Original Dub wrote:Hazy2 wrote:A new UEFA study has shown that Manchester United has the highest net debt of any club in the world.
The amount of money that United owe has now grown to €536million (£464m), according to the European Football Landscape report.
United's debt has grown by 25 per cent in the last year alone, which is a complete contrast to the rest of Europe, where UEFA say overall debt has decreased every year over the past five years.
The debt accrued by United have been a source of anger from some fans over the past decade. Gill and his rag hat on hiding under a desk.
Fucking madness.
I'd love to see them do a Leeds. Impossible with Gill pulling the strings and
the FA in it's current set up.
Very clever move getting Gill high up the ranks in UEFA.
I think the FA are afraid of the PL either going solo, as it were, or a number of teams in it joining a European Super League, as always seems a possibility lurking around the corner. If this were to happen, the FA, in their own eyes, would lose a lot of influence, importance and part of their reason for existing so, on that basis, they toady up continually to those they regard as the important players in the PL.
Since Sky money rules all in the PL and the Sky4 are the be all and end all to them, the FA have to pay particular deference to the Sky4 cartel and all that that entails; hence the way that City are wronged and mistreated continually, as we are perceived to be a threat to the cosy situation which has prevailed until fairly recently.
Paradoxically, the only redeeming aspect towards saving English football would be if, because of the growing importance and power of the Chinese football scene, the money currently being lavished by Sky on the PL, would be transferred to China instead, because that would be the football the world would want to watch.
This would cause the PL to, firstly, wither and then, finally, to completely collapse, leaving English football (and the FA) to pick up the pieces and, hopefully, restore some sanity and administrative matters to pre PL levels.
This still doesn't solve the problem of UEFA, but if other European Leagues are affected by the Chinese 'explosion', in the same way as I feel it will happen in this country, then UEFA will diminish in importance and, without the same volume of money swilling around as at present, all thoughts of Financial Foul Play could disappear in a climate where many Clubs throughout Europe, will be 'going to the wall'.
How that will leave City is anyone's guess, but in the next 10-15 years, I feel football in this country will be totally different from the situation as at present but, overall and in the bigger picture, it couldn't be any worse than the corrupt way things have developed to this point in time.
One thing I do feel certain about, is that China definitely aren't going to go away.