Looks like San Marino may finally bag a win
They played last night and lost?
And why can't City have each one of their over 100 charges ruled upon individually, or in small batches? Why do they have to conclude on all of them after a massive amount of time? Is that so that if they find them guilty they'll only suffer for one season, unlike for the multiple seasons that they've benefited from swindling the advertising revenue system? For example, say they're found guilty of 20 charges as a total guess, if they sanction them in one season for that, they could just get relegated to the Champo for 1 season and then be back in the Prem the next and challenging for the title. If you were to punish them on a rolling program for each few times they're found guilty, they would probably not be able to challenge for the Prem title for several years which would hurt them a lot more than basically spending 1 year winning the Championship and then probably returning and winning the Prem again the next season. Their lawyers will be dragging appeals out for years anyway, and by that time the rules will probably have changed so all the charges will be reduced or thrown out.
What really screwed us over is being set to qualify for the Champions League 2 seasons in a row, and then falling away at the end of both seasons and ending up in the Europa League. We had been building a squad that could compete for top 4, and because of this had a very high wage to turnover ratio. Far from ideal, not helped by our wholly incompetent director of football. Not selling anyone in the summer of 2022, like we had done every previous summer, does now look like a big mistake.Incredible how the 3 clubs that have been done for financial irregularities have gained absolutely nothing through there bad financial decisions.
The flag was changed in 2010 -You shouldn't be changing the flag on a national team's shirt. How many other countries FA's would allow a change to their national shirt's flag? More virtue signalling nonsense.
They also really REALLY need to review the way these PSR sanctions are happening. It's farcical having random points deductions happening throughout the season. Surely it has to be done in the summer or at a singular cutoff point mid-winter at the absolute worst? The way it is impacting ongoing games is ridiculous.What really screwed us over is being set to qualify for the Champions League 2 seasons in a row, and then falling away at the end of both seasons and ending up in the Europa League. We had been building a squad that could compete for top 4, and because of this had a very high wage to turnover ratio. Far from ideal, not helped by our wholly incompetent director of football. Not selling anyone in the summer of 2022, like we had done every previous summer, does now look like a big mistake.
But as our statement pointed out, is it fair to sanction clubs who dare to show ambition? We've done it, succeeded, and now are being punished for not being able to sustain that. The likes of Newcastle and Villa want to disrupt the traditional top clubs but are being hamstrung by these rules. Meanwhile, Manchester United are just allowed to pile up hundreds of millions of pound worth of debt.
I get that there is a need for PSR regulations, but what they are trying to do is not working. The legal issues are taking far too long to deal with. A team could be relegated, but because of delays in PSR sanctions, in a couple of years may find that due to another team receiving a PSR deduction, that they shouldn't have been relegated. Equally a team could win the league (ie. Man City), and due to prolonged legal wrangling have it taken off them in a few years. It is madness.They also really REALLY need to review the way these PSR sanctions are happening. It's farcical having random points deductions happening throughout the season. Surely it has to be done in the summer or at a singular cutoff point mid-winter at the absolute worst? The way it is impacting ongoing games is ridiculous.
Not disputing that fact, but the likes of Brighton and Brentford used Leicester as a model for how they wanted to operate. They've stuck with that, but a combination of one summer of bad decisions, a fraud of a manager and a useless director of football has come back to bite us. And losing our chairman in such tragic circumstances has not helped matters at the club.There nothing wrong with ambition. Right way and wrong way to do it. Brighton and Brentford have had a similar model where they build slowly. Buy cheap and sell on, whilst always on the look out for the next bargain to bring forward. That's the right way. How all clubs should be run. Leicester took advantage of the bigger sides having a poor season, it elevated the club to a point it couldn't keep up with the Liverpool's etc.
Leicester, forest and Everton have all just thrown money at players that just aren't worth it. The clubs suffer because you own so many mediocre players on high wages that can't be offloaded until the contact expires. Hence no money comes in.