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Yorkie

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4 minutes ago, TRon said:

 

Ashley wasn't rich in comparison to the big hitters in the PL, that's the issue. He argued to compete for CL places you needed funding of a small state, e.g. Abramovich or UAE. 

 

PIF are representing Saudis, they will spend what it takes to get to the CL. If you don't like that fair enough, but this is the playing field now, you can either buy a ticket or stay out of the arena. 

When he bought us he was only behind what was the top 4 and possibly Tottenham in terms of actual wealth.

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We can dance around it all we want, but PIF and Ashley both see the club as something they can use to their benefit. That's owners of football clubs at the top level. No one is genuinely doing it for philanthropic reasons. 

 

The only difference in that motivation is that PIF will make us a much better football team. It won't get me championing their cause at all.

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53 minutes ago, Jackie Broon said:

 

Because they wanted a PL club, Staveley has said they looked at Inter as an alternative but the Italian league is a mess.

 

 

 

 

It certainly is a mess. And maybe in the wider public's eye, a less desirable league.

 

If they pull out due to relegation and weren't aware of what they were signing up too I can see them being fucking skint in no time [emoji38]

 

You'd really like to HOPE that this time our owners have done extensive due diligence and not bought on a whim and ready to drop at the first inconvenience. Like I say, would make the last 18 months a very strange one.

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4 minutes ago, gjohnson said:

When he bought us he was only behind what was the top 4 and possibly Tottenham in terms of actual wealth.

 

Those are still bad odds (in his eyes) to spend the sort of money it would take to get in the CL considering Chelsea and City were just going to blow everyone out of the water, then you still have Man U who were far wealthier than us. 

 

I'm just saying, PIF will not worry about whether they can compete on finances with anyone, there is a difference. 

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1 minute ago, NE27 said:

 

It certainly is a mess. And maybe in the wider public's eye, a less desirable league.

 

If they pull out due to relegation and weren't aware of what they were signing up too I can see them being fucking skint in no time [emoji38]

 

You'd really like to HOPE that this time our owners have done extensive due diligence and not bought on a whim and ready to drop at the first inconvenience. Like I say, would make the last 18 months a very strange one.

 

It wouldn't be strange, it would be the most Newcastle United thing ever to get bought be the richest owners in world football after an 18 month battle only to get relegated and dumped by them.

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1 minute ago, Jackie Broon said:

 

It wouldn't be strange, it would be the most Newcastle United thing ever to get bought be the richest owners in world football after an 18 month battle only to get relegated and dumped by them.

 

Come on Jackie, you've gone all negative!

 

Obviously its a possibility, but I cannot see that happening. Not in my opinion anyway.

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3 hours ago, macphisto said:

That's not organic growth, 2nd to Man U after only 5 years, ahead of Liverpool. It was fuelled by debt, our income didn't cover a transfer like Shearer's together with our other expenditure at the time. That's why we had the years under Dalglish where we had to buy players like Rush, Pearce and Barnes. We were fairly skint due to our debt. For info, I know what you're saying about our commercial deals, for example I remember the Adidas advert with Ferdinand kicking a ball being shown around the country.

 

Anyway, my major point is that we have had dramatic growth in the past and no one cared less; everyone loved it.

It was organic growth as the debt was sustainable and based on a proper sound business model, most major companies have debt and fund operations through that, a football club should be no different. We did have to reign it in of course under Dalglish and then towards the end of Sir Bobby’s time, but that’s good business sense too. The point I’m making is that the Shearers, the coming second, the wages we could afford, all come about because fans were buying absolutely everything and because of KK, the brand of the team and how we played, major business’ wanted to get involved and help bankroll the club too, hence the rise in our turnover and commercial revenues which were ridiculous at the time. It was all internally driven. That’s why I’ve never begrudged Man Utd their success under Fergie and feel, as @Yorkieso eloquently wrote in regards to Liverpool, there are alternative ways than just having some sovereign state or rich sugar daddy come in and buy success.

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8 minutes ago, HTT II said:

It was organic growth as the debt was sustainable and based on a proper sound business model, most major companies have debt and fund operations through that, a football club should be no different. We did have to reign it in of course under Dalglish and then towards the end of Sir Bobby’s time, but that’s good business sense too. The point I’m making is that the Shearers, the coming second, the wages we could afford, all come about because fans were buying absolutely everything and because of KK, the brand of the team and how we played, major business’ wanted to get involved and help bankroll the club too, hence the rise in our turnover and commercial revenues which were ridiculous at the time. It was all internally driven. That’s why I’ve never begrudged Man Utd their success under Fergie and feel, as @Yorkieso eloquently wrote in regards to Liverpool, there are alternative ways than just having some sovereign state or rich sugar daddy come in and buy success.

 

In an ideal world there would be alternatives where you could punch your weight, but as long as you have sovereign state owned clubs, it's not a level playing field. Like the old Billy Joel song goes, we didn't start the fire. All we did was pick up the biggest flame thrower once the match had been lit. 

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19 minutes ago, HTT II said:

It was organic growth as the debt was sustainable and based on a proper sound business model, most major companies have debt and fund operations through that, a football club should be no different. We did have to reign it in of course under Dalglish and then towards the end of Sir Bobby’s time, but that’s good business sense too. The point I’m making is that the Shearers, the coming second, the wages we could afford, all come about because fans were buying absolutely everything and because of KK, the brand of the team and how we played, major business’ wanted to get involved and help bankroll the club too, hence the rise in our turnover and commercial revenues which were ridiculous at the time. It was all internally driven. That’s why I’ve never begrudged Man Utd their success under Fergie and feel, as @Yorkieso eloquently wrote in regards to Liverpool, there are alternative ways than just having some sovereign state or rich sugar daddy come in and buy success.

Didn't we reign it in because it wasn't sustainable ?

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I don't want to be that club that spends 30m here, 30m there on players who fail and never amount to anything.

 

I'd rather the club put that money into the academy, the stadium, the training ground and most importantly the staff. A top class management structure who know exactly what it takes to be a success. Always bemused me that a football club is willing to spend whatever amount on a player but isn't willing to throw that amount of money at a top notch DOF/recruitment guy, who would pay their wage back in no time by signing the right players at the right price etc.

 

Commercially we are a million miles off where we should be too. We could easily get bigger sponsors than Spurs for example, who are punching way above their weight (to their credit) with regards to fanbase and reach.

 

In short, get stuff behind the scenes sorted, the football results will follow.

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22 minutes ago, HTT II said:

It was organic growth as the debt was sustainable and based on a proper sound business model, most major companies have debt and fund operations through that, a football club should be no different. We did have to reign it in of course under Dalglish and then towards the end of Sir Bobby’s time, but that’s good business sense too. The point I’m making is that the Shearers, the coming second, the wages we could afford, all come about because fans were buying absolutely everything and because of KK, the brand of the team and how we played, major business’ wanted to get involved and help bankroll the club too, hence the rise in our turnover and commercial revenues which were ridiculous at the time. It was all internally driven. That’s why I’ve never begrudged Man Utd their success under Fergie and feel, as @Yorkieso eloquently wrote in regards to Liverpool, there are alternative ways than just having some sovereign state or rich sugar daddy come in and buy success.

What major companies, Newcastle Brown Ale? We'll just have to disagree on whether coming from the bottom of the 2nd division to spending what we did in such a short time is organic growth or not. To make the strides that we did back then was not organic growth in my view as that would imply building a club over a much longer time frame and having the right foundations in place; by the end of that period we didn't even have a reserve team. Newcastle was falsely built up at the time through external debt to maximise the return for the Halls when they floated the club. After that we were never able to spend like that again.

 

As I say, my major point was that no one complained back then when we were breaking transfer records which is something we had never done in our history.

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17 minutes ago, macphisto said:

What major companies, Newcastle Brown Ale? We'll just have to disagree on whether coming from the bottom of the 2nd division to spending what we did in such a short time is organic growth or not. To make the strides that we did back then was not organic growth in my view as that would imply building a club over a much longer time frame and having the right foundations in place; by the end of that period we didn't even have a reserve team. Newcastle was falsely built up at the time through external debt to maximise the return for the Halls when they floated the club. After that we were never able to spend like that again.

 

As I say, my major point was that no one complained back then when we were breaking transfer records which is something we had never done in our history.

Yes Newcastle & Scottish breweries, Asics then Adidas, the PL money of course and we bought and sold really well. The stadium revamp was mainly down to the grants following the Taylor Report after Hillsborough. We spent less gaining promotion than WHU if I remember right and were outspent net by even the likes of Villa during that period where most clubs were spending more than they had ever spent. Unlike a lot of those clubs though, their revenues were not as strong as ours or were limited to a certain ceiling where as ours wasn’t and I do broadly agree with you, we have 129 years of rich history, culture and success on and off the pitch, even if it hasn’t always materialised in trophies, that’s only going to be enhanced and built on you’d hope. I maintain. However, our growth under KK was organic, self sustaining to a point and entirely inline with a successful business performing at its max. Also, the debt wasn’t even big even by those days standards, and every penny the club made it spent. Every business has debt, we had far less than most clubs and it wasn’t a debt to an owner. 

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37 minutes ago, madras said:

Didn't we reign it in because it wasn't sustainable ?

We did so more to appease the SE and we did reign it in because it wasn’t always sustainable at the rate we were going. If only we had won the league, we didn’t float on the SE and KK stayed, I believe we’d have won lots of silverware and been a major force in Europe maximising our revenues even more. Scrapping the reserves and having no real youth set up was a major blow because it meant we had to go out and buy players rather than develop our own. 

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27 minutes ago, STM said:

I don't want to be that club that spends 30m here, 30m there on players who fail and never amount to anything.

 

I'd rather the club put that money into the academy, the stadium, the training ground and most importantly the staff. A top class management structure who know exactly what it takes to be a success. Always bemused me that a football club is willing to spend whatever amount on a player but isn't willing to throw that amount of money at a top notch DOF/recruitment guy, who would pay their wage back in no time by signing the right players at the right price etc.

 

Commercially we are a million miles off where we should be too. We could easily get bigger sponsors than Spurs for example, who are punching way above their weight (to their credit) with regards to fanbase and reach.

 

In short, get stuff behind the scenes sorted, the football results will follow.

Couldn’t agree more. Spent 100m on the academy and we will be producing 100m pound players in a decade easily. 

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2 minutes ago, HTT II said:

Yes Newcastle & Scottish breweries, Asics then Adidas, the PL money of course and we bought and sold really well. The stadium revamp was mainly down to the grants following the Taylor Report after Hillsborough. We spent less gaining promotion than WHU if I remember right and were outspent net by even the likes of Villa during that period where most clubs were spending more than they had ever spent. Unlike a lot of those clubs though, their revenues were not as strong as ours or were limited to a certain ceiling where as ours wasn’t and I do broadly agree with you, we have 129 years of rich history, culture and success on and off the pitch, even if it hasn’t always materialised in trophies, that’s only going to be enhanced and built on you’d hope. I maintain. However, our growth under KK was organic, self sustaining to a point and entirely inline with a successful business performing at its max. Also, the debt wasn’t even big even by those days standards, and every penny the club made it spent. Every business has debt, we had far less than most clubs and it wasn’t a debt to an owner. 

You're mostly spot on but the sustainability was heavily dependent on continued success. It was a bold plan, with huge ambition and belief.

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Just now, Happinesstan said:

You're mostly spot on but the sustainability was heavily dependent on continued success. It was a bold plan, with huge ambition and belief.

Of course, and that’s the only way to achieve both, but it has to be balanced and we couldn’t ever quite get that right once SJH basically took a back seat and FS took more control and started flicking managers around and doing dodgy deals with agents and his family members…

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I think we were outselling the likes of LFC in shirt sales by 3-1 at one point and were not far off Man Utd. Our commercial prospects under KK in those days was insane, again we went from being 6m in the red and losing 2m a year which not even player sales was covering, to 40-50m turnover, in basically 5 years, but in reality it was more like 3 once we gained promotion and solidified our seat at the top of the table along with Man Utd.

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1 minute ago, HTT II said:

Of course, and that’s the only way to achieve both, but it has to be balanced and we couldn’t ever quite get that right once SJH basically took a back seat and FS took more control and started flicking managers around and doing dodgy deals with agents and his family members…

Aye, but dodgy deals are all over the place now.

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2 minutes ago, HTT II said:

I think we were outselling the likes of LFC in shirt sales by 3-1 at one point and were not far off Man Utd. Our commercial prospects under KK in those days was insane, again we went from being 6m in the red and losing 2m a year which not even player sales was covering, to 40-50m turnover, in basically 5 years, but in reality it was more like 3 once we gained promotion and solidified our seat at the top of the table along with Man Utd.

Aye. Our battles with Man U were a massive boon for our global exposure. If they'd turned to shit that year and we'd won the league at a canter it probably wouldn't have grown so quickly.

 

 

Edited by Happinesstan

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1 minute ago, Happinesstan said:

I'd also add that it would have become sustainable in the following years. Succes at the time was a top 3 finish, but only a couple of years later top 6 or 7 was adequate to keep the cash registers turning over.

Today it’s very sustainable to achieve a top 6 consistency with the right manager and recruitment model in place, it always hinges on having the right manager though. Our suspect our new owners, short term will put people in place to reach the top 4 and once we become a ‘CL club’ they will go all out to win the league and the Cl and become an elite club which will take big money once we get to that kind of transition like City have. 

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There's two models effectively. The Chelsea and Man City model. And everyone else. 

 

What those two clubs have done amazingly well is beyond the initial silly investment into the playing staff and getting a brand new team, the next layer was to build not just world class but world leading infrastructure. With Chelsea, their academy and buying all those young players has made them hundreds of millions now - as well as generated top class talent for the first team. With Man City, they've acquired other clubs in a global model, and have created a system/network and a playing style that is repeated from U7's all the way up to the first team. It's so strategic and so well done, very holistic and interconnected. That's what billions spent right can do - as it future-proofs the club and allows them to join the elite for good. Neither clubs are 'traditional' elite like Man U, Liverpool, Bayern etc - but I can't see them falling from grace any time soon due to how solidly they've been set up and this joined up thinking. 

We now have money beyond both of these clubs. The $64,000 question is whether we have the thinking and the strategy - as that trumps all. 

 

Otherwise you end up with what Everton and Man U etc have done with their multi-millions. Buying £40m players who don't fit the team. 

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