Yes. I pay prostitutes to wear it whilst I regale them with tales of Scarlett.Do you own a football jersey made of the finest lace in all the land.
Yes. I pay prostitutes to wear it whilst I regale them with tales of Scarlett.
It actually makes sense IMO. There are very few companies with turnover figures of football clubs that employ as few staff as clubs do (even Utd only have 1000 employees), so the actual cost of furlough to the Government is far less than other multi-million pound companies.This whole PFA row is getting kind of ugly. Hancock singling out footballers as the one high-paid profession to target makes him look like a snob imo. I don’t really get why clubs furloughing staff is controversial either.
I expect he sees it as an easy chance to score some political points tbh. The whole "it's a disgrace footballers get paid so much, nurses and soldiers should be on the same wages" narrative is likely to be very prominent in their target audience I should imagine.Yeah. It’s hard to escape the conclusion that Hancock sees football as a trivial distraction for plebs.
But even more generally, I understood the furlough scheme as a way for companies to stop people coming to work without accruing large costs. Why would you offer that, actively encourage uptake, and then criticise companies for using it? It makes no sense.
Very much so, depending what happens elsewhere in europe it could open up a right can of worms.Player contracts are the only issue I can really see with that.
I just don't think it's a good look for clubs in a league which generates billions of pounds in revenue, some owned by owners worth billions of pounds and which pays players several hundreds of thousands of pounds a week to be relying on government support to pay employees earning normal salaries.This whole PFA row is getting kind of ugly. Hancock singling out footballers as the one high-paid profession to target makes him look like a snob imo. I don’t really get why clubs furloughing staff is controversial either.
Yeah I mean how distasteful you find it is just a matter of opinion, it'll bother some of us more than others. But the government itself can't criticise businesses for participating in a program it encouraged them to participate in.I just don't think it's a good look for clubs in a league which generates billions of pounds in revenue, some owned by owners worth billions of pounds and which pays players several hundreds of thousands of pounds a week to be relying on government support to pay employees earning normal salaries.
From start to finish I think the Premier League (and football in general) has handled this horribly.
why not? football clubs' operating income will be collapsing because the television companies are unlikely to pay out for the cancelled matches and matchday income has flatlined, but they still have to pay wagesWell, it's a slightly grey area for mine. It's definitely not really in "the spirit of the policy" imo. But as you allude to, I'm not sure it's the role of the government to give a view on that.
Well, it obviously will differ from club to club, and the difference between clubs like Man Utd and Yeovil will obviously be massive, for instance. But the notion of a club with billionaire owners, for example, dipping into a pool of public funds to subsidise the wages of their non-playing staff (which, for arguments same, say the total value of is about £100k per week) whilst continuing to pay their players out of their own pockets (to a total tune of millions of pounds per week) will not sit well with a lot of people. Similar to millionaires who claim job-seeker's allowance and other unemployment benefits.why not? football clubs' operating income will be collapsing because the television companies are unlikely to pay out for the cancelled matches and matchday income has flatlined, but they still have to pay wages
Yeah but come on, reading between the lines that's exactly what it is.I don't think it's against the spirit of the scheme at all, personally. The policy was sold as unconditional - its accompanying slogan was "whatever it takes". It wasn't sold as a safety net for companies that might struggle to survive otherwise. They could very easily have made it means-tested, like Universal Credit, but they chose to make it open to all, like the NHS.
so it would be better if the players were furloughed too?Well, it obviously will differ from club to club, and the difference between clubs like Man Utd and Yeovil will obviously be massive, for instance. But the notion of a club with billionaire owners, for example, dipping into a pool of public funds to subsidise the wages of their non-playing staff (which, for arguments same, say the total value of is about £100k per week) whilst continuing to pay their players out of their own pockets (to a total tune of millions of pounds per week) will not sit well with a lot of people. Similar to millionaires who claim job-seeker's allowance and other unemployment benefits.