P!ssed Off Platypuss I wish people would actually read the FA's document - there is stacks in there about modifying the loan system too.
Mills and co. have already told us it's a "4 pronged attack" and it's "all or nothing".
Therefore if you're not prepared to accept B teams, which millions of people will not, then the other 70 pages of the report are redundant.
Say someone offers you a contract and says "you must accept all 1,000 of the terms or we cannot complete the deal, there is no room for negotiation".
You find Term 1 to be outrageously unacceptable. You laugh in their face and tell them to do one, you don't go on to read all the other 999 terms, that would be a complete waste of time.
Really?
4.2.5 Balancing the pursuit of objectives with practical considerations
As is the case with the introduction of all radical proposals, we anticipate there will be
some who will instinctively consider them too far-reaching or too difficult to deliver.
For instance, were this proposal for B teams playing in the lower leagues to be too
contentious for the Football League clubs (it would be the Football League, not the
Premier League, which would be most changed by this proposal) we would welcome
pragmatic debate about other possible proposals.
The Premier League itself has recognised the problems of the current Under 21
Premier League and has proposed a range of changes. From next season the Under
21 league will have two divisions, with promotion and relegation, which some believe
will give more purpose to games. Some games will be televised and fixtures will be
scheduled more regularly and the number of games clubs are required to play in their
main stadium will increase from three to five for each club.
However, many of the clubs we have spoken to have their doubts. Clubs that will play
in the lower division of the Under 21 Premier League have commented that this will
remove from them the benefit of competing against the best Under 21 sides, which
was a prime motivation for them establishing Cat 1 academies in the first place. Others
have told us they still doubt whether the changes will give their young players the
competition they need if they are to gain the experience necessary to challenge to get
in the first team squad.
Many of the older Premier League players we have talked to mourn the passing of the
old reserve leagues where they gained enormously valuable experience from playing
with older players. However, the history of the Premier League Reserve league which
ran between 1999 and 2012 shows how difficult it is to deliver what clubs, players and
fans need and seek. Despite many attempts to make it more competitive, the league
was finally abandoned and replaced by the current Under 21 Premier League.
If there were not to be B teams in the lower leagues, it is important that any alternative
proposals involving the creation of B teams realistically promise what academy
managers and coaches, club management and young players are calling for: games
that have an intensity of competition; something to play for, be it league position,
promotion/relegation or large prize money; meaningful cup competitions; crowds
and TV coverage; defined fixture days; proper stadium venues and – as a proper B
team – an ability to mix developing players and a backbone of older or motivated,
recuperating first team players. If such an experience could be created, it would be
welcomed by everyone in football.
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