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I hope this happens and happens fast, I can’t abide these elite team supporters talking about historical pride and grass roots football when I’d wager 99% of them wouldn’t be able to name a National League team if their life depended on it...They know the cost of everything and the value of nothing, happy to see a 100 million pound acquisition for their team, yet little realising nor caring that 1% of that would keep the lights on at a 5th tier teams ground for a couple of years....” oh there are teams lower than the premiership?” I want this to happen so that we can all be involved in the great reset...and it would be nice to watch the aftermath meltdown of the elite plastic fans....Rant over, ................... for now
Quote from: silent majority on April 19, 2021, 09:42:33 pmQuote from: drfchound on April 19, 2021, 09:17:51 pmIt has been inevitable for some years though that the ESL was going to happen.Just like those builders who get planning refused but keep coming back with a revised set of plans until they get their own way.The building goes ahead, some of the protesters even buy one of the houses and everyone gets used to things as they have become.The protestors did their best but nothing could stop the development.Your analogy doesn't really work as this was a different set of builders. The last time it was the ECA, not this time. Furthermore they still haven't got planning permission, nor have they got any land to build on, the land belongs to someone else.I don't think I've ever seen supporters so closely aligned as they are with this issue. Fans of the big six have all been active today in telling their clubs that they won't sit idly by.I am on the same side as you SM and support the same things.I just feel that the ESL is going to happen and has been inevitable for quite a few years.
Quote from: drfchound on April 19, 2021, 09:17:51 pmIt has been inevitable for some years though that the ESL was going to happen.Just like those builders who get planning refused but keep coming back with a revised set of plans until they get their own way.The building goes ahead, some of the protesters even buy one of the houses and everyone gets used to things as they have become.The protestors did their best but nothing could stop the development.Your analogy doesn't really work as this was a different set of builders. The last time it was the ECA, not this time. Furthermore they still haven't got planning permission, nor have they got any land to build on, the land belongs to someone else.I don't think I've ever seen supporters so closely aligned as they are with this issue. Fans of the big six have all been active today in telling their clubs that they won't sit idly by.
It has been inevitable for some years though that the ESL was going to happen.Just like those builders who get planning refused but keep coming back with a revised set of plans until they get their own way.The building goes ahead, some of the protesters even buy one of the houses and everyone gets used to things as they have become.The protestors did their best but nothing could stop the development.
Nice bit of humour from Wolves. They are claiming they were PL champions in 2018/19 having finished 7th behind the breakaway six. They are suggesting it’s too late for a parade ?
Quote from: silent majority on April 19, 2021, 09:34:49 pmQuote from: wilts rover on April 19, 2021, 09:13:27 pmQuote from: silent majority on April 19, 2021, 09:03:26 pmQuote from: Chris Black come back on April 19, 2021, 08:52:31 pmYou can almost read the outcome of the "fan-led" review now. Will just entrench the current status quo, as that will be presented as some kind of golden age worth preserving, rather than literally the problem that needs solving. Any review led by a Tory MP is not going to deliver any radical change. Doubtless plenty will make the case for change but you can predict now that bugger all will come of this.I think you're missing the point! This is a fan led review based on the work we've done and presented to the FA and others.https://thefsa.org.uk/news/fsa-statement-government-fan-led-review/A government that wont let workers reps join company boards and allows the gig economy is going to support fans running £multi-billion football clubs. Oh aye...I have absolutely no idea how you arrived at that from anything I've posted. It's not about what you posted SM - Wilts is on a personal crusade against the Tories - and will use any avenue possible....
Quote from: wilts rover on April 19, 2021, 09:13:27 pmQuote from: silent majority on April 19, 2021, 09:03:26 pmQuote from: Chris Black come back on April 19, 2021, 08:52:31 pmYou can almost read the outcome of the "fan-led" review now. Will just entrench the current status quo, as that will be presented as some kind of golden age worth preserving, rather than literally the problem that needs solving. Any review led by a Tory MP is not going to deliver any radical change. Doubtless plenty will make the case for change but you can predict now that bugger all will come of this.I think you're missing the point! This is a fan led review based on the work we've done and presented to the FA and others.https://thefsa.org.uk/news/fsa-statement-government-fan-led-review/A government that wont let workers reps join company boards and allows the gig economy is going to support fans running £multi-billion football clubs. Oh aye...I have absolutely no idea how you arrived at that from anything I've posted.
Quote from: silent majority on April 19, 2021, 09:03:26 pmQuote from: Chris Black come back on April 19, 2021, 08:52:31 pmYou can almost read the outcome of the "fan-led" review now. Will just entrench the current status quo, as that will be presented as some kind of golden age worth preserving, rather than literally the problem that needs solving. Any review led by a Tory MP is not going to deliver any radical change. Doubtless plenty will make the case for change but you can predict now that bugger all will come of this.I think you're missing the point! This is a fan led review based on the work we've done and presented to the FA and others.https://thefsa.org.uk/news/fsa-statement-government-fan-led-review/A government that wont let workers reps join company boards and allows the gig economy is going to support fans running £multi-billion football clubs. Oh aye...
Quote from: Chris Black come back on April 19, 2021, 08:52:31 pmYou can almost read the outcome of the "fan-led" review now. Will just entrench the current status quo, as that will be presented as some kind of golden age worth preserving, rather than literally the problem that needs solving. Any review led by a Tory MP is not going to deliver any radical change. Doubtless plenty will make the case for change but you can predict now that bugger all will come of this.I think you're missing the point! This is a fan led review based on the work we've done and presented to the FA and others.https://thefsa.org.uk/news/fsa-statement-government-fan-led-review/
You can almost read the outcome of the "fan-led" review now. Will just entrench the current status quo, as that will be presented as some kind of golden age worth preserving, rather than literally the problem that needs solving. Any review led by a Tory MP is not going to deliver any radical change. Doubtless plenty will make the case for change but you can predict now that bugger all will come of this.
Since 2000, if my arithmetic is correct, only 18 teams have appeared in a Champions League final. Extending that back to 1980 only increases it to 28 teams. Since 2010, the 12 clubs plus PSG, Bayern and Dortmund have contested every final. The chances are that anyone aged 25 or younger, doesn't remember a final without them. These clubs don't want to break away as such, they want to run their own European competition in an almost closed shop alongside their existing domestic league season. It really isn't that much different from what we have now, except for the guarantee of the closed shop. For all the talk of dreaming of reaching these heights, it never happens for almost every club. Let the big boys have their own way. The fact is, nothing much changes.So who are we feeling sorry for? Everton? West Ham? Leicester? They didn't feel sorry for us when they started all this with the Premier League cash cow or when 1998 happened to us. They haven't been worried that we are never realistically going to be in with a chance of European qualification. When they were selling their souls for pots of money for coming anywhere above 18th in the EPL they weren't thinking about the fairness of it all. There were no cries of foul from them when parachute payments were brought in or extended. And before anyone says "what about their fans?", what about them? They aren't bothered about us either. "The likes of Doncaster" isn't a compliment. If we go into oblivion they won't even wave goodbye. They'll all have to do what we do, manage on what they get and manage their expectations accordingly. Boo f**king hoo.
Other than financial gain, I can't see the benefits to these clubs - they will be essentially turning themselves into the football equivalent of the Harlem Globetrotters....
Quote from: Beerseller on April 20, 2021, 01:07:59 pmSince 2000, if my arithmetic is correct, only 18 teams have appeared in a Champions League final. Extending that back to 1980 only increases it to 28 teams. Since 2010, the 12 clubs plus PSG, Bayern and Dortmund have contested every final. The chances are that anyone aged 25 or younger, doesn't remember a final without them. These clubs don't want to break away as such, they want to run their own European competition in an almost closed shop alongside their existing domestic league season. It really isn't that much different from what we have now, except for the guarantee of the closed shop. For all the talk of dreaming of reaching these heights, it never happens for almost every club. Let the big boys have their own way. The fact is, nothing much changes.So who are we feeling sorry for? Everton? West Ham? Leicester? They didn't feel sorry for us when they started all this with the Premier League cash cow or when 1998 happened to us. They haven't been worried that we are never realistically going to be in with a chance of European qualification. When they were selling their souls for pots of money for coming anywhere above 18th in the EPL they weren't thinking about the fairness of it all. There were no cries of foul from them when parachute payments were brought in or extended. And before anyone says "what about their fans?", what about them? They aren't bothered about us either. "The likes of Doncaster" isn't a compliment. If we go into oblivion they won't even wave goodbye. They'll all have to do what we do, manage on what they get and manage their expectations accordingly. Boo f**king hoo.Comparisons to the formation of the Premier League are ludicrous. Anyone can be promoted to or relegated from the PL and it’s made both it and the EFL so competitive. The ESL would be an exclusive rich boys club and destroy the competitive nature of the PL with no top 4 race. 49 clubs have so far spent time in the PL.
Since 2000, if my arithmetic is correct, only 18 teams have appeared in a Champions League final. Extending that back to 1980 only increases it to 28 teams. Since 2010, the 12 clubs plus PSG, Bayern and Dortmund have contested every final. The chances are that anyone aged 25 or younger, doesn't remember a final without them. These clubs don't want to break away as such, they want to run their own European competition in an almost closed shop alongside their existing domestic league season. It really isn't that much different from what we have now, except for the guarantee of the closed shop. For all the talk of dreaming of reaching these heights, it never happens for almost every club. Let the big boys have their own way. The fact is, nothing much changes.So who are we feeling sorry for? Everton? West Ham? Leicester? They didn't feel sorry for us when they started all this with the Premier League cash cow or when 1998 happened to us. They haven't been worried that we are never realistically going to be in with a chance of European qualification. When they were selling their souls for pots of money for coming anywhere above 18th in the EPL they weren't thinking about the fairness of it all. There were no cries of foul from them when parachute payments were brought in or extended. And before anyone says "what about their fans?", what about them? They aren't bothered about us either. "The likes of Doncaster" isn't a compliment. If we go into oblivion they won't even wave goodbye. They'll all have to do what we do, manage on what they get and manage their expectations accordingly. Boo f**king hoo.
Quote from: normal rules on April 20, 2021, 02:34:41 pmQuote from: Beerseller on April 20, 2021, 01:07:59 pmSince 2000, if my arithmetic is correct, only 18 teams have appeared in a Champions League final. Extending that back to 1980 only increases it to 28 teams. Since 2010, the 12 clubs plus PSG, Bayern and Dortmund have contested every final. The chances are that anyone aged 25 or younger, doesn't remember a final without them. These clubs don't want to break away as such, they want to run their own European competition in an almost closed shop alongside their existing domestic league season. It really isn't that much different from what we have now, except for the guarantee of the closed shop. For all the talk of dreaming of reaching these heights, it never happens for almost every club. Let the big boys have their own way. The fact is, nothing much changes.So who are we feeling sorry for? Everton? West Ham? Leicester? They didn't feel sorry for us when they started all this with the Premier League cash cow or when 1998 happened to us. They haven't been worried that we are never realistically going to be in with a chance of European qualification. When they were selling their souls for pots of money for coming anywhere above 18th in the EPL they weren't thinking about the fairness of it all. There were no cries of foul from them when parachute payments were brought in or extended. And before anyone says "what about their fans?", what about them? They aren't bothered about us either. "The likes of Doncaster" isn't a compliment. If we go into oblivion they won't even wave goodbye. They'll all have to do what we do, manage on what they get and manage their expectations accordingly. Boo f**king hoo.Comparisons to the formation of the Premier League are ludicrous. Anyone can be promoted to or relegated from the PL and it’s made both it and the EFL so competitive. The ESL would be an exclusive rich boys club and destroy the competitive nature of the PL with no top 4 race. 49 clubs have so far spent time in the PL. Ok, I'll give you relegation not that its likely to affect the ESL six. Other than that, its so competitive that no-one has won it without oodles of cash. Its a rich boys club. Leicester would have been nowhere without billionaire owners, Blackburn were early rich boys before Jack Walker's demise and the only other winners are the ESL clubs in 27 out of 29 seasons.Do Rovers have a hope of winning it in the next 20 years? No, not a chance in hell unless some Saudi price decides we're the next Man City (that's a real "ludicrous" for you). Same for probably 84 other teams in the current 92.Man City - now there's a perfect example. 2002 they return to the Premier League and then pumped full of money, they become the next big thing. That's not Man City being given a fair crack, that's akin to financial doping. They wouldn't be where they are without the money. Competitive my arse.
Quote from: Beerseller on April 20, 2021, 01:07:59 pmSince 2000, if my arithmetic is correct, only 18 teams have appeared in a Champions League final. Extending that back to 1980 only increases it to 28 teams. Since 2010, the 12 clubs plus PSG, Bayern and Dortmund have contested every final. The chances are that anyone aged 25 or younger, doesn't remember a final without them. These clubs don't want to break away as such, they want to run their own European competition in an almost closed shop alongside their existing domestic league season. It really isn't that much different from what we have now, except for the guarantee of the closed shop. For all the talk of dreaming of reaching these heights, it never happens for almost every club. Let the big boys have their own way. The fact is, nothing much changes.So who are we feeling sorry for? Everton? West Ham? Leicester? They didn't feel sorry for us when they started all this with the Premier League cash cow or when 1998 happened to us. They haven't been worried that we are never realistically going to be in with a chance of European qualification. When they were selling their souls for pots of money for coming anywhere above 18th in the EPL they weren't thinking about the fairness of it all. There were no cries of foul from them when parachute payments were brought in or extended. And before anyone says "what about their fans?", what about them? They aren't bothered about us either. "The likes of Doncaster" isn't a compliment. If we go into oblivion they won't even wave goodbye. They'll all have to do what we do, manage on what they get and manage their expectations accordingly. Boo f**king hoo.Comparisons to the formation of the Premier League are ludicrous. Anyone can be promoted to or relegated from the PL and it’s made both it and the EFL so competitive. The ESL would be an exclusive rich boys club and destroy the competitive nature of the PL with no top 4 race. 49 clubs have so far spent time in the PL.
Since 2000, if my arithmetic is correct, only 18 teams have appeared in a Champions League final. Extending that back to 1980 only increases it to 28 teams. Since 2010, the 12 clubs plus PSG, Bayern and Dortmund have contested every final. The chances are that anyone aged 25 or younger, doesn't remember a final without them. These clubs don't want to break away as such, they want to run their own European competition in an almost closed shop alongside their existing domestic league season. It really isn't that much different from what we have now, except for the guarantee of the closed shop. For all the talk of dreaming of reaching these heights, it never happens for almost every club. Let the big boys have their own way. The fact is, nothing much changes.So who are we feeling sorry for? Everton? West Ham? Leicester? They didn't feel sorry for us when they started all this with the Premier League cash cow or when 1998 happened to us. They haven't been worried that we are never realistically going to be in with a chance of European qualification. When they were selling their souls for pots of money for coming anywhere above 18th in the EPL they weren't thinking about the fairness of it all. There were no cries of foul from them when parachute payments were brought in or extended. And before anyone says "what about their fans?", what about them? They aren't bothered about us either. "The likes of Doncaster" isn't a compliment. If we go into oblivion they won't even wave goodbye. They'll all have to do what we do, manage on what they get and manage their expectations accordingly. Boo f**king hoo.