- Oct 19, 2005
- 13,012
- 46,732
Oh fuck off with the name calling, this isn't the school playground FFS.Levy apologists
Oh fuck off with the name calling, this isn't the school playground FFS.Levy apologists
Yes, I have large reservations that the cash cows of UEFA will be reigned in by UEFA, and that's before we get into UEFA's observable track record down the years.Lets wait and see how stringent these measures are.
No-one forgets this at all, but some of us can recognise it for what it is: a reductive point that ignores all the complexities.Levy apologists always forget this bit.
Not you. Sorry.We rich yet?
Well he could put more focus on trying to win some of the competitions we are in.
Due to recent numbers and analysis from the latest numbers from Swiss Ramble, the FFP number is likely less than half of 400m as we've run at a loss for the last 4 or 5 seasons. The 400m is from the season after we hadn't signed a single player and gone to the CL final if I recall correctly.Good point, but I guess with the Kane sale (pure profit) it would make a difference too. I think I read somewhere an academy sale allows you to spend 3x what you sell them.
The losses come from the Stadium and other infra projects connected to it and the club, which don't come into FFP calculations.Due to recent numbers and analysis from the latest numbers from Swiss Ramble, the FFP number is likely less than half of 400m as we've run at a loss for the last 4 or 5 seasons. The 400m is from the season after we hadn't signed a single player and gone to the CL final if I recall correctly.
Woo! We win!The losses come from the Stadium and other infra projects connected to it and the club, which don't come into FFP calculations.
The latest I've seen on this since the 22/23 accounts were released is below, basically if we get CL this season we have nearly £650m of FFP headroom this summer, before player sales are taken into account.
View attachment 139679
We have nothing like that for PL rules. Not even close unfortunately.The losses come from the Stadium and other infra projects connected to it and the club, which don't come into FFP calculations.
The latest I've seen on this since the 22/23 accounts were released is below, basically if we get CL this season we have nearly £650m of FFP headroom this summer, before player sales are taken into account.
View attachment 139679
100% wrong as of right now.We have nothing like that for PL rules. Not even close unfortunately.
We are allowed to spend 70% of our turnover on player wages and transfer fees, amortised over the length of the signed players’ contracts with a cap of (I think) 5 or 6 years. Plus profit (fee minus remaining book value) of players sold.
With our current wage bill and amortisation numbers we will likely have around £70m - £110m of net transfer spend available to us if we are to stay within PL fair play limits.
Don't think it's ever been explained what part of the wage bill counts , in the recent Tottenham Hotspur Ltd accounts there are 320 players & football admin staff out of a total of 793 employees at the club with a total wage bill of circa £251 million.*I'm not 100& sure if we need to count all wages or just footballing wages in the total wages - if it's just footballing then the wages number comes down a fair bit.
Yep this is definitely the grey area. Most online sources have our player wage bill at around £120m for 22/23 season, yet as you say that's less than half the reported amount of wages in our accounts.Don't think it's ever been explained what part of the wage bill counts , in the recent Tottenham Hotspur Ltd accounts there are 320 players & football admin staff out of a total of 793 employees at the club with a total wage bill of circa £251 million.
Wonderful post match leak from the clubSpurs' search for suitors continues
Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy is continuing his search to find new investors amid genuine interest from across the Atlantic.
Mail Sport knows of at least two US-based groups who have shown an interest in acquiring a stake in the club in recent months having been made aware of the numbers in question.
Levy has already confirmed the club are in talks with potential investors after the club recorded a post-tax loss of £86.8 million for the year ending June 30, 2023.
THE NOTEBOOK: Arsenal FINALLY get the midfield Mikel Arteta envisaged
THE NOTEBOOK: Arsenal sealed back-to-back away wins over Tottenham for the first time in 36 years on Sunday, beating their arch-rivals 3-2 in the North London Derby to stretch their lead at the top.www.dailymail.co.uk