by Millsy »
23 Nov 2021 10:17
tmesis Orion1871
Yet parachute payments exist. The EFL don't want real financial fair play and neither do the Premier League. Got to keep their heritage clubs at the top and stop anyone from daring to challenge the established order.
I don't see anything to suggest the EFL wants the clubs that come down to have an unfair advantage (even if they do). What would be the point? How does the football league benefit from that situation?
Fair point. I'm no economist SO JUST GENERALLY GUESSING but the way I see it though is not necessarily that they want those that come down to have an unfair advantage. Of course those that come down will be paying such ridiculous wages they absolutely need parachutes to keep them alive. But why do they have such a large wage bill? Because to stand a chance in the PL you need to do that. Why? Because there's a massively uneven distribution of wealth in the game so you need to pay huge wages to stand a chance. Why? The system is built around the huge clubs who can spend freely and with impunity.
That's the status quo which mustn't change. Huge clubs, who think they have a God-given right to be the be all and end all in English footy (SuperLeague etc), attract all the money, be able to spend it as they wish. Screw the rest of the league.
EFL rules to me are basically just protecting that setup so Orion1871's point stands. I guess it's the equivalent of trying to sort out the enormous wealth gap in society by banning poor people from spending. Simple stupid law to paper over the cracks rather than actually dealing with the issues for a fairer society.
Not sure what the alternative is though. Stricter financial controls on PL clubs too? Wage caps? Much more even distribution of revenue throughout the leagues? Then it would have to be worldwide in some way or ENglish PL clubs wouldn't be able to compete internationally? If it could work though we wouldn't need the parachute system and there would be much more fluidity.
Last edited by
Millsy on 23 Nov 2021 11:00, edited 1 time in total.