Apparently already had special dispensation to sign a replacement for Valdes.Ha I never even thought of the keeper situation. The ban might have actual consequences.
Although if Pinto goes down injured no doubt there'll be "special dispensation" to sign someone better.
GIMH on Pothas' wall said:That gulf people used to go on about between the Prem and the championship, I reckon it's not really there so much anymore. Most clubs in the championship have been in the prem and therefore have had the parachute payments etc, and as a result the gulf is championship to league one.
Spot on, and also if you look at those teams you named who didn't go straight back up, the parachute payments were one year only back then I believe so that made a quick return vital even moreso.My theory is that the gulf's actually between the top 6 or 7ish teams in the Premier League and the rest of the Premier League. I don't think there's a huge amount between the dross that comprises the bottom half of the Premier League and the top of the Championship; the main gulf is how much the teams in the Premier League can overpay spanners like Danny Graham.
The big gulf financially seems to be for teams who get relegated to the Championship and who subsequently don't get promoted quickly back to the Premier League; quite a few teams have really struggled financially to adjust to life outside the Premier League (Leeds, Southampton and Coventry to name 3 although Southampton have recovered quite nicely.) As long as teams aren't getting promoted and spending spastic money (looking at you QPR) I reckon Corrin's right that there'll be a gap that emerges between the Championship and League One.[/COLOR]
I suppose there is a bit of a gulf between the divisions as all 3 relegated clubs are well in the hunt for promotion immediately back to the Premier League, but having said that big-ish teams like Birmingham, Bolton and Blackburn who were in the Premier League not long ago are all really struggling, or are at best battling for mid-table mediocrity.Spot on, and also if you look at those teams you named who didn't go straight back up, the parachute payments were one year only back then I believe so that made a quick return vital even moreso.
The Premier League and Champions League are so all consuming though.Yeah we are in agreement here, my difference with Corrin is that he seems to fear for the future of league one and two and I don't.
West Ham a bad example IMO, they've got the London factor. Sunderland or Aston Villa is a much better example IMO.You need money to do anything, that is without doubt but I would certainly not rule out clubs repeating what Swansea have done in recent years. The Champions League certainly dominates all though. There is more chance of me seeing Brentford in the Premier League than a West Ham fan is to see them in the Champions League. My point is that does not kill football, people just keep on going to it regardless.
Where I worry more than Pothas is probably because my team is in decline. We struggle, always, being in the shadow of two huge clubs in possibly England's top football City, but with us a shambles on and off the pitch, and both of the aforementioned neighbours resurgent I worry about where our next generation is going to come from. With the way football is reported and covered these days, even young lads with hugely devoted dads are going to be tempted by the Prem clubs.I think globalisation might become a problem for the popularity of the football league. I basically follow **** all with the football league; it's much easier to follow La Liga and the Bundesliga. And obviously there's no comparison when it comes to standard.
Certainly if you don't want to watch live football in a stadium (something I will never understand) that is true but I think there are enough people that enjoy going to watch games live, and that want to take their kids, to keep it going.I think globalisation might become a problem for the popularity of the football league. I basically follow **** all with the football league; it's much easier to follow La Liga and the Bundesliga. And obviously there's no comparison when it comes to standard.
I'm pretty sure this wouldn't be allowed to happen under FIFA regulations. Rings a bell that they made some sort of law whereby each FIFA member that already has one has to keep their promotion/relegation system. Whether this would/could be enforced in practice though I don't really know as I don't know this area that well.Where I have real fears though, are that we either go down the closed shop route, or we see reserve teams in the premier league. Because of the loan system I don't see the latter as something that will happen in the short term but one day? Maybe. And by closed shop, Super League did it, could see a lot of prem/champ teams pushing for it, a two tier Premier league that you have to be elected to or from. But then the resistance would be massive so I dunno.
This was sort of my point though. I think less kids are having second teams in the lower leagues, and having them more across Europe. That's certainly the case with me.Yeah I am sure the current state of our clubs influences the way we see things at the moment.
I think it is important to remember that people are more then capable of following more than one side. I know it is not really seen as the done thing in England butl oads of kids go to to watch Brentford and I don't doubt that a a lot of them have a Premiership side as well, you certainly see a Chelsea shirt from time to time. If your local side is doing well and you are into football then I think you are likely to go along now and again, even if you do not become a real fan, even more so if it is in a nice stadium with good facilities. It is a book that I have a few issues with but there is a good chapter on this in Soccernomics.
I don't see the closed shop route ever happening. The top end of the league might turn into a closed shop but at the end of the day the top 6 clubs need 14 other teams to beat, you might as well give the illusion of competition by rotating those sides every year.Where I worry more than Pothas is probably because my team is in decline. We struggle, always, being in the shadow of two huge clubs in possibly England's top football City, but with us a shambles on and off the pitch, and both of the aforementioned neighbours resurgent I worry about where our next generation is going to come from. With the way football is reported and covered these days, even young lads with hugely devoted dads are going to be tempted by the Prem clubs.
That being said, some people love attaching themselves to an underdog, lower league clubs will get people through the dates who maybe don't at that point regard themselves as supporters but fancy watching a live game and some of them get hooked.
Where I have real fears though, are that we either go down the closed shop route, or we see reserve teams in the premier league. Because of the loan system I don't see the latter as something that will happen in the short term but one day? Maybe. And by closed shop, Super League did it, could see a lot of prem/champ teams pushing for it, a two tier Premier league that you have to be elected to or from. But then the resistance would be massive so I dunno.