Ah, I get it now. It's actually "more than one club".
O.f.c they will be fine tbh, they'll just get stadium naming rights and paying everyone off bit by bit.
Messi is mes que un clubMessi really is bigger than Barcelona.
Remember the rules… no wumming.No, Messi should not accept less money. He can get more than what he is demanding from Barcelona from other teams anyway. Why should Messi be punished for how poorly the club has been run? Give them till the deadline to find a solution otherwise sign for another team.
He gave them an out last year instead they decided to keep him like hostage.
The rest of the players can say no but the club will just start terminating contracts. The team is filled with dead weights. Pique, de jong, pedri, busquets, fati, their goalkeepers, other young players. The rest either takes a pay cut or gets kicked out.
This has just been leaked
- Every player has to surrender 5% of their weekly wage to Messi. This will fund 0.8% of Messi's salary.
- If Messi assists you to score a goal, 75% of your goal bonus goes to Messi. If you don't have a goal bonus clause, an individual bonus will be rewarded to you, of which 100% proceeds to Messi.
- Barca will set up a charity focusing on mental health, which purpose is to bring about happiness in Catalonia by ensuring Messi's long-term stay.
-As very credible reports explain, Messi is crucial to Barca's match day revenue, merchandising and sponsorships, Messi will earn 75% from profits of all shirts and tickets sold, as well as sponsorships entered into. Those with keen economic sensibilities speculate that this will increase Barca's revenues by 40% in the next fiscal quarter.
-Javier Tebas has privately confirmed that La Liga will place a 15% Messi tax on every transfer between now and end of June 2023 to help fund Messi's salary, as La Liga's most important asset. It is still not clear whether this only applies to transfers between Spanish clubs or whether this can be applied to transfer dealings between Spanish clubs and non-Spanish clubs. Reports suggest that UEFA have given La Liga positive signals that it will throw its weight behind the proposal, given the importance of the matter.
Messi is thought to be seriously considering joining PSG.
And every player has to give Messi their second born childThis has just been leaked
- Every player has to surrender 5% of their weekly wage to Messi. This will fund 0.8% of Messi's salary.
- If Messi assists you to score a goal, 75% of your goal bonus goes to Messi. If you don't have a goal bonus clause, an individual bonus will be rewarded to you, of which 100% proceeds to Messi.
- Barca will set up a charity focusing on mental health, which purpose is to bring about happiness in Catalonia by ensuring Messi's long-term stay.
-As very credible reports explain, Messi is crucial to Barca's match day revenue, merchandising and sponsorships, Messi will earn 75% from profits of all shirts and tickets sold, as well as sponsorships entered into. Those with keen economic sensibilities speculate that this will increase Barca's revenues by 40% in the next fiscal quarter.
-Javier Tebas has privately confirmed that La Liga will place a 15% Messi tax on every transfer between now and end of June 2023 to help fund Messi's salary, as La Liga's most important asset. It is still not clear whether this only applies to transfers between Spanish clubs or whether this can be applied to transfer dealings between Spanish clubs and non-Spanish clubs. Reports suggest that UEFA have given La Liga positive signals that it will throw its weight behind the proposal, given the importance of the matter.
Messi is thought to be seriously considering joining PSG.
United will be next the way they're going under the Glazer's.
What's the debt now? Close to 600 mill?
As far as I know Man city, Chelsea and Liverpool are all debt free.
Ah, I get it now. It's actually "more than one club".
So we both agree that Woody is incompetent in Sporting matters but has done an incredible to maintain United's financial clout without oil money
We've managed to spend almost as much as the oil clubs, but without having a title challenge for 8 years.
United will be next the way they're going under the Glazer's.
I am sorry mate but that is an awful post. Please educate yourself on the club's finances and how debt works. United are rock solid economically.United will be next the way they're going under the Glazer's.
What's the debt now? Close to 600 mill?
As far as I know Man city, Chelsea and Liverpool are all debt free.
Comparing United’s financial situation to Barca’s pretty much demonstrates how little you understand about football economics.
Barcelona's debt estimated to be 1.7 billion and rising.
Manchester United' debt is close to 600 mill.
So enlighten me as to why when United's debt starts climbing into that range in 10 years or so, that it will benefit the club.
And while your at it, explain to me how the Glazer's leverage buy out of putting United millions in debt has been a net positive gain for the club?
This thread doesn’t have anything to do with the Glazers. Discussion about debt and it’s role in businesses have been discussed as nauseum in the relevant threads. Stop fishing for likes just so you can get out of the newbies
United and Barca’s financial situations are completely different because they’ve been spending far more than their earn. Their wage to revenue % has been over 100% whereas United traditionally maintain a level of around 50-60%. They’ve been borrowing to fund their transfers and even to pay their wages. United doesn’t do that.
Don't try to evade the question. The Glazer's are bad owners, they've put the club in debt, and that debt keeps growing. Provide a link to the wage revenue please.
You think the Glazer's run the club financially well? Overpaying to purchase duds like Alexa Sanchez, and tying them down to luxurious wages, so that they have no resale value, is that fiscally responsible?
How about signing duds like Phil Jones, and Matic to 5 and three year contracts so you can't sell them....is that fiscally responsible?
Signing your top goalkeeper to such high wages that you can't sell him so, you have to eat the cost and look at putting him out on a loan, is that fiscally responsible?
When the debt starts to get paid off and stops going up instead of down, I won't be worried about it, but right now, United's 10 to 15 year trajectory on their debt does not look promising.
Don't try to evade the question. The Glazer's are bad owners, they've put the club in debt, and that debt keeps growing. Provide a link to the wage revenue please.
You think the Glazer's run the club financially well? Overpaying to purchase duds like Alexa Sanchez, and tying them down to luxurious wages, so that they have no resale value, is that fiscally responsible?
How about signing duds like Phil Jones, and Matic to 5 and three year contracts so you can't sell them....is that fiscally responsible?
Signing your top goalkeeper to such high wages that you can't sell him so, you have to eat the cost and look at putting him out on a loan, is that fiscally responsible?
People think they're on the brink, but in reality, they're already freefalling. Hasn't quite hit the ground yet, but it's too late. Icarus.
Is there a thread about the racism stuff from Griezmann and Dembele?
cheers buddyIn the Griezmann thread I think. This one seems to have been sidetracked.
What about since abramovic joined? That would be more logical than cherry picking the last 5 years, one of which you have a transfer ban anyway.
I've been hearing that Busquets has been finished for some time. Is he really one of their key players?Messi, De Jong, Pedri, Busquets are worth kept since those four are their key players. Keeping Messi is worth more than keeping Pjanic, Umtiti, Dembele, and Coutinho all together.
Sid Lowe in the guardian, just quoted a small portion.
Barcelona’s total debt is around €1,173m. In the winter, they took a €525m loan from Goldman Sachs to help them restructure their finances, while players agreed to salary deferrals back in November. Laporta admits that Barcelona’s salaries currently account for 110% of their income. “We do not comply with financial fair play regulations,” he said. Right now, put in blunt terms, Barcelona cannot pay their players.
Just a reminder that my post was in relation to someone claiming PSG, City and Chelsea will be the only forces in football due to being able to blow everyone out of the water. I was providing 5 and 10 year figures to show that other clubs have spent more (Barca, Utd etc). It wasn't a debate about where money came from.
According to transfer league, Chelsea net spend post Roman is £704m, Utd's is £688m, almost identical. So i don't see how someone can say we can spend a net of £250m per season when we've averaged a net of nearer £40m per season.
In fact it is City who are the outliers at £1.073bn net spend
See posters like daysleeper and anybody that has the audacity to defend this shit.It insanity. Let Messi go and start a financially sustainable rebuild is the only sensible option. He is 34 FFS.
Barcelona's debt estimated to be 1.7 billion and rising.
Manchester United' debt is close to 600 mill.
So enlighten me as to why when United's debt starts climbing into that range in 10 years or so, that it will benefit the club.
And while your at it, explain to me how the Glazer's leverage buy out of putting United millions in debt has been a net positive gain for the club?