Lucky Posted November 4, 2025 Share Posted November 4, 2025 Viagra can always sponsor the physio department Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stifler Posted November 5, 2025 Share Posted November 5, 2025 8 hours ago, TheBrownBottle said: Unsurprised as he’s done the sum total of fuck all for some time - his links with adidas were much vaunted, but that wasn’t exactly the deal of the century, and a football club getting a kit manufacturer isn’t unusual. No significant commercial deals were made on his watch; Sela and Noon are PIF. I think that’s a little unfair. It’s pretty much been confirmed that he was a big reason why we linked up with Adidas. The Adidas deal also happened to be the biggest shirt manufacturer deal outside of the top 6 in England, as well as one of Adidas’ biggest with only the European giants earning more. The fee is a minimum of £30m per year, uplifting to a maximum of £40m per year, compared to our previous £5m per year with Castoe that could be increased by hitting sales targets, but unlikely due to how little revenue the club earned from shirt and merchandise sales deals were structured under Ashley. To put it into perspective, Noon now pay us more money to be a sleeve sponsor than Castore paid us. On top of this the Adidas deal also brought us into the elite fold clubs before the likes of Benfica, Celtic, and Ajax were. They even pay us more than they do to Aston Villa, who’s owner owns a significant share in Adidas. The Adidas deal also opened up new merchandise opportunities for us. The training merchandise, Terrace icon, SPZL, and Gazzelle ranges all proving popular, not to mention last years retro release of the 95-97 home shirt, and the upcoming retro release of the 95-96 away shirt and training merchandise. That simply wouldn’t have been possible with any other manufacturer. Nike have done a good job with Spurs and PSG, but the majority of it is just releasing stupid amounts of alternative shirts, and their Air Jordan tie up, which wouldn’t really work with our fanbase. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fenham Mag Posted November 7, 2025 Share Posted November 7, 2025 It looks like we’ll be heading into the busy December period with a fully fit squad with the return of Tino and Wissa. Touch wood no injuries in the upcoming couple of fixtures. Bunce and his team have played a blinder especially with the amount of games we have coming up. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Butcher Posted November 7, 2025 Share Posted November 7, 2025 We're 13th. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
bobbydazzla Posted November 7, 2025 Share Posted November 7, 2025 15 minutes ago, Fenham Mag said: It looks like we’ll be heading into the busy December period with a fully fit squad with the return of Tino and Wissa. Touch wood no injuries in the upcoming couple of fixtures. Bunce and his team have played a blinder especially with the amount of games we have coming up. Outbreak of ebola virus incoming at Darsley Park and the entire first team all absolutely riddled with it in 3.....2......1....... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fenham Mag Posted November 7, 2025 Share Posted November 7, 2025 18 minutes ago, The Butcher said: We're 13th. What’s that got to do with Bunce? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yorkie Posted November 7, 2025 Share Posted November 7, 2025 29 minutes ago, Fenham Mag said: What’s that got to do with Bunce? Don't bother. Just Butcher's daily reminder that everything is awful. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Butcher Posted November 7, 2025 Share Posted November 7, 2025 16 minutes ago, Yorkie said: Don't bother. Just Butcher's daily reminder that everything is awful. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pilko Posted December 3, 2025 Share Posted December 3, 2025 Just saw this on TransferRoom's page on LinkedIn, apparently Forest scout Thomas Federspiel has left his role & joined Ross Wilson at NUFC as First Team & Global Talent Scout for Brazil, Ecuador and Colombia. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
patrone Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 (edited) https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/articles/cvgj8j1gv0go Edited December 4, 2025 by patrone Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
joeyt Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 Apologies if posted elsewhere https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/articles/cvgj8j1gv0go Newcastle want to be 'top club in world' by 2030 Quote The year is 2030. Newcastle United are "perennial contenders" competing for the biggest prizes in the game, and "in the debate about being the top club in the world". This is the bold five-year vision of David Hopkinson, who was recently appointed as Newcastle's new chief executive. "That kind of progress doesn't take as long as you might think," the Canadian said bullishly. "First off, we need to be totally aligned about the fact that that's what we want to do. "We have to have the courage to ignore those that doubt us, and even those that laugh at us. Because there will be some." Such scepticism is not in question, at a time when Newcastle lie in 12th place in the Premier League table, but there is context to Hopkinson's way of thinking as he talks of "constructing an organisation whose sole purpose is to win". Hopkinson previously spent the majority of his career at Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, where he oversaw the commercial activities of the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Toronto Raptors. The Raptors were, as Hopkinson put it, "lost in the woods" in 2014 before going on to win the National Basketball Association (NBA) championship for the first time just five years later. There may not be the play-offs to fall back on in the Premier League, like there are in basketball, but Hopkinson believes Newcastle are at the intersection of the "most transformational opportunity" in sport. The 54-year-old has not shied away from a bold time-frame, as a result, even if this is obviously a very different ball game. "If it's not time-bound, it's fantasy," he said. Bridging a huge revenue gap Yet it is clear such a dramatic shift won't happen overnight - even if Hopkinson rates head coach Eddie Howe as a "special" manager. Hopkinson has carried out an in-depth review since coming in back in September - submitting a transformation plan with closely-guarded milestones for each of the coming seasons to the club's owners - and he is the first to admit that there is "a lot of work to do". Newcastle's revenues are set to increase to more than £400m, which represents a huge increase on the £140m figure posted in 2021 But they still have an almighty gap to bridge on, say, Manchester City, who generated £715m in income a couple of seasons ago. This enabled Manchester City to spend nearly £200m more on wages than Newcastle within the financial regulations in 2023-24 and, historically, the clubs with the biggest salary bills tend to pick up the most points in the league. Finding a way to turbocharge revenues will therefore be a key focus for Hopkinson, who also previously served as president of Madison Square Garden Sports and, perhaps, most relevantly, the head of global partnerships at Real Madrid. Michael Sutherland, who worked alongside Hopkinson at Real Madrid, as the club's chief transformation officer, said the executive brought "a lot more structure and a more professional approach to the way sponsorships were managed". "You could say, 'It's Real Madrid. It's the easiest role in the world because who doesn't want to sponsor the club?'" he said. "But it creates a different problem. "You are basically selling the concept of being with the best club in the world so if Real Madrid don't have a good season, and don't win a championship, that heavily impacts your value proposition to sponsors. "But one of the things that changed a lot was the sophistication of the types of partners we were able to offer and, particularly, the speed with which we were able to execute." 'Manchester City were able to get there earlier' There are potential areas of uplift at Newcastle. Though the number of employees has doubled to more than 550 staff members in recent years, Newcastle have gaps in key senior areas to fill. The digital and data side of the club both need significant work, and are a long way behind their rivals. Hopkinson has also cited "less obvious opportunities" with global partners, beyond companies linked to Newcastle's majority owners, the Public Investment Fund (PIF) of Saudi Arabia. There had once been a tangible fear among top-flight executives that Newcastle could enter into especially lucrative sponsorship deals with Saudi Arabian firms through the PIF. A senior figure elsewhere, who contacted the Premier League on behalf of his club and 10 others, even requested that notice be given of a vote to introduce a short-term ban on related-party transactions just five days after the takeover in 2021. Associated party transaction (APT) rules were later voted through by the overwhelming majority of top-flight clubs to ensure deals were of fair market value. This was always going to be a more gradual build, as a result, as football finance expert Kieran Maguire explained. "Manchester City were able to get there earlier when there was no such thing as associated party transactions, when you didn't have to go through a constant series of hoops and constraints before being able to sign a sponsorship contract and they benefited from that," he said. "It's that much more difficult now and, if you're a sponsor, who are you going to try and go for? You're going to go for those clubs who have got the big trophies to put alongside their product." 'We've got to keep raising the bar' There are other ways to boost revenue streams in the long run, of course. Not least match day income. But there remains ongoing uncertainty surrounding the future of St James' Park and Hopkinson recognised the club will be at the stadium in its current guise for "many years", regardless of whether the ground is renovated or a new one is built. "We're modelling a multitude of different scenarios," he said. "But even if we were to make a decision tomorrow, which we're not going to do, it still takes years of permits, planning, finance, construction, etc. That's the case whatever we choose." Clearly there are some big decisions to be made regarding infrastructure as a whole. Sporting director Ross Wilson, who followed Hopkinson through the door, from Nottingham Forest, said work is ongoing to effectively double the footprint of the club's existing training base. But the club recognise the limitations of the Benton site and are also planning a major investment to build a new state-of-the-art training ground elsewhere. It neatly sums up the breathless challenge Newcastle face across the board to one day gatecrash the elite. "A lot of the conversations we're having, other clubs are having as well," Wilson added. "We have got to keep raising our bar because everyone else is raising theirs at the same time." Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Collage Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 Actions speak more than words. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Prophet Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 "It’s always easy to judge recruitment in the past,’ he said, straight-batting down the wicket. ‘I think you’ve always got to judge recruitment with the context of time and what the need was at that specific time. This club has been on an interesting journey, from a relegation battle to a Champions League club, and that requires different things in different moments." That's how you do diplomacy, Paul (from Ross Wilson). Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
JT24 Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 For those interested in the links to your favourite journalists write up on the meeting with Hopkinson and Wilson: Edwards: https://archive.ph/Tlreg Douglas: https://archive.ph/c6tvf Hope: https://archive.ph/gAIxS Waugh: https://archive.ph/ULMaK Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Keegans Export Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 Quote “By 2030, I see this club being in the debate about being the top club in the world.” I admire the ambition but that is an absolutely mental claim tbf Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pixelphish Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 14 minutes ago, Keegans Export said: I admire the ambition but that is an absolutely mental claim tbf He’s certainly got PIFs penchant for grand words. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
NG32 Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 We would need to make up about a 300 mill swing in income wont we? Just to be at the same table, never mind challenge?!?! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
STM Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 5 minutes ago, NG32 said: We would need to make up about a 300 mill swing in income wont we? Just to be at the same table, never mind challenge?!?! Weve already made a 200m+ swing in the same time period. I only want the club try and be the best it can be and so long as its showing ambition to improve across the board, I wont be holding them to any lofty targets they may have set for themselves... am I right guys? guys? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
STM Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 In all seriousness, we are on the edges of being a regular CL side and being regularly in cup finals, if that club can consolidate that over the next 5 years, that will do me. A European trophy wouldn't go amiss too. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
manorpark Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 15 minutes ago, STM said: A European trophy wouldn't go amiss too. Another one would indeed be nice, though nothing will beat the first one . . . Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris_R Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 Already seen one in my lifetime Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Magpie Mover Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 Try reading the comments on the BBC linked to the article. Everyone seems to find the statement extremely funny. I think it just makes us look delusional and stupid. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scoot Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 11 minutes ago, Magpie Mover said: Try reading the comments on the BBC linked to the article. Everyone seems to find the statement extremely funny. I think it just makes us look delusional and stupid. Under Ashley, we wanted him out for more ambitious owners. We get ambitious owners who make ambitious statements. "We look stupid" Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Optimistic Nut Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 30 minutes ago, Magpie Mover said: Try reading the comments on the BBC linked to the article. Everyone seems to find the statement extremely funny. I think it just makes us look delusional and stupid. Who gives a shite what other fans think? I want ambition. Us to try and be the best. Enjoy it, man. Like someone else said, it's not long ago the club were happy just being secure in the league. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
enthusiast Posted December 4, 2025 Share Posted December 4, 2025 1 hour ago, Chris_R said: Already seen one in my lifetime seen two Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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