by Ian Royal » 08 Jan 2014 12:12
by Readingfanman » 08 Jan 2014 12:30
Ian Royal Still not really getting why readingfanman seems to think that you have to finish in the top 2 to be one of the "challengers".
I think there's a bit of a reading comprehension problem going on there.
by YateleyRoyal » 08 Jan 2014 12:34
ReadingfanmanIan Royal We're 9th, one whole point off the Play Offs. It's incredibly unlikely, but with a stonking run (you know like the one from 2 years ago), we could still just about win the league. Let alone get promoted. And even if we don't, it's hardly the end of the year. We can reasonably expect to be in amongst the challengers next year.
On what basis, if we didn't get promoted this season, are we in amongst the challengers for next year? I really don't see any basis on which you can claim that. If Adkins is to stay at the club, and gets to bring in his own players, will people not clamour for him to have "time to gel" the players etc?
3 more clubs get relegated from the Premier League with bigger resources and become challengers, added the 3 losing teams in the Playoffs, and then probably anyone who finished above us if we finish outside the Playoffs. Say we finish 10th, for arguments sake, that would put us behind 9 other clubs in terms of challengers. Personally, I don't see any evidence of how we can be considered challengers for the title or promotion next season, when so far this season we have shown no evidence of being a team who are capable of achieveing either.
by floyd__streete » 08 Jan 2014 12:50
YateleyRoyal Why do the three relegated clubs automatically become challengers?
by Extended-Phenotype » 08 Jan 2014 12:52
Ian RoyalExtended-Phenotype I wonder if it is intellectually possible for people to criticise/defend Adkins without mentioning McDermott as if the success, failure, opinion and appointment of either is intrinsically linked with the other?
I bet it isn't.
What would you give me if I don't mention MaccyD again (by name or sly reference) in relation to Adkins performance, no matter what the provocation, for the rest of the season?
by SPARTA » 08 Jan 2014 13:01
Ian Royal What would you give me if I don't mention MaccyD again (by name or sly reference) in relation to Adkins performance, no matter what the provocation, for the rest of the season?
by Extended-Phenotype » 08 Jan 2014 13:25
by Readingfanman » 08 Jan 2014 13:50
floyd__streeteYateleyRoyal Why do the three relegated clubs automatically become challengers?
I'd say that parachute payments give you an unequal advantage over many of the other sides
LOL @ football, a sport run so badly that you have to give a 'Live Aid' style handout for teams which get relegated to save them from inevitable financial meltdown. What a crap way to run our national game
by Royal Rother » 08 Jan 2014 13:54
by Extended-Phenotype » 08 Jan 2014 13:55
Readingfanmanfloyd__streeteYateleyRoyal Why do the three relegated clubs automatically become challengers?
I'd say that parachute payments give you an unequal advantage over many of the other sides
LOL @ football, a sport run so badly that you have to give a 'Live Aid' style handout for teams which get relegated to save them from inevitable financial meltdown. What a crap way to run our national game
Pretty much this; if a team gets relegated from the Premiership, they should by logic (It may not be the case 100% of the time) be a challenger for promotion the following season. There's exceptions of course, but a quarter of teams finishing in the top two in the last eight years have been relegated from the top flight the year before.
by The Rouge » 08 Jan 2014 14:01
by Extended-Phenotype » 08 Jan 2014 14:07
by floyd__streete » 08 Jan 2014 14:37
by Extended-Phenotype » 08 Jan 2014 14:43
floyd__streete Amazed to see people stick up for the concept of parachute payments.
Basically, they are one of the most glaringly obvious examples of the spiralling wage commitments which the top clubs have made and which accordingly have filtered down the food chain. Rouge’s comment that “other large companies operating in different circumstances” would need some sort of rescue package is entirely disingenuous, as if there are somehow league tables in the world of commerce which prevent you competing directly against every other opponent in your market.
The need for Parachute payments only serves to highlight how depressingly bonkers football expenditure has become. I appreciate why we need them, in the circumstances. But that doesn’t mean that the concept of them isn’t a damning indictment on the way in which English football is run. In the Championship you have teams like Yeovil (average gate 4500) come up and have to compete with the likes of Reading, attracting 4 times the crowd and with the generous advantage of a huge hand out for having failed in the division above!
by ZacNaloen » 08 Jan 2014 14:47
by PieEater » 08 Jan 2014 15:51
by The Rouge » 08 Jan 2014 15:56
Extended-Phenotypefloyd__streete Amazed to see people stick up for the concept of parachute payments.
Basically, they are one of the most glaringly obvious examples of the spiralling wage commitments which the top clubs have made and which accordingly have filtered down the food chain. Rouge’s comment that “other large companies operating in different circumstances” would need some sort of rescue package is entirely disingenuous, as if there are somehow league tables in the world of commerce which prevent you competing directly against every other opponent in your market.
The need for Parachute payments only serves to highlight how depressingly bonkers football expenditure has become. I appreciate why we need them, in the circumstances. But that doesn’t mean that the concept of them isn’t a damning indictment on the way in which English football is run. In the Championship you have teams like Yeovil (average gate 4500) come up and have to compete with the likes of Reading, attracting 4 times the crowd and with the generous advantage of a huge hand out for having failed in the division above!
No, I get it - I think we are both of the same mind, arguing in different ways. The fact we have them means the system is f/cked. But the system being f/cked is why we have to have them.
by ZacNaloen » 08 Jan 2014 16:04
PieEater That would work for wages but wouldn't that scupper any transfer fees? A club could spend millions on players, get relegated and they all leave for free?
by Franchise FC » 08 Jan 2014 16:28
Readingfanman & how many years have all three been languishing around in mid table for now? 5+?
Fwiw - I've gone back through the tables since we got promoted the first time and got the finishing positions for the season before of each side for the top two spots:
Cardiff - 6th
Reading - 5th
QPR - 13th
Newcastle - Relegated from Top Flight
Wolves - 7th
WBA - 4th
Sunderland - Relegated from Top Flight
Reading - 7th
Hull - 8th
Southampton - Promoted from League 1
Norwich - Promoted from League 1
WBA - Relegated from Top flight
Birmingham - Relegated from Top Flight
Stoke - 8th
Birmingham - Relegated from Top Flight
Sheff United - 8th
So no team (Except QPR who had a tonne of money pumped in that summer) has finished below 8th in the last 8 years and then been promoted the following season (without the use of the playoffs, which I haven't yet checked). Fact remains going by the stats above, if we miss the playoffs and finish mid table, we are much more likely next season to be a mid table side rather than a challenger to the title.
by Ian Royal » 08 Jan 2014 17:23
ReadingfanmanIan Royal Still not really getting why readingfanman seems to think that you have to finish in the top 2 to be one of the "challengers".
I think there's a bit of a reading comprehension problem going on there.
I would place a challenger for promotion as someone who finishes in the top 3 or 4. If you want, you can go back and look how many teams who finish mid table then finish in the top 3 or 4 the season after. I imagine it's quite a low amount.
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