by M-U-R-T-Y » 16 Jan 2012 15:25
by Bandini » 16 Jan 2012 15:57
Extended-PhenotypeBandini
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.
It’s fine if you have stars in place, but you don’t turn average footballers into stars simply by paying them more. And what do clubs pay transferred players? Chocolate coins?
It isn’t an alternative strategy. It’s just another factor in running a club. There is no point have the ability to pay players competitively, if they are all shite.
PS - I'm not suggesting the Reading players are shite...
by Extended-Phenotype » 16 Jan 2012 16:02
by Bandini » 16 Jan 2012 16:03
by Extended-Phenotype » 16 Jan 2012 16:14
by Bandini » 16 Jan 2012 16:20
by Extended-Phenotype » 16 Jan 2012 16:30
by Bandini » 16 Jan 2012 16:34
by Royal Rother » 16 Jan 2012 16:38
by melonhead » 16 Jan 2012 16:52
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.
No qualms as to where the money has actually gone...we keep having to sell our best players to...well...pay for all the average ones.
by Extended-Phenotype » 16 Jan 2012 16:57
Bandini In that case it's especially clever of Hammond to convince the purchasers of the players that they are no longer average, despite them having done nothing other than turn out average performances for us.
by Bandini » 16 Jan 2012 17:02
Extended-PhenotypeBandini In that case it's especially clever of Hammond to convince the purchasers of the players that they are no longer average, despite them having done nothing other than turn out average performances for us.
That's right. Because we have a hi-tech payment system which sees salaries instantaneously increase with performance quality.
Jesus, it not hard to see what I am saying. They are average, they get good, we sell them.
Try sniffing less glue.
by melonhead » 16 Jan 2012 17:02
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.
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 16 Jan 2012 19:05
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 Ian Royal » 16 Jan 2012 21:01
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 melonhead » 17 Jan 2012 09:29
Rev Algenon Stickleback HExtended-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.
I'm sure there's no suggestion like that being made. It's more that clubs in a position to offer higher wages are able to attract better players, and therefore they'll do better.
With Bosman deals and the differing transfer policy of clubs, the amount spent is less reliable. For a start it depends on where you start from before spending. A team spending £8 million on three players can still easily be worse than a club that's spent nothing, if the club that spent nothing had a better team to begin with.
by Extended-Phenotype » 17 Jan 2012 09:58
by Hoop Blah » 17 Jan 2012 10:07
by Bandini » 17 Jan 2012 10:10
by Hoop Blah » 17 Jan 2012 10:17
Bandini One is not a substitute for the other, but neither are they independent. As the more that is spent on transfers the less can be spent on wages and vice versa.
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