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Posted
2 minutes ago, KentExile said:

far from perfect, but basically yes

https://www.transfermarkt.co.uk/championship/einnahmenausgaben/wettbewerb/GB2/plus/0?ids=a&sa=&saison_id=2010&saison_id_bis=2025&nat=&pos=&altersklasse=&w_s=&leihe=&intern=0

 

# Club Expenditure Arrivals Income Departures balance
1 Swansea City Swansea City €308.57m 345 €394.08m 351 €85.51m
2 Blackburn Rovers Blackburn Rovers €91.02m 376 €163.26m 388 €72.23m
3 Bristol City Bristol City €101.47m 384 €146.88m 381 €45.42m
4 Peterborough United Peterborough United €26.28m 473 €67.42m 479 €41.14m
5 Wigan Athletic Wigan Athletic €76.89m 445 €111.09m 439 €34.20m
6 Watford FC Watford FC €400.63m 467 €434.47m 466 €33.83m
7 Barnsley FC Barnsley FC €26.90m 469 €55.87m 466 €28.97m
8 Milton Keynes Dons Milton Keynes Dons €4.04m 429 €21.43m 429 €17.39m
9 Blackpool FC Blackpool FC €13.39m 508 €28.42m 514 €15.03m
10 Oxford United Oxford United €5.92m 433 €19.48m 421 €13.56m
11 Portsmouth FC Portsmouth FC €16.60m 478 €29.25m 479 €12.65m
12 Charlton Athletic Charlton Athletic €29.80m 488 €42.26m 485 €12.46m
13 Reading FC Reading FC €71.14m 398 €81.90m 400 €10.76m
14 Plymouth Argyle Plymouth Argyle €11.11m 411 €20.29m 413 €9.18m
15 Rotherham United Rotherham United €6.38m 476 €13.75m 471 €7.37m
16 Preston North End Preston North End €26.12m 396 €32.47m 392 €6.35m
17 Bolton Wanderers Bolton Wanderers €31.93m 429 €36.94m 438 €5.01m
18 Doncaster Rovers Doncaster Rovers €1.78m 467 €6.79m 465 €5.01m
19 Birmingham City Birmingham City €136.20m 437 €140.90m 438 €4.70m
20 Wycombe Wanderers Wycombe Wanderers €1.92m 405 €5.78m 403 €3.87m
21 Scunthorpe United Scunthorpe United €2.11m 472 €5.88m 477 €3.78m
22 Coventry City Coventry City €71.33m 366 €74.41m 370 €3.09m
23 Burton Albion Burton Albion €2.04m 482 €4.98m 477 €2.93m
24 Hull City Hull City €228.74m 436 €231.53m 438 €2.79m
25 Yeovil Town Yeovil Town - 501 €760k 506 €760k

Ah that must have been what I saw. 

Thanks!

  • Thanks 1
Posted
2 minutes ago, KentExile said:

far from perfect, but basically yes

https://www.transfermarkt.co.uk/championship/einnahmenausgaben/wettbewerb/GB2/plus/0?ids=a&sa=&saison_id=2010&saison_id_bis=2025&nat=&pos=&altersklasse=&w_s=&leihe=&intern=0

 

# Club Expenditure Arrivals Income Departures balance
1 Swansea City Swansea City €308.57m 345 €394.08m 351 €85.51m
2 Blackburn Rovers Blackburn Rovers €91.02m 376 €163.26m 388 €72.23m
3 Bristol City Bristol City €101.47m 384 €146.88m 381 €45.42m
4 Peterborough United Peterborough United €26.28m 473 €67.42m 479 €41.14m
5 Wigan Athletic Wigan Athletic €76.89m 445 €111.09m 439 €34.20m
6 Watford FC Watford FC €400.63m 467 €434.47m 466 €33.83m
7 Barnsley FC Barnsley FC €26.90m 469 €55.87m 466 €28.97m
8 Milton Keynes Dons Milton Keynes Dons €4.04m 429 €21.43m 429 €17.39m
9 Blackpool FC Blackpool FC €13.39m 508 €28.42m 514 €15.03m
10 Oxford United Oxford United €5.92m 433 €19.48m 421 €13.56m
11 Portsmouth FC Portsmouth FC €16.60m 478 €29.25m 479 €12.65m
12 Charlton Athletic Charlton Athletic €29.80m 488 €42.26m 485 €12.46m
13 Reading FC Reading FC €71.14m 398 €81.90m 400 €10.76m
14 Plymouth Argyle Plymouth Argyle €11.11m 411 €20.29m 413 €9.18m
15 Rotherham United Rotherham United €6.38m 476 €13.75m 471 €7.37m
16 Preston North End Preston North End €26.12m 396 €32.47m 392 €6.35m
17 Bolton Wanderers Bolton Wanderers €31.93m 429 €36.94m 438 €5.01m
18 Doncaster Rovers Doncaster Rovers €1.78m 467 €6.79m 465 €5.01m
19 Birmingham City Birmingham City €136.20m 437 €140.90m 438 €4.70m
20 Wycombe Wanderers Wycombe Wanderers €1.92m 405 €5.78m 403 €3.87m
21 Scunthorpe United Scunthorpe United €2.11m 472 €5.88m 477 €3.78m
22 Coventry City Coventry City €71.33m 366 €74.41m 370 €3.09m
23 Burton Albion Burton Albion €2.04m 482 €4.98m 477 €2.93m
24 Hull City Hull City €228.74m 436 €231.53m 438 €2.79m
25 Yeovil Town Yeovil Town - 501 €760k 506 €760k

This goes to show how difficult it is to grow and achieve with a football club using the 'Brighton' model. You can keep selling players for more than you paid, but in our case the club has stagnated while that has happened. Clubs like Brighton. Brentford, the dingles, have bought cheap, sold high and progressed the league position of the club. To do that, you have to keep reinvesting the money wisely and appointing smart football people. We've done none of that. It's all on the owners and reason 358 that they need to go.

  • Like 2
Posted (edited)
14 minutes ago, StHelensRover said:

This goes to show how difficult it is to grow and achieve with a football club using the 'Brighton' model. You can keep selling players for more than you paid, but in our case the club has stagnated while that has happened. Clubs like Brighton. Brentford, the dingles, have bought cheap, sold high and progressed the league position of the club. To do that, you have to keep reinvesting the money wisely and appointing smart football people. We've done none of that. It's all on the owners and reason 358 that they need to go.

The Brighton model (when they were promoted from the Championship) involved spending more than they received, which can be done under FFP rules as fees spent are divided over the course of a contract where fees received are counted as 1 singular payment, even then, I seem to recall (correct me if I am wrong) that Brighton would have been in trouble for breaching rules had they not gone up, such was the extent of their overspend

Rovers do the polar opposite

Brentford, Coventry, Middlesbrough etc operate/operated closer to a player trading model, although all invest a much higher proportion of monies from player sales than Rovers

Edited by KentExile
  • Like 3
  • Fair point 1
Posted
13 minutes ago, StHelensRover said:

This goes to show how difficult it is to grow and achieve with a football club using the 'Brighton' model. You can keep selling players for more than you paid, but in our case the club has stagnated while that has happened. Clubs like Brighton. Brentford, the dingles, have bought cheap, sold high and progressed the league position of the club. To do that, you have to keep reinvesting the money wisely and appointing smart football people. We've done none of that. It's all on the owners and reason 358 that they need to go.

I always assumed, though could be wrong, that clubs like Brighton, Brentford etc. started off buying players for lower fee's, selling those for good money, using that money to buy more expensive players than the first lot cost, sell those, reinvest, rinse, repeat.

So like, you'd buy a player for £2m, sell for £10m, then buy a player for say £5m out of the profit, sell for £20m etc. etc.

(they are example figures that i've just made up)

Rovers just wanna buy for £500k, sell for a profit and then buy more players for £500k.

  • Like 5
Posted
2 minutes ago, davulsukur said:

I always assumed, though could be wrong, that clubs like Brighton, Brentford etc. started off buying players for lower fee's, selling those for good money, using that money to buy more expensive players than the first lot cost, sell those, reinvest, rinse, repeat.

So like, you'd buy a player for £2m, sell for £10m, then buy a player for say £5m out of the profit, sell for £20m etc. etc.

(they are example figures that i've just made up)

Rovers just wanna buy for £500k, sell for a profit and then buy more players for £500k.

not just fees, Brighton/Brentford etc also used money in to increase the wage budget

  • Like 1
Posted
3 hours ago, Herbie6590 said:

1. There plainly isn’t common ground across the whole of the fanbase - I sense it’s another Devil’s Ratio of 52:48 TBH - the Coalition is representing their constituency

2. No credible buyer will engage with fans - they’d approach the current owners, the more credible, the less we’d know of them

I think you’re badly wrong there Herbie. The Coalition might not be representative of all Rovers fans but my guess is that it is more 90/10 -85/15 territory. I think if you asked every Blackburn Rovers fan whether they wanted their club to be run better, by new owners, you would struggle to find a single dissenting voice.

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
4 minutes ago, Penwortham Blue said:

I think you’re badly wrong there Herbie. The Coalition might not be representative of all Rovers fans but my guess is that it is more 90/10 -85/15 territory. I think if you asked every Blackburn Rovers fan whether they wanted their club to be run better, by new owners, you would struggle to find a single dissenting voice.

I think it's actually somewhere in-between. Because while I think probably 90% of fans dislike the owners and are really frustrated with them, a sizeable portion of those are also too risk averse to want a change of ownership, that's where we get the "I don't like them but at least they're putting the money in, we could be another Bury, no one will buy us" comments. That sizeable group of people dislike the owners, but will either never protest, or will only protest once we're bottom of League One. Those are the ones we need to convince regarding a boycott. We need to convince them that it is worth rolling the dice with new owners. Edit- I don't have an answer about how to do this, especially after 15 years of nonsense.

Edited by StHelensRover
  • Like 4
  • Fair point 1
Posted
8 minutes ago, Penwortham Blue said:

I think you’re badly wrong there Herbie. The Coalition might not be representative of all Rovers fans but my guess is that it is more 90/10 -85/15 territory. I think if you asked every Blackburn Rovers fan whether they wanted their club to be run better, by new owners, you would struggle to find a single dissenting voice.

It’s how you phrase the question(s)…for those of a certain age there’s a “Yes Prime Minister” episode in which Sir Humphrey illustrates the conundrum beautifully.

I’ll try & parody it…badly…

 

“Are you worried that Blackburn Rovers will fold without generous owners?”

”Do you agree that to be competitive in the Championship you need owners with deep pockets?”

”Do you think that calling for Venky’s to leave risks Rovers future?”

 

versus…

 

”Do you agree that football without hope means nothing?”

”Do you agree that success in a lower division would galvanise a latent Rovers fanbase?”

”Do you think the club could be run by better, new owners than Venky’s?”

  • Like 7
Posted
4 minutes ago, Herbie6590 said:

It’s how you phrase the question(s)…for those of a certain age there’s a “Yes Prime Minister” episode in which Sir Humphrey illustrates the conundrum beautifully.

I’ll try & parody it…badly…

 

“Are you worried that Blackburn Rovers will fold without generous owners?”

”Do you agree that to be competitive in the Championship you need owners with deep pockets?”

”Do you think that calling for Venky’s to leave risks Rovers future?”

 

versus…

 

”Do you agree that football without hope means nothing?”

”Do you agree that success in a lower division would galvanise a latent Rovers fanbase?”

”Do you think the club could be run by better, new owners than Venky’s?”

Here it is…

 

  • Like 3
Posted
2 minutes ago, Mattyblue said:

Far more than 10% are content enough for the owners to stay.

Probably so but I wouldn't think they are in the majority and if you include all those who have walked away since 2011 then there are perhaps at most 5000 attending who for whatever reason are content enough.

Posted
14 minutes ago, Mattyblue said:

Far more than 10% are content enough for the owners to stay.

Agree, the match going home fans that remain I rarely hear much dissent about the Venkys other than the odd chant when we start losing. We have lost the real dissenters from attending over the years which is fair enough, I will probably join them next season.

  • Like 1
  • Backroom
Posted

A significant portion of those still attending Ewood will be most loyal / apathetic towards the ownership. The majority of those who have had enough are already boycotting, albeit unofficially. It's why a boycott call now is so difficult for the Coalition - for those who agree with them, you're preaching to the choir and those people are probably, mostly, not attending anyway. That leaves you with the remaining group who will be very hard to convince to take action. It's not an enviable task. 

Granted there are a few on here who go but would boycott for the cause, as we've seen. I sadly think they are in the minority though - even if we're just talking a single game. 

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Mattyblue said:

Far more than 10% are content enough for the owners to stay.

I don’t think they are happy or indeed, content for them to stay. They just aren’t prepared to do anything in an attempt to get them removed.

Edited by Penwortham Blue
  • Like 1
Posted
16 minutes ago, MarkBRFC said:

Just won't happen.

When there and in the moment, when they are in the concourse 90% of fans will buy something without giving it a second thought.

Well they understand the position we are in, and it’s about time solidarity in football kicks in between two fanbases. They will happily boycott.

  • Like 2
Posted
6 minutes ago, Elrovers said:

Well they understand the position we are in, and it’s about time solidarity in football kicks in between two fanbases. They will happily boycott.

I bet they don't.

Football fans generally only really care about what is happening at there own club, despite the calls from there supporters trust I imagine they will treat it as a normal game and still turn up in fairly decent numbers, and buy plenty from the concourse.

Would love to be wrong, but I just don't see it.

Posted
5 minutes ago, MarkBRFC said:

I bet they don't.

Football fans generally only really care about what is happening at there own club, despite the calls from there supporters trust I imagine they will treat it as a normal game and still turn up in fairly decent numbers, and buy plenty from the concourse.

Would love to be wrong, but I just don't see it.

 

Blackpool fans at Ewood. You'd be surprised at who is willing to help out especially when they've been through it

 

Posted
5 minutes ago, ... said:

 

Blackpool fans at Ewood. You'd be surprised at who is willing to help out especially when they've been through it

 

Yep I remember it, over 2k of them still bought tickets to go in and spent money on the concourse though.

  • Like 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, MarkBRFC said:

Yep I remember it, over 2k of them still bought tickets to go in and spent money on the concourse though.

That wasn't about not spending on the concourse though. That was about being united and and bringing to light piss poor ownership

Posted
2 minutes ago, ... said:

That wasn't about not spending on the concourse though. That was about being united and and bringing to light piss poor ownership

And we're still here a decade later.

Fair enough for Blackpool they got through it, I bet they couldn't give a damn about us now they are sorted though.

Just the way football fans are.

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