BarryWhiteRFCSnowflake RoyalWestYorksRoyal I probably should wait until a takeover is confirmed, but hopefully Dai is on his way out. In terms of how I'd like to see incoming owners go about business, I think there are several priorities to focus on:
5) Back the women's team
If the men have had it bad, the women's team has been ruined. Back to back relegations is very possible, and we're miles away from the team that produced Fran Kirby or the underdogs who held our own in the WSL for years. It's not as simple as going back to full time - the women's Championship doesn't bring in anything like enough revenue to be full time, so we'd need the owner to underwrite guaranteed losses. But we can bring in better planning, strategic thinking, staff structure etc., to at the very least get them to hold their own at the upper end of the Championship.This is just net cost with no benefit to the performance of the men's team or the finances. This doesn't mean we shouldn't do it of course.
I'd argue virtually nothing in your post directly improves revenue. And between 1 and 2 fifths actually harms it.
On this point, I'd like to argue to the contrary. I took my two step children to their first Reading game yesterday (age 6 and 9). They have never shown an interest to watch a match with me at home or go to a game. I managed to talk them into going to this game away at Blackburn as an experiment to see if they preferred live football. They loved the experience, and why? Because the players came over to the stands, posed for photos with them, gave them high fives and chatted with them after the game. You don't get that kind of interaction at the men's game, but because of that, my two step children, who have no interest in sport at all (well until yesterday), now want to go to more games. Both men's and women's. Women's football is important, and I've always been proud of our club for championing it.
Also, I'd argue if you get 1-4 right, just see those flans flock back through the turnstiles.
I can only speak from experience but there does seem to be a fairly noticeable shift in kids around my sons age who simply want to watch football and couldn't care less if it is men or women who are playing, they see zero difference. If that continues as those kids get older then gates at the womens game, at all levels, in many countries, will continue to increase, and revenue will follow as a result.