RedRover
Full Member
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2007
- Messages
- 9,004
They came and went through bad management. You've acted like Utd spent vast, unmatched funds for years and cherry picked players from all their rivals. They didn't. You've painted a completely inaccurate picture of what actually happened. Plenty of clubs had the funds to compete with Utd. They just didn't have a great manager and so those clubs fell away due to the nature of the sport. For City and Chelsea it matters not if they spend badly. They'll buy their way out of it regardless of how well run they are.
They have less risk. Not zero risk that Chelsea an City operated in for years. That's the big difference.
It's strange that all these clubs you're crusading for don't agree with the benefits of billionaire owners given they have voted in favour of FFP.
Again, the "risk" argument is a non-starter for me. There will always be have's and have nots in football and that's pretty much how it's always been. United can spend more money that Newcastle, who can spend more money than Palace who can spend more money than Burnley, and so it goes on. This isnt something new. This "risk" argument is just a way to justify arguing that United are fine to spend big money but other clubs arent.
And I'm not "crusading" for anyone - I'm being pragmatic and realisitc. For me the PL is more entertaining than it ever has been right now and as a football fan, I like that, so I have no issue with them spending their owners money. These clubs are not lashing £500 million on one player, nor paying their players massively above the sums other clubs are paying. If they want to commit their money then that's their business as far as i'm concerned.
Its hardly surprising that these clubs are, on the face of it, in favour of FFP - they now have their place at the top table and will want to stop anyone else doing the same as them, so it doesn't take a genius to work out why. United will be supprting it for their own ends as well. The clubs will only act in their own best interests - that's hardly a startling conclusion.
At the end of the day having money and being able to buy players doesnt guarantee success. Clubs need to get the balance right and build a sisde with a manager in charge who knows what he's doing. That's hwat makes the game so interesting to me.
You have your opinion and fair enough. I'm not trying to convince you otherwise.
But for me, the issues United face right now are little to do with these clubs. They've bought top players, perhaps raised the bar, but United can easily compete given the money they generate. These sides are not running away with the league every year, or turning it into a two horse race a la the former old firm in Scotland so I don't see what all the fuss is abaout. Indeed, had these clubs not come in with big money its arguable that United would be so far ahead of the field the league as a spectacle could be a much worse proposition.
Fact is, people can dress this up however they like but it just smacks to me of jealousy. No United fans had their knickers in a twist about the "good of the game" and the "madness of modern football" when we were pushing wages up, or breaking transfer records for what were, at the time unheard of amounts of money - and nor should they. Their team was doing what it took to win titles, entertain the fans and build a legacy.
I suspect few fans will be moaning if we go out and spend £200 million in the summer and a re sitting pretty at the top of the tree come May 2015 - even though there would be a strong argument that we "bought the title" rather than developing a side "organically".
I'll bow out now, because we're going in circles here.