
by Barry the bird boggler » 15 Jan 2012 15:21
by Ian Royal » 15 Jan 2012 15:27
Barry the bird boggler So, where's all the money really gone then?
by FiNeRaIn » 15 Jan 2012 15:38
Ian RoyalRoyal Rother Yeah, where the fcuk is Royal Blue anyway?
Ignoring anything that doesn't conform to his view? Finerain also notable in his absence.
PS: great article.
by melonhead » 16 Jan 2012 09:39
by Extended-Phenotype » 16 Jan 2012 10:31
by Royal Rother » 16 Jan 2012 10:40
Extended-Phenotype If anything, this report shows Reading have plenty of room to operate at a larger loss with JM being the major creditor (the author assures us that because of this, even if our debts exceed our assets the club won’t go insolvent – plus, JM ‘injects’ money into the club simply by reducing his own bill).
.
by Bandini » 16 Jan 2012 11:05
Extended-Phenotype The last point of the article is rather spurious – surely higher wages are being spent on better players? The author can’t be seriously suggesting just paying your players more money will improve your position! Here Jem Karacan, here’s another 100k a year. Now be a creative midfielder.
by FiNeRaIn » 16 Jan 2012 11:37
by Extended-Phenotype » 16 Jan 2012 12:06
BandiniExtended-Phenotype The last point of the article is rather spurious – surely higher wages are being spent on better players? The author can’t be seriously suggesting just paying your players more money will improve your position! Here Jem Karacan, here’s another 100k a year. Now be a creative midfielder.
If, of course, he's a £100K better this season than the previous season, paying him a higher wage to reflect that improvement and to tie him to a longer term contact isn't spurious at all.
by Bandini » 16 Jan 2012 12:13
Extended-PhenotypeBandiniExtended-Phenotype The last point of the article is rather spurious – surely higher wages are being spent on better players? The author can’t be seriously suggesting just paying your players more money will improve your position! Here Jem Karacan, here’s another 100k a year. Now be a creative midfielder.
If, of course, he's a £100K better this season than the previous season, paying him a higher wage to reflect that improvement and to tie him to a longer term contact isn't spurious at all.
It IS spurious when the statistic is being used to make the point that wages are more significant than signings in terms of table position. Wages simply aren’t the factor, which even you stress in your point – to correct his argument, quality/performing footballers are more significant than transfers in table position. Which is a silly point to make, really.
If you don’t HAVE the quality footballers whom deserve more wages, then transfers are your option – not wage increases - the two factors are incomparible.
by Hoop Blah » 16 Jan 2012 12:23
by Red » 16 Jan 2012 12:26
by Extended-Phenotype » 16 Jan 2012 13:36
by westendgirl » 16 Jan 2012 13:42
Extended-Phenotype The last point of the article is rather spurious – surely higher wages are being spent on better players? The author can’t be seriously suggesting just paying your players more money will improve your position! Here Jem Karacan, here’s another 100k a year. Now be a creative midfielder.
by Extended-Phenotype » 16 Jan 2012 14:46
by Bandini » 16 Jan 2012 14:50
Extended-Phenotype I’m just going by what the article said:
“In short, the
more you pay for your players in wages, the higher you will finish; but what you pay for them in
transfer fees doesn’t seem to make much difference.”
You don’t “assemble” a good team by paying them more wages. You assemble a good squad through your academy and by transfers. Paying higher wages is not an alternative strategy unless you already have players worth paying highly for already.
Even this seems counter-intuitive with regards to Reading, as we don’t seem willing to keep players either.
It’s all very well saying we pay competitive wages but if all the players worth high wages are sold, who are we spending high wages on?
I’d have far more confidence in articles like this if they would show just an inkling of impartiality, rather than a big Hooray spoilt by flawed logic from one of JM’s mates.
by Hoop Blah » 16 Jan 2012 14:53
Hoop Blah I do wonder how much money we waste on the lesser players and how much we do pay our top earners. We're always told on here (I think you're one of those who put forward the argument at times) that the club won't pay too much because we're a team without stars and the wage reflects that and it's a strength that we're all in it together blah blah blah. You're post would seem to contradict that though, not that I think you're wrong this time of course.
In terms of us being the masters of efficient use of money and resources, I've done a little bit of digging on this. The only way I can really see to measure this is to look at how well we spend our money and turn that into league performance. I think our source of income is more honest and sustainable than others but at the end of the day that doesn't translate into points.
The below is a selection of turnover/wages/finishing positions from the 2009/2010 Championship. I've not included Newcastle or West Brom who went up 1st and 2nd.
Forest - 14.6m turnover, 15.6m wages, finished 3rd
Cardiff - 15m, 16m, 4th
Leicester - 16.2m, 14.4m, 5th
Swansea, 10m, 7.5m, 7th
Sheff U, 15m, 16.7m, 8th
Reading, 27m, 18.2m, 9th
QPR, 18.2m, 14.3m, 13th
Derby, 29.7m, 14.3m, 14th
Ipswich, 15.6m, 17m, 15th
Watford, 11.25m, 10.8m, 16th
The above doesn't show how much those clubs spent on transfer fees, just how much they paid the staff. What was interesting for me was that apart from Newcastle and West Brom (I assume they were paying a lot more than us so didn't look) we were the club with the highest wage bill but we finished 9th (the Rodgers/post-Coppell clear-out effect).
I've not done the same for 2009, although I might, but I have looked at the majority of the wage bills for that season and only Boro (£33m) appear to have paid out more than us (£25m). Even Birmingham (£23.6m), Wolves (£16.7m) and Sheff U (£20m) paid less than us in wages that season.
It does dispel the myth that we're poor payers in this league too.
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 16 Jan 2012 14:59
FiNeRaIn What the accounts confirm is that even after we have sold most of our recognised quality players we are still paying MASSIVELY over the odds on wages, which is frankly quite worrying. Who negotiates these contracts...good grief.
by Extended-Phenotype » 16 Jan 2012 15:07
Bandini
Paying wages which are appropriate to the players' worth is an alternative strategy, and its a strategy the club has been attempting to execute since, at least, the second season in the premiership when Coppell opted, as far as possible, to keep the squad together.
by Hoop Blah » 16 Jan 2012 15:08
Rev Algenon Stickleback HFiNeRaIn What the accounts confirm is that even after we have sold most of our recognised quality players we are still paying MASSIVELY over the odds on wages, which is frankly quite worrying. Who negotiates these contracts...good grief.
"over the odds" would indicate that clubs in a similar position have considerably lower wage bills. I doubt that's the case.
It's more that there are so many clubs that have no interest in balancing the books pushing the wages higher and higher.
One of JM's complaints was that our squad was too big, and he probably has a point.
Then again, I'm sure we do have some players on salaries more suited to the premier league. If the rumours are true (could be complete nonsense) then Kebe wants to be the highest earner at the club. Given that we signed him as a premier league club, it's a little alarming if he isn't that already.
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