prostak It's easy to just dismiss this out of hand, but you do realize that by doing so you have no right to criticise anything the board do with regard to club finances?
What?
by TFF » 13 Jan 2011 23:08
prostak It's easy to just dismiss this out of hand, but you do realize that by doing so you have no right to criticise anything the board do with regard to club finances?
by Svlad Cjelli » 13 Jan 2011 23:14
That Friday Feelingprostak It's easy to just dismiss this out of hand, but you do realize that by doing so you have no right to criticise anything the board do with regard to club finances?
What?
by TFF » 13 Jan 2011 23:39
by Svlad Cjelli » 13 Jan 2011 23:43
by prostak » 13 Jan 2011 23:55
by Wimb » 14 Jan 2011 05:08
prostak
Bigmike/Wimb - I had actually anticipated just that answer in the thread where I originally mooted it. The public accounts show that your season ticket 'donation' doesn't even cover the wage bill, so leave that one. Do you expect the right to dictate the plot of Hollywood films in exchange for your 8.50 down the multiplex? I spent a tenner in Sainsbury's earlier - am I allowed a go in a board meeting now?
I'm increasingly of the opinion that many Reading fans are everything rival supporters accuse them of being - on the whole a bit feckless, very consumer-minded and priced out of Stamford Bridge. God knows what would result if the club ever went back into serious financial trouble - undoubtedly some form of car-park gathering of 20 or so, but what then? It's easy to just dismiss this out of hand, but you do realize that by doing so you have no right to criticise anything the board do with regard to club finances?
by Forbury Lion » 15 Jan 2011 23:18
by Svlad Cjelli » 15 Jan 2011 23:32
Forbury Lion If the club need transfer funds from the fans they can get them - just release another new kit and the fans with more money than sense will buy it. Alternatively, put ticket prices up by £1..... say 23 games, 10k attendance - £230k raised for transfer fees over a season.
If fans want to fund something then fund something for the fans or from the fans that the club won't spend on or for a worthy cause but not funding the clubs spend as it is a business, not a charity.
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 16 Jan 2011 00:34
prostak Koln are by no means a massive club. The fans didn't buy Poldi all by themselves, but .
by prostak » 16 Jan 2011 02:06
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 16 Jan 2011 10:56
prostak True, but bear in mind the lower cost of tickets in Germany, so that doesn't necessarily translate into higher revenues. I realize that wasn't the point you were making, but I'd be very surprised if they have anything like the commercial clout of Bayern or Schalke. The figures for the Podolski transfer were something like €1m raised to reduce a €10m transfer, so you see the sort of budget involved.
I'd also love to see Charlie Austin's funny little face rendered in this manner -
by Svlad Cjelli » 16 Jan 2011 22:55
by Forbury Lion » 01 Feb 2011 13:55
There is a fine line to tread between supply and demand.Svlad CjelliForbury Lion If the club need transfer funds from the fans they can get them - just release another new kit and the fans with more money than sense will buy it. Alternatively, put ticket prices up by £1..... say 23 games, 10k attendance - £230k raised for transfer fees over a season.
If fans want to fund something then fund something for the fans or from the fans that the club won't spend on or for a worthy cause but not funding the clubs spend as it is a business, not a charity.
Except that increasing the price may reduce the demand, and if it reduces attendences by just 2.5% it means they lose about it means they lose about £10k a game instead of gaining £10k.
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