Anyway, FWIW:
Avon RoyalWimb I appreciate the sentiments but let's not forget how bloody hard the Championship is and how few relegated teams actually manage to bounce back.
Exactly this.
The whole "we'll just go down and rebuild" approach has just as much risk as the "invest to stay up" approach.
It's a different kind of risk though. Adding quality to a Championship squad costs a lot less than adding the necessary quality to PL squad.
Also, imagine the spend required in the summer to keep us up. West Ham and Southampton both had better squads than us to start with and have still had to spend millions on new players. West Ham are comfortably mid-table, but Southampton aren't guaranteed survival and they spent £27m on transfer fees alone. An injury to a couple of key players and they could be right in the smelly stuff. By comparison, we had a squad that would need serious investment to get us to West Ham's level and a not insignificant spend just to get to where Southampton are. The question you have to ask yourself is, would you rather we spend £30m+ to give us a chance, but no guarantee, of surviving the drop; or spend wisely in the hope you stay up, but have the means to mount another challenge should you get relegated.
If we had taken the view that we were going to spend millions on staying up, but failed, then we'd find ourselves in the Championship with a bunch of players we can't afford to keep, plus potential debts. Spend frugally and if you go down, you have a group of players that you can afford to keep, for the most part, plus parachute money to allow you to add to that squad, giving you a much better chance of bouncing back.
There's not an easy answer. You can either go slowly as WBA have or go all in as Stoke have. But I would argue that the Stoke model (for want of a better name) has more financial risk attached to it than the WBA model. With the WBA model, the risk is you don't go back up straight away and lose some of your fan base. That is an easier pill to swallow than having to flog all of your best players to plug gaps, as Reading did when we failed to go back up the season after we went down and the next three seasons after that.
TSI don't have massive reserves of money to dip into and that was made very clear to us all when they took over the club. The more frugal way of running the club has been our past and is our foreseeable future. Like it or not, that's something we'll all have to get used to.