Tom Halsey
International Coach
In Man Utd’s case, they finished outside the top few quite a lot. They actually got relegated in 1974 only 6 years after being champions of Europe. They had various periods of being ‘nearly there’ and other periods of extreme mediocrity between 1967 and 1993. In Liverpool’s case, less often, though they have finished nearer the middle of the table than the top of it quite a few times.How many times did those teams finish outside the top few?
How many times have other teams on the bottom of the ladder now enjoyed premiership success?
The competition is just breeding more and more unequality. The top teams get more powerful and the ****ter teams get weaker.
Blackburn were nearly relegated the other day and won the league in 1995, albeit in no small part because they were bankrolled. Newcastle weren’t though, and in 1996 would have won the league but for an almighty blowup only 3 years after promotion. They were relegated in 2009.
I don’t pretend the playing field is totally equal obviously, but I don’t see that as negatively as you do. I’m not actually opposed to a salary cap, as I said, as long as it is a worldwide one. However if just the English league imposed it, it would have utterly terrible consequences for the long term health of the league as a whole.
I am utterly opposed to franchising the top league though, and GIMH has explained it best as to why.
EDIT: And GingerFurball's point ("Actually it's the €40m or so a season extra revenue from participating in the Champions League that's driving inequality in domestic leagues throughout Europe") is the main reason why it's different now than it was 20 years ago, in all leagues, not just England.
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