRoyal Rother Coppell said at the time of relegation that he had thought that 1, the squad he had was amply good enough to stay up and 2, that signing new players might just upset the applecart in the dressing room and not have an overall positive effect on the team.
And of course he might have been right.
He wasn't though, was he . We went down.
And before anyone dares suggest we were unlucky - we conceded 6 points to each of the two teams who finished directly above the dotted line that season, Fulham and Bolton. Thrashed we were, done over twice by both of them. We failed to invest through Coppell's paranoia and thoroughly deserved to go down.
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