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Is it bullying or buying or even both towards the CCC clubs.A big big carrot to dangle to the likes of DRFC and many others ie a rise from £800k per season to £2.2m. Let's hope Donny know where they have come from and maybe one day go back too.If it go's ahead, and I think it will....I'm just glad DRFC are in the CCC right now
CusworthRovers wrote:QuoteIs it bullying or buying or even both towards the CCC clubs.A big big carrot to dangle to the likes of DRFC and many others ie a rise from £800k per season to £2.2m. Let's hope Donny know where they have come from and maybe one day go back too.If it go's ahead, and I think it will....I'm just glad DRFC are in the CCC right now£2.2m is a drop in the ocean if you're trying to compete with potentially a dozen clubs with the extra muscle of vast parachute payments.I just wish the smaller Premier League clubs and the Championship clubs could wake up and see that this is just another step on the road to mediocrity. What the Big clubs want is a steady supply of cannon fodder, reasonably wealthy smaller clubs who they can beat most weeks.They haven't got the sense to look long term, they just want to take the money that's on offer now. Their support will grow tired with the lack of success and eventually the gates will drop.[/quote]tell that to the prawn sandwich brigade nothing succeeds like successeveryone likes to be associated with success thats why they get the best sponsorship crowds adoration etcit has always struck me as odd that the USA sports are forever levelling the playing field with their draft picks to the worst teams in the land where success is alland in the UK we (as a more liberal nation) have rampaging inequalities in our sportsho hum
I agree with all that River Don. It might be the wrong attitude from me.....but if we are wanting to compete we are not going to turn down £2.2m, when are rivals are excepting it.
What's clear is that a new fault-line has appeared in the English game between the Championship (23 out of 24 were in favour of the deal I'm told) and the 48 clubs in the lower two leagues (where there was unanimous opposition).