Does all this make it impossible for Rick Parry to continue in his role?
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The latest plans to destroy football in England
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Wouldn't you know? Fans have no allies but each other. No one else can be trusted.
https://twitter.com/SamWallaceTel/status/1316706756479848449
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On Parry, consider this from the Athletic, with whom he clearly has been talking
Can Rick Parry dust himself down from this?
The majority of the 72 EFL clubs, those he must ultimately answer to, continue to support Parry. Nigel Travis, Leyton Orient chairman, said on Tuesday that Parry “is a man who is helping to sustain British football” and it is a sentiment shared by plenty of executives and owners across the three divisions. Middlesbrough’s Steve Gibson has been another influential figure to back Parry since the weekend and there is a groundswell of opinion that the EFL is working in the best interests of clubs.
There is even a school of thought that Parry has been empowered by events of the past 72 hours. A seat has been allocated for the EFL in strategic discussions and Parry can lobby directly to the Premier League.
Contrary to that, though, is the belief Parry has weakened his position over the past four days. He circled the wagons on Sunday with written and broadcast interviews and then there was another round of media activity on Tuesday to demonstrate support for Project Big Picture but that vocal social media campaign gained little traction. One Premier League executive believes Parry’s “tactics” have backfired.
Masters, though, has insisted there will be no grudges held. “Clearly there’s some frustration a proposal that hadn’t had any input from the Premier League, from our clubs, has been pushed so hard in public,” he said. “But we don’t have a beef with the EFL, certainly not with its clubs. We want to have a good relationship with them. We’re their biggest partner. We have a historic relationship with them. So we want it to be constructive.”
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The EPL is going for a divide and rule approach by applying different criteria to the Championship and cutting out the EFL administration by negotiating directly with clubs to control how the money is distributed. The EPL is treating it purely as a hardship fund than a permanent restructure of how TV money is carved up. No more illusions that 25% is on the table.
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Originally posted by Satchmo Distel View PostThe EPL is going for a divide and rule approach by applying different criteria to the Championship and cutting out the EFL administration by negotiating directly with clubs to control how the money is distributed.
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Martin Samuel has the mind of a child.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...ed-failed.html
MARTIN SAMUEL: All Liverpool had to do to remain revered champions was not be a self-serving club like Manchester United... they failed by trying to sell English football out for a sack of cash
It was such a glorious opportunity for Liverpool. How did they blow it? They were more than just respected, more than just appreciated. They were revered, they were venerated, hell, they were even popular.That’s the hardest trick of all for champions, certainly emphatic ones: to be liked.
Yet when Jurgen Klopp’s hard-working, quick-thinking, all-action team clinched the title last season, only the bitterest rival could begrudge them.
And all they had to do to remain right there, at the pinnacle of English football, was not be Manchester United. And they couldn’t pull it off. Couldn’t not be the club that turns up to every Premier League meeting with a self-serving, bad idea. Couldn’t not be the club that wants to tyrannise 14 others.
Couldn’t not be the club that demands the power, the glory — and all the money. Couldn’t not be the club that would sell English football out to Rick Parry, or UEFA, or Andrea Agnelli at Juventus for a sack of cash.
That’s all Liverpool had to be. Not Manchester United. And they blew it.
So when Everton line up against Liverpool on Saturday, it will mean more, but not in the way Anfield’s marketing department imagines.
It will mean more because a club it was thought represented the best turned out, in its machinations, to represent the worst. It means more because many people feel so greatly let down including, it seems, some of Liverpool’s supporters. They are as perplexed as anybody that a club so successful within the established parameters of the English game, should end up on the same side as its evil twin.
Roy Hodgson was as good as dead to Liverpool fans the moment he spoke of his fondness for Sir Alex Ferguson, but it looks as if John Henry and the Glazer family have been cosy for years, while plotting to carve up English football.
‘The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again,’ wrote George Orwell in Animal Farm, ‘but already it was impossible to say which was which.’
In philosophy at least, Manchester United and Liverpool are now indistinguishable.
Yet, as Christian Purslow of Aston Villa — a former Anfield executive — asked Liverpool chairman Tom Werner at Wednesday’s Premier League meeting: What was not to like? Certainly for the owner of a Premier League club. The workings of the top division of English football could not be simpler or more efficient. Everyone makes money, or should.
The top finishers each season pass through a platinum door to the riches of European football, while the three worst clubs are relegated. And that’s it. We can argue about the trickle down effects to the pyramid below, but anyone who thinks Project Big Picture was really about that probably believes gullible isn’t in the dictionary, too.
So why might an elite club be dissatisfied? Think of the summer Manchester United have just had. It began with Ole Gunnar Solskjaer boasting of how United could exploit the financial crisis caused by coronavirus to plunder the transfer market, and ended with them recruiting a free agent in Edinson Cavani, because the clubs around wouldn’t sell.
Covid-19 has wreaked havoc across many industries but, before it, Premier League clubs were strong financially.
Many remain so, despite losses. They do not need, or will not yield, to Manchester United’s money. If they do, it is only for an exceptional price, like the ?80million that teased Harry Maguire out of Leicester.
Change the rules to aid Manchester United’s financial advantage, weaken those outside the Big Six, enforce stricter FFP regulations to thwart owner investment, and maybe United could better exploit the world they had created.
As it is, with some very straightforward principles and voting procedures, the Premier League is as competitive as it can be.
And as a simple league, it is conservatively run. That is why 14 votes are needed to pass rules or bring about change. It wards off radical or kneejerk measures. The 14-6 vote is a lock to prevent the creation of selfish cabals.
The founders did not wish for changes to be made 11-9, or even 12-8. They required more than a two-thirds majority. And the most collegiate members and clubs have always understood and deferred to that.
In popular imagination, Ken Bates, the former chairman of Chelsea, could start a fight in an empty meeting room. In fact, he is remembered as one of the most solid supporters of the Premier League’s equal voting principle, even when it went against him. There have always been factions within the whole, big and small concerns. Even before the arrival of Roman Abramovich, Chelsea were among the smaller of the big boys.
Yet it was Bates who often reminded his fellow members what they had signed up to, and that they had to carry 14, like it or not. This kept it fair. Bruce Buck, Chelsea’s current representative, has a more conciliatory manner, but is not married to voting equality like Bates.
There never was a golden age of football club ownership — Tottenham nearly fell off a cliff in the old Football League — but one imagines David Gill would have played his hand rather differently than Ed Woodward of Manchester United last week. Gill was a fine politician, always first to arrive at Premier League meetings and deep in conversation with his fellow executives. But never those at the elite end.
Gill used that time to try to carry the 14, to get a few recruits to whatever supposedly innocent cause Manchester United were espousing. He worked the directors’ suite at Old Trafford, too, in a way Woodward does not. ‘Put it like this,’ said one voice inside those meetings, ‘the five substitutes proposal would never have failed had Gill been around.’
Manchester United were the most successful club in the Premier League, but Gill’s shrewd politicking ensured they were never at war with the other 19 shareholders.
That has now changed; but the disappointment comes seeing Liverpool treading the same path. For a club so fond of slogans, being Not Manchester United could have emerged as the strongest identity of all. Not in big print on a poster, but by positioning Liverpool at odds with the grasping nature and base motivations of the European elite.
Had Liverpool emerged with an altruistic plan to help the lower leagues through this economic crisis, that did not include the opportunistic monetary and power grabs, what heroes they would have been.
Now that would be a club capable of living up to the idea that this means more. That would be a club of the people, one whose principles would justify the rhetoric many find cloying. It isn't that Liverpool under its current ownership have never made mistakes. There was the infamous ?77 ticket for best seats in the new stand, and the decision to furlough lower paid staff this year. Yet, very quickly, faced with supporters’ protests, the board relented. It listened, which is more than many do.
Now think of the good Liverpool have done under Fenway’s stewardship: rebuilding the historic Anfield site rather than moving to a new ground; appointing a superb, charismatic manager in Klopp, who has greatly enriched English football culture; delivering a brilliant, diligent, selfless yet highly skilled team, one of the finest this country has produced; becoming European champions, world champions and domestic champions.
Liverpool under Klopp have given us some of our greatest games and most admirable achievements. To concede the title as they did to Manchester City two seasons ago, then find the strength and will to win it the following campaign, was a feat many believed could not be accomplished.
Their senior staff are much admired, too. Michael Edwards runs the finest recruitment department in the country, and Liverpool have barely missed in the transfer market in recent seasons. The day-to-day operation is steered from New England by Mike Gordon, president of Fenway Sports Group and regarded as one of the sharpest minds in sports ownership. Yet somehow, and perhaps quite unfairly, this hugely respected executive tier have been dragged into an unseemly civil war by Henry, the billionaire at the helm of FSG.
Parry has been pumping the idea that Henry is a benign influence whose only thought is to help the English football pyramid, yet that view now generates the most hollow laughter. There are great and good people at Liverpool, and it is a great and good club.
But the modern reputation it has cultivated so carefully went down with the ship Big Picture.
Underneath this article there's a subsection about how Harry Maguire is a cunt who deserves all the abuse coming to him for betraying England, and southgate better back away lest he become collateral damage.Last edited by The Awesome Berbaslug!!!; 16-10-2020, 17:50.
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The striving to present Liverpool as some kind of behemoth we all previously warmed to until now aside there is not a lot to disagree with is there? I mean in that nobody ever really thought Liverpool were some kind of welcome antidote to Glaziers way of expoliting English football.Last edited by ale; 16-10-2020, 18:56.
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Originally posted by ale View PostThe striving to present Liverpool as some kind of behemoth we all previously warmed to until now aside there is not a lot to disagree with is there?
Also while there are many positive things to be said about the voting structure of the premier league. You can't really make the points he is making, in the way he is making, when you remember that this system is built on pointlessly starving the lower tiers of money. It's like getting on your moral high horse to defend democracy among white people under apartheid. You are using arguments of fairness to defend what is a pretty unfair system if you think about it for any length of time, or are even tangentially aware of anything other than the premier league.Last edited by The Awesome Berbaslug!!!; 16-10-2020, 20:31.
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Originally posted by The Awesome Berbaslug!!! View Post
That's most of the article though. It seems martin is shocked to discover that American Venture capital vultures act like Amercian venture capital vultures.
Also while there are many positive things to be said about the voting structure of the premier league. You can't really make the points he is making, in the way he is making, when you remember that this system is built on pointlessly starving the lower tiers of money. It's like getting on your moral high horse to defend democracy among white people under apartheid. You are using arguments of fairness to defend what is a pretty unfair system if you think about it for any length of time, or are even tangentially aware of anything other than the premier league.
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Well fortunately no-one was making one of those.
Originally posted by ale View PostNo need to compare PL voting structure with SA under apartheid. It doesnt work & reduces any valid points you wish to make
It seems though that the villains of the piece have moved on,
https://www.skysports.com/football/n...ked-tournament
It seems that Fifa seems to think that they have some business running European club based tournaments. Well see how long that lasts.
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Originally posted by ursus arctos View PostTo which they would reply
National. Football. League.
Did they all win a nice shiny trophy roughly every couple of years? Were their fans used to being big fish in a (relatively) small pond year in, year out?
I'm not sure the clubs have fully thought this through. Are Liverpool and Man. Utd fans going to be happy if they finish 10th or 11th in a Super League? Are they going to put up with losing a much larger percentage of their matches?
Thanks to the Champions League, Liverpool or Man. Utd versus a Big Euro Club matches are already ten a penny and not of much interest for the general fan, how are they going to market Liverpool vs Porto twice a season in perpetuity?
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Originally posted by Tratorello View Post
Were the teams in the NFL previously used to winning at least 75% of their matches and finishing in the top 4 every season?
Did they all win a nice shiny trophy roughly every couple of years? Were their fans used to being big fish in a (relatively) small pond year in, year out?
I'm not sure the clubs have fully thought this through. Are Liverpool and Man. Utd fans going to be happy if they finish 10th or 11th in a Super League? Are they going to put up with losing a much larger percentage of their matches?
Thanks to the Champions League, Liverpool or Man. Utd versus a Big Euro Club matches are already ten a penny and not of much interest for the general fan, how are they going to market Liverpool vs Porto twice a season in perpetuity?
How are people going to handle not having the anger release of watching your team destroy a smaller and weaker team. there's a viciousness and angry entitlement that seems to just get worse and worse
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