Ian Reus
Ended 14 years of Grand National sweepstakes
Classic whataboutery.Let's not place the West on any kind of pedestal. Britain, America, UAE etc. They're all involved in despicable stuff.
Classic whataboutery.Let's not place the West on any kind of pedestal. Britain, America, UAE etc. They're all involved in despicable stuff.
Your still not as rich as them though. Maybe I'm mistaken but I believe their revenue was nearly $150m higher than yours and they're worth half a billion more according to Forbes. City aside the richest clubs from 10 years ago are still the richest today.
2017 revenues were Liverpool $448m, Spurs $310m.
2016 was $471 vs $310.
The gap of almost half a billion was maintained too.
Once the Premier League was invented and Sky Sports flooded the Premier League with money in 1992/93 there was basically no way back for teams who weren't United, Arsenal, Liverpool and Chelsea because they received the most of they money at the time. Nobody ever gets as big or as rich as the old Big Four by clean, fair methods - the money's always divided unequally somewhere along the line so that those at the top get the largest portion.
Thanks for this. Really informative stuff. I'm not suggesting that United were guilty of anything by the way, just making the point that by the early 2000s the gap between the Big Four and the rest was so huge that any attempt to destabilise their monopoly would have to take serious investment.It is a myth that only Man United, Arsenal, Liverpool and Chelsea were the only ones to benefit from Sky. This table shows what each club got up to May 2016.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...y-season-figures-flight-history-revealed.html
ALL-TIME PREMIER LEAGUE PRIZE MONEY TABLE
1. Manchester United = £870,270,178
2. Arsenal = £842,767,443
3. Liverpool = £815,422,132
4. Chelsea = £815,365,323
5. Tottenham = £750,281,906
6. Man City = £723,497,948
7. Everton = £700,261,154
8. Newcastle = £649,353,497
9. Aston Villa = £649,236,912
10. West Ham = £585,267,008
11. Sunderland = £544,691,139
12. West Brom = £469,320,933
13. Fulham = £469,282,303
14. Stoke = £440,148,447
15. Southampton = £413,090,876
16. Blackburn = £407,374,059
17. Bolton = £377,782,130
18. Wigan = £327,522,594
19. Swansea = £324,027,184
20. Norwich = £286,386,229
21. Crystal Palace = £266,351,695
22. Hull = £257,682,121
23. Birmingham = £256,856,871
24. Middlesbrough = £249,050,677
25. Leicester City = £247,730,615
26. Portsmouth = £231,278,314
27. QPR = £206,823,399
28. Wolves = £197,532,615
29. Reading = £173,350,044
30. Burnley = £167,908,143
31. Charlton = £159,014,046
32. Watford = £126,834,655
33. Leeds = £125,476,974
34. Cardiff = £107,934,984
35. Derby = £107,637,845
36. Blackpool = £86,670,041
37. Bournemouth = £70,843,913
38. Coventry = £45,864,675
39. Ipswich = £44,843,315
40. Sheffield United = £44,775,780
41. Wimbledon £34,906,015
42. Sheffield Wednesday = £34,341,926
43. Bradford = £23,365,274
44. Nottingham Forest = £20,132,869
45. Barnsley = £7,673,144
46. Oldham = £3,418,187
47. Swindon = £1,895,182
48. Luton = £1,493,500
49. Notts County = £1,493,500
AND Football League = £23,926,231
Overall total = £14,788,455,945
Per season Tottenham (3m) and Everton (5m) weren't that far behind Chelsea and Liverpool.
Newcastle and Villa were only 50 million behind Everton, less than 3 million per season.
As has been pointed out, in 1992/93 the Big Five were United, Arsenal, Liverpool, Everton and Tottenham. So Villa and Newcastle have had the Sky funds to move up.
I was looking at the accounts for Manchester City (yes I'm boring). Weirdly it comes under a group including New York City and Melbourne City.
They have made losses of around £35-40m in each of the last two years. Not quite sure how this is balancing the books? And when you consider their revenue is inflated further by sponsorship from friends their losses are substantial.
As for funding the company this is covered by issuing new shares. Last year they issued enough shares to cover the transfer spending last summer and more to a Chinese company. I suspect the same thing will happen again.
I'm not sure which set of accounts you've been reading but it's certainly not City's. Our last set of published accounts showed operating profit of £90m and net profit of £30m, and virtually the same the season before.
I'm not sure which set of accounts you've been reading but it's certainly not City's. Our last set of published accounts showed operating profit of £90m and net profit of £30m, and virtually the same the season before.
Its called lying.
I am not lying. I am looking at the group accounts rather than just Manchester City on its own. The group structure has a number of companies including City Football Services Limited and City Football Marketing Limited. Both companies have made substantial losses in the last two years. If you look into those accounts they have made these losses due to cost charged from all the football clubs in the group. This basically means City have transferred 'losses' to these two companies by transferring costs between companies. It's creative accounting.
Talk today, that they have to sell before they can buy.
TBH, city identified the signings they needed and went out and got them, did they overspend?, Sure. But i don't think they wanted to overspend, i just think that this is the price the Premiership teams are going to have to pay. whether we like it or not. Every club in the world knows there is obscene amounts of money in the premier league and will charge accordingly.
Furthermore average premier league teams who would normally be selling clubs, are so rich now due to the lucrative TV deals that they can afford to hold out for unrealistic prices.
Yes.