Home > Football > How Chelsea could give the likes of Watford a lift
by CaughtOffside.com on 27 April 2007
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One of the biggest problems facing the Premier League, obviously, is the ever-widening financial gap between the 'big clubs' and the 'small clubs'. With no structure to stop the free-spending of a team like Chelsea, a club like Charlton, say, in a similar location geographically but miles away economically, wind up being left alone at the bottom of the table while the big kids run away and hide in the Champions League.
The idea, then, is to stop this from happening. And maybe the best way to do it, sadly, is to follow some parts of the American model.
In American sports, parity reigns. In Major League Baseball, the Detroit Tigers, three years removed from finishing with the second worst record in league history, finished as title runners-up, beating the New York Yankees and their $200 million payroll along the way. In the National Football League, the league runners-up have built a tradition of not making the play-offs in the next season, and in the National Basketball Association the New York Knicks, who have spent more money than anyone in basketball, ever, are a league laughing stock.
Contrast this with the Premier League, with four winners since its inception, where a lasagna fiasco denied Tottenham a possible breaking of the stronghold at the top four, and where a club with one of Europe’s best overall records (Liverpool) hasn’t been able to win a thing domestically in 19 years.
You cannot say that it is all right for the status quo to remain - you cannot say that the league is all right, because to me it looks in danger of falling completely down the abyss. How long can the fans of the 'other' 16 teams take season after season of mediocrity, knowing that any glimmer of real success, from an Everton in 2005 or maybe a Bolton this season, will be inevitably crushed by teams with more spending power than they could ever possibly accrue?
And so this leads me, admittedly long-windedly, to my point. To survive as anything more than a spectacle, the Premiership needs to take on pieces of the American model. I don’t want franchises, I don’t want teams moving around, and of course I don’t want a ridiculous closed-system league. I’m thinking more along the lines of a basic salary cap (or maybe some limits on player salaries), and some restrictions to create a bit of spending parity.
Not total, thus incredibly boring, parity but something a lot better than what we have now. Arsenal, Manchester United, Chelsea and Liverpool will still be the most competitively appealing teams to play for, but at least money will be a smaller part of the equation.
Major League Baseball has, to great effect, instituted a system of revenue sharing, whereby the poor teams, wait for it, get money from the big teams. Would it be so bad for Chelsea to kick a little bit of money over to Watford, in the interest of fair play? Would it destroy the game if Sheffield United were able to purchase someone to, you know, play the game effectively?
Any player, with the system as it is now, has no real interest in staying with a smaller team apart from loyalty, and you can’t realistically blame a guy for taking five times his current salary to play for a better team. We see this with Michael Carrick (yes, Tottenham are a comparatively small club) and Wayne Rooney (same for Everton) b****ring off to Manchester United, and of course everyone worthwhile who’s come up from West Ham in the last 10 years.
West Ham fans, would you rather see Joe Cole coming down the left wing as opposed to Matt Etherington? Wouldn’t the talented Ferdinand brother be more useful than that t*at Anton? Or how about that same Michael Carrick, still at West Ham?The good people who root for Everton, I’m sure, would rather play Rooney up front than whoever the hell they have up there, and, though this is about three months early, I’m sure Darren Bent from Charlton is going to look good in Spurs colours next season.
The obvious counterpoint to all of this, of course, is that with the amount of TV money coming in next season, the playing field will be levelled out a bit. But doesn’t more money just, you know, help the big teams as much as the small teams? It’s the relative positions that are important - if all the teams up their bids by a few million pounds it helps no one. I’m sure most of the smaller teams aren’t in the best positions financially, and I’ve got to assume that that money is going to be going towards clearance of debt, or the board members’ pockets, as opposed to the team sheet.
So basically, maybe a salary cap, maybe some revenue sharing, maybe some fairness. Or maybe the small teams can continue to get sh*t on by the rest of the league.
Comments (3)
by essexian76 on April 28, 2007
think theres an even more simplistic answer...you can only spend on players what you generate through finances, not the benevolence of a 'sugar daddy'
by devmapper on May 01, 2007
You forget onething, it is not only the Premiership. For salary caps to work, it has to be implemented everywhere in Europe. Else players will only leave the Premiership and go to leagues where there is no salary cap. It is not only about Sheffield United achieving some sort of parity with Chelsea, it also has to factor in the fact that the top 4 clubs will have to compete in the Champions League too
by ZOLA-HOLLY VALANCE-MAGIC on June 13, 2007
*ROMAN ABRAMOVICH IS NOT JUST A CHELSEA GOD BUT A FOOTBALL GOD TOO, TO ALL SMALLER CLUBS. He loves this sport and he is doing a lot for the development of the infrastructure of the Russian game. HE IS INJECTING HIS OWN MONEY IN THE INDUSTRY OF WORLD FOOTBALL TO ALL CLUBS THAT ARE BUYING THEIR PLAYERS AND ALSO MAKING FOOTBALL INTERESTING AGAIN WITH MORE COMPETITION IN THE LEAGUE & EUROPEAN CUP......
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