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pi_68911884
quote:
AZ verhoogt begroting met tien miljoen euro
Door Yalçin Yükler
Maandag, 11 mei 2009, 17:24

Het kampioenschap legt AZ geen windeieren. Zojuist maakte de Alkmaarse club bekend dat het de begroting voor volgend seizoen met 10 miljoen euro verhoogt. AZ kwalificeerde zich direct voor de Champions League, waardoor er een flink smak extra geld binnenkomt.

De landskampioen begon het seizoen met een begroting van naar verluidt 28 miljoen euro. Door de hogere begroting staat de club krachtiger in zijn schoenen, als er wordt geboden op belangrijke spelers. Daarnaast zullen met de extra inkomsten uit de Champions League nieuwe spelers worden aangetrokken.
pi_68915487
Dat is wel een flinke smak erbij. Forser dan ome Dirk ons heeft voorgehouden. En volgend seizoen als we 'gewoon' weer Europa League spelen weer 8 miljoen er af?
pi_68915772
quote:
Op maandag 11 mei 2009 19:42 schreef Gatalin het volgende:
Dat is wel een flinke smak erbij. Forser dan ome Dirk ons heeft voorgehouden. En volgend seizoen als we 'gewoon' weer Europa League spelen weer 8 miljoen er af?
jup, kijk maar wat er dit jaar met PSV gebeurt
  Moderator / Redactie Sport / Weblog maandag 11 mei 2009 @ 20:19:09 #154
17650 crew  rubbereend
JUICHEN
pi_68916935
En als Twente het niet haalt komt er nog eens zo'n smak geld bij. En als er ook nog eens een paar spelers verkocht worden gaat AZ volgend seizoen een monster winst draaien.
DeLuna vindt me dik ;(
Op zondag 22 juni 2014 12:30 schreef 3rdRock het volgende:
pas als jullie gaan trouwen. nu ben je gewoon die Oom Rubber die met onze mama leuke dingen doet :)
  Moderator / Redactie Sport / Weblog donderdag 21 mei 2009 @ 00:15:20 #155
17650 crew  rubbereend
JUICHEN
pi_69247617
Bij Feyenoord staat het water aan de lippen dus.
DeLuna vindt me dik ;(
Op zondag 22 juni 2014 12:30 schreef 3rdRock het volgende:
pas als jullie gaan trouwen. nu ben je gewoon die Oom Rubber die met onze mama leuke dingen doet :)
  donderdag 21 mei 2009 @ 00:22:56 #156
129814 wolferl
Ik kan niets bedenken
pi_69247864
quote:
Op donderdag 21 mei 2009 00:15 schreef rubbereend het volgende:
Bij Feyenoord staat het water aan de lippen dus.
Ja dat wordt pompen of verzuipen voor ze.
Als Ajacied doet het me wel wat, toch gek.
pi_69695979
Nieuw overzicht vanuit Engeland namens Deloitte, die van vorig seizoen staat hier.
quote:
Premier League revenues near £2bn
By Bill Wilson

The Premier League saw its revenues soar by 26% in the 2007/08 season to nearly £2bn ($3.15bn; 2.2bn euros), a report into football finances has said. The revenues of top-flight English sides were £1.93bn, up from £1.5bn a year earlier, Deloitte said. Despite the downturn, 11 of the 20 top league clubs made an operating profit in 2007/08, from eight a year before. But Premier League salary costs topped £1bn for the first time, and the clubs' total net debt was £3.1bn.

Two-thirds of the debt was carried by the big four of Manchester United, Liverpool, Chelsea and Arsenal, but Dan Jones, the editor of Deloitte's Annual Review of Football Finance, said those clubs all had business plans "that they feel make sense". The strong revenue growth outstripped the ever-upwards salary growth, which boomed by 23% to £1.2bn, the biggest annual increase in absolute terms recorded by the Premier League.

'Remarkable achievement'
"In season 2007/08 the big change was the new broadcasting deal - most of the growth came from there, " Mr Jones told the BBC. The current three-year broadcasting deal - worth £1.7bn - began in August 2007. "In the season that has just finished [2008/09] we think the growth is going to be a little bit lower, but it is going to get clubs up to that magical £2bn mark - which is a remarkable achievement, an average of £100m a club in the Premier League."

But he warned that the approaching summer months would reveal the extent to which fans and sponsors were willing to match their previous levels of demand, with clubs having to closely examine their marketing and pricing strategies.

"This summer will be critical for football clubs, it will be very interesting to see how the season ticket renewals go, how the corporate hospitality renewals go," said Mr Jones. "I think that is why we are seeing a lot of clubs freezing season ticket prices, reducing prices. They are very sensitive to the fans and their corporate sponsors and the problems they are facing."

However, he said English football - at both Premier League and Football League level - was proving more resilient in the face of downturn than many other industries.

Soaring wages
The wages to turnover ratio in the Premier League dropped slightly to 62%, a small decline, but still close to the previous year's high of 63%. Wages paid by top-flight English sides grew by 23% from the previous season to £1.2bn. Sunderland saw its wage bill soar by 56% and Derby County by 51%. Chelsea once again had the highest wage bill, totalling £172.1m Premier League clubs increased commercial revenues to £447m, up by 12%, whereas matchday revenues grew more modestly, by 3%, to £554m.

Meanwhile, revenues in the Championship increased by 2% to £226m in 2007/08, with total revenues of the total 72 Football League clubs exceeding £500m for the first time.

However, despite revenue growth, improved profitability has remained elusive. "For many owners, Premier League clubs represent 'trophy assets' with the potential to deliver a long term return but which at best break even annually, rather then a cash cow delivering an ongoing 'dividend'," said Mr Jones. Indeed, of the total net debt of £3.1bn in the Premier League, a total of £1.2bn was in non-interest bearing "soft loans" from club owners.

Tax contributions
Mr Jones also pointed out that while footballer's wages often attracted headlines, the amount of cash the industry put into national coffers was often ignored. "One thing that does not draw much attention in the midst of all these huge numbers around football is the tax side of things," he said.

"So, in 2007/08 season we think the overall tax payment to the government from professional football in England was about £860m. When the new top rate of tax comes in that will go up to £1bn." However, he said that despite reports of elaborate tax avoidance schemes around players wages, Deloitte was not aware of any being widely adopted by clubs.

Limited growth
As well as looking at the English Premier League and Football League the Deloitte report also studies Germany, France, Italy and Spain. Italy's Serie A was the fastest growing league in terms of revenue, thanks mainly to the change in clubs in the league, including the return of Juventus, in 2007/08. In joint second place after the Premier League, in terms of gross revenues, was Spain's La Liga and Germany's Bundesliga.

The Bundesliga, France's Ligue 1, and the English Premier League have been boosted by having secured long-term broadcast deals which deliver significant proportions of total revenue.

PREMIER LEAGUE TEAMS WITH MOST DEBT 2007/08
Chelsea - £711m
Manchester Utd - £649m
Arsenal - £318m
Liverpool - £300m
Newcastle Utd - £245m
Figures are net debt at end of 2007/08 season Source: Deloitte

TOP PREMIER LEAGUE WAGE BILLS 2007/08
Chelsea - £172.1m (£132.9m)
Manchester Utd - £121.1m (£92.3m)
Arsenal - £101.3m (£89.7m)
Liverpool - £90.4m (£77.6m)
Newcastle Utd - £74.6m (£56.7m)
(2006/07 wages in brackets) Source: Deloitte

PREMIER LEAGUE CLUBS WITH LOWEST STADIUM UTILISATION 2007/08
Wigan Athletic - 73%
Blackburn Rovers - 74.9%
Bolton Wanderers - 80.7%
Middlesbrough - 81%
Sunderland - 82%
Figure relates to average % of stadium filled for home games

FANCY THAT: 2007/08 SEASON FACTS
  • Chelsea became the first club to report over £80m gross transfer spending in one season
  • Championship clubs' total wage costs increased by £32m to £291m
  • Total investment in English stadia and facilities was £187m



  • pi_69696134
    Chelsea heeft wel een aardig loonlast zo te zien Dat ze een hoge schuld hebben is niet zo gek: alle investeringen van Abramovich vallen daaronder, dat schijnen renteloze leningen van hem te zijn, heb ik ergens gelezen.
    Amsterdamsche Football Club Ajax | Chelsea Football Club | Fútbol Club Barcelona
      donderdag 4 juni 2009 @ 11:59:42 #159
    52164 pfaf
    pfief, pfaf, pfoef!
    pi_69696385
    Liverpool echt uit het niets ineens 300 miljoen schuld, is dat toen die overname geweest? Dat was toch al een seizoen eerder? Verder echt onbegrijpelijke hoeveelheden bij Chelsea en Utd.

    Over de stadionbezoeken, Wigan en Blackburn zijn amper gezakt, Sunderland echter een mega drop, terwijl Bolton en M'boro flink zijn gestegen.

    Bij de facts over de salarissen in The Championship zegt natuurlijk echt alles over de concurrentiepositie van Nederland tov Engeland., laat staan met de salariskosten van Chelsea en Utd. Dat is gewoon niet te doen.

    Enorm verschil van de Premier League in omzet in vergelijking met de andere grote landen. Totaal niet raar dat zij elke keer Europa domineren op deze manier.
    pi_69696422
    Deze cijfers zijn wel van vorig seizoen (07/08).
    While we're living, the dreams we have as children fade away
    AFC Ajax | Borussia Mönchengladbach] | Kansas City Chiefs | Alabama Crimson Tide
      donderdag 4 juni 2009 @ 12:04:46 #162
    128959 M0NTANA
    Don't fuck with me!
    pi_69696441
    quote:
    Op donderdag 4 juni 2009 11:49 schreef BliksemSchigt het volgende:
    Nieuw overzicht vanuit Engeland namens Deloitte, die van vorig seizoen staat hier.
    [..]

    [ afbeelding ]
    [ afbeelding ]
    [ afbeelding ]
    [ afbeelding ]
    Jammer dat NL er niet bij staat. Maar hoe dan ook interessant onderzoek.
    I'm Tony Montana! You fuck with me, you fuckin' with da best!
    A.F.C. Ajax - Tottenham Hotspur F.C. - S.S. Lazio S.p.A. - Club Atlético de Madrid S.A.D. - R.S.C. Anderlecht
    pi_69696507
    Chelsea's schuldcijfers hier zijn inmiddels verouderd. Daar is nu 50% vanaf.

    Maar goed, met de TV-deals zit het wel goed in Engeland. En in tegenstelling tot bijvoorbeeld Spanje, profiteren alle clubs daaraan mee, wat alleen maar goed is voor de competitie. In Spanje zijn die verschillen in TV-inkomsten tussen Barcelona, Real Madrid en de andere clubs echt gigantisch.

    [ Bericht 3% gewijzigd door mcyodogg op 04-06-2009 12:15:28 ]
    PSV --- Chelsea FC --- Frank Lampard --- Heinz-Harald Frentzen --- Timo Glock
    pi_69696549
    quote:
    Op donderdag 4 juni 2009 12:02 schreef BliksemSchigt het volgende:
    Liverpool echt uit het niets ineens 300 miljoen schuld, is dat toen die overname geweest? Dat was toch al een seizoen eerder? Verder echt onbegrijpelijke hoeveelheden bij Chelsea en Utd.
    Niet echt onbegrijpelijk hoor, dat komt natuurlijk door de overnames.

    Glazer heeft de overname gefinancierd met geleend geld, en die "schuld" op de club afgedragen.
    quote:
    The Glazers simply bought the club on bankers’ wallet, and if push comes to shove, they will handover the “soccer club” to banks, endure manageable loss, swim back home and watch “football clubs” play in America.
    Wat meer info over de schuld van ManU (technisch verhaal, snap er zelf niet veel van):
    http://soccerlens.com/manchester-uniteds-debt-analysed/7356/
    While we're living, the dreams we have as children fade away
    AFC Ajax | Borussia Mönchengladbach] | Kansas City Chiefs | Alabama Crimson Tide
    pi_69696552


    Wat is commercial?
    pi_69696911
    quote:
    Op donderdag 4 juni 2009 12:08 schreef zjroentje het volgende:

    [..]

    Niet echt onbegrijpelijk hoor, dat komt natuurlijk door de overnames.

    Glazer heeft de overname gefinancierd met geleend geld, en die "schuld" op de club afgedragen.
    [..]

    Wat meer info over de schuld van ManU (technisch verhaal, snap er zelf niet veel van):
    http://soccerlens.com/manchester-uniteds-debt-analysed/7356/
    Ja, dat wist ik, maar de stijging is wel extreem, of het zou rente oid moeten bevatten. Op een gegeven moment moet dat afgebouwd worden lijkt me? Over het hele United verhaal staat op de eerste pagina ook nog een artikel van The Guardian hoe dat min of meer zit.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk(...)remierleague.chelsea

    Dat is dus gewoon rente die er overheen komt.
    pi_69696930
    quote:
    Op donderdag 4 juni 2009 12:08 schreef TargaFlorio het volgende:
    [ afbeelding ]

    Wat is commercial?
    quote:
    Note: Matchday revenue is largely derived from gate receipts (including season tickets and memberships). Broadcast revenue includes revenue from television and radio, from both domestic and international competitions. Sponsorship revenue is mainly derived from brand/name placing on team shirts and around stadia. Other commercial revenues include conferencing, catering and merchandising. For the Premier League and La Liga (Spain), commercial revenue is not disaggregated into "sponsorship" and "other". La Liga's revenue breakdown has been estimated. The revenue figures for Italy's Serie A clubs have been adjusted to aid comparability between European leagues.
    pi_69697036
    Shirtjes verkoop etc. gok ik dat ze bedoelen met Commercial
    pi_69697050
    quote:
    Op donderdag 4 juni 2009 12:19 schreef BliksemSchigt het volgende:

    [..]

    Ja, dat wist ik, maar de stijging is wel extreem, of het zou rente oid moeten bevatten. Op een gegeven moment moet dat afgebouwd worden lijkt me? Over het hele United verhaal staat op de eerste pagina ook nog een artikel van The Guardian hoe dat min of meer zit.
    Rente is geloof ik bijna 70 miljoen pond per jaar.

    Artikel van april dit jaar over de finaciele situatie bij United: http://www.telegraph.co.u(...)e-record-season.html
    While we're living, the dreams we have as children fade away
    AFC Ajax | Borussia Mönchengladbach] | Kansas City Chiefs | Alabama Crimson Tide
      donderdag 4 juni 2009 @ 12:28:12 #170
    52164 pfaf
    pfief, pfaf, pfoef!
    pi_69697171
    En dan maken wij ons druk over een schuld van 20 miljoen op een begroting van 50, of een schuld van 60.000 op een begroting van enkele miljoenen.
    pi_69697439
    Overzicht van The Guardian (Accounts for the year to 31 May 2008 - of anders vermeldt)
    quote:
    Arsenal
    Ownership Arsenal Holdings PLC major shareholders are:
    Danny Fiszman (Swiss resident) 16%
    Lady Nina Bracewell-Smith 15.9%
    Kroenke Sports Enterprises UK (owned by US resident Stan Kroenke): 28.3%
    Red and White Holdings (owned by Russian resident Alisher Usmanov and Farhad Moshiri) 25%


    Turnover £222.5m
    (Up from £200.1m: 11.4%)
    Gate and match-day income £95m
    TV and broadcasting £68m
    Retail £13m
    Commercial £31m
    Property development £15m
    Player trading £0.5m
    Wage bill £101.3m (up from £89.7m: 12.9%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 45%
    Profit before tax £36.7m
    Debts £416m
    Interest payable £26m

    Highest paid director Keith Edelman: £1.056m (plus a £1.67m payoff when he resigned on 1 May 2008)

    State they're in Arsenal's halo as the top club with the most enviable financial model has slipped due to the economic downturn and an unprecedented boardroom power battle. Sales of the swish apartments built on the old Highbury stadium were expected to provide Arsène Wenger with a windfall, but sales have stalled in the downturn, and Arsenal are having to extend a £133m bank loan on the development. The main £200m borrowed to build the Emirates Stadium, fixed at 5.6%, remains an excellent deal, but the finances are nevertheless a squeeze. With four directors having been ousted in two very un-Arsenal-like years of boardroom jockeying, the alliance of Danny Fiszman and Stan Kroenke maintains fragile control. However the tightness of money, coupled with a fourth place finish, leaves the board vulnerable to an apparent campaign by the Russian investor, Alisher Usmanov, to secure more control by arguing that major investment is needed.
    quote:
    Aston Villa
    Ownership Reform Acquisitions LLC, a US company, owned ultimately by Randy Lerner (resident New York)

    Turnover £75.6m (up from £37m in 10 months to 31 May 2007: 105% increase)
    Gate and match-day £18.5m
    TV and broadcasting £46m
    Commercial £11m
    Wage bill £50.4m (Up from £22.5m: 124% increase)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 66.7%
    Loss before tax £7.6m
    Debts £73m
    Interest payable £5.8m

    Highest paid director Unnamed but thought to be Richard Fitzgerald: £1.04m (including a £775,000 payoff in January 2008)

    State they're in Martin O'Neill lamented at the end of the season that he did not have the "wherewithal" to compete with the big four clubs, after Villa's smaller squad petered out in the spring. That was despite meaty financial backing from their US owner Randy Lerner, who invested a further £48.5m, as loans, in Villa between May 2007 and 2008. The club currently owes Lerner £75.5m. Such is the cost of trying to fund a major club to finish sixth in the Premier League.
    quote:
    Blackburn Rovers
    Ownership The Trustees of the Jack Walker 1987 Settlement, a trust registered in Jersey (a tax haven)

    Turnover £56.4m (up from £43.3m: a 30% increase)
    Gate and match-day £6.2m
    TV and broadcasting £41.2m
    Commercial £9m
    Wage bill £39.7m (up from £36.7m, an 8% increase)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 70%
    Profit before tax £3m
    Debts £17m
    Interest payable £1.5m

    Highest paid director John Williams: £295,000

    State they're in With Premier League survival secured, chairman John Williams will feel vindicated for having swiftly removed Paul Ince as the manager in December and appointing Sam Allardyce. Williams persuaded the club's owners, the trustees of Jack Walker's estate, to loan the club £3m last year, but they have wanted to sell for two years but no buyer has appeared. With gates and commercial income under pressure in the recession, Williams and Allardyce will have to husband resources shrewdly again next season.
    quote:
    Bolton Wanderers
    Ownership 95% owned by Edwin Davies, via Fildraw Private Trust, believed to be in the Isle of Man, a tax haven

    Turnover £59.1m
    (up from £51m last year: 16% increase)
    Gate and match-day £6.8m
    Hotel £8.7m
    TV and broadcasting £34.2m
    Corporate hospitality £2.4m
    Merchandising £1.2m
    Sponsorship and advertising £3.5m
    Other football income £2.3m
    Wage bill £39m (up from 30.7m in 2007, a 27% increase)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 66%
    Loss before tax £8.4m
    Debts £52m
    Interest payable £3m

    Highest paid director Allan Duckworth: £376,000

    State they're in With gates 11.4% down despite season ticket price reductions, losses and debts up, and Bolton one of the clubs more vulnerable to the recession, Wanderers are struggling to keep up. The club's owner, the Isle of Man-based Edwin Davies, loaned a further £4.5m, apparently at annual interest of 10%, for which the club paid a £623,000 arrangement fee. Few doubted that the chairman Phil Gartside's idea for a "Premier League Second Division" springs in part from his own fear that Bolton, at some point, are likely to face the financial horror of relegation.
    quote:
    Chelsea
    Ownership Wholly owned by Roman Abramovich

    Turnover £213.6m (up from £190.5m the previous year, a 12% increase)
    Football Activities £189.8m
    Hotel/Catering £8.9m
    Merchandising £9.6m
    Other commercial £5.3
    Wage bill £149m (up from £133m in 2007, a 12% increase)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 68%
    Loss before tax £84.5m
    Debts £701m owed to Roman Abramovich
    Interest payable Nil

    Highest paid director Peter Kenyon: £2m

    State they're in Football's most famous interest-free loan, the funding of Chelsea by the oligarch Roman Abramovich since 2003, reached a vast £701m by June 2008. In January Chelsea said the total had been reduced to £339.8m, with the rest converted into shares. The chief executive Peter Kenyon's plan for Chelsea to be self-reliant by 2010 has been dented by £30m payouts to departing managers Jose Mourinho, Avram Grant and Luiz Felipe Scolari, and Chelsea's thumping loss was up. Chelsea's squad is ageing, and, with Abramovich's continuing subsidy, Carlo Ancelotti will need to satisfy the oligarch's hunger for success while trying to renew the squad.
    quote:
    Everton
    Ownership Shares in the Everton Football Club Company Limited are owned by:
    Bill Kenwright 25%
    Jon Woods 19%
    Robert Earl (resident of Florida) 23%


    Turnover £76m (up from £51m the previous year, an increase of 50.1%)
    Gate and match-day £20.5m
    TV and broadcasting £46.6m
    Other commercial activities £8.9m
    Wage bill £44.5m (up from £38.4m the previous year, an increase of 16%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 59%
    Profit before tax £26,000
    Debts £39m
    Interest payable £3.9m

    Highest paid director Keith Wyness: £470,000

    State they're in Two remarkable seasons for David Moyes' team, finishing fifth twice in succession, and a significantly improved financial picture, put fresh doubt on the need for Everton to move to the new stadium being controversially planned at Kirkby. The club ensured that players' wages did not gobble up the booming increase in TV money, and Everton turned over £76m, a £25m increase. Kirkby, which many fans oppose, is projected optimistically to be worth only another £6m annually, and even within the club, some may be quietly relieved if the government ultimately refuses permission for the scheme.
    quote:
    Fulham
    Ownership Mafco Holdings Limited, a Bermuda (tax haven) company, which is owned by Mohamed Al Fayed and his family

    Turnover £53.7m (up from £39.7m last year, a 35.2% increase)
    Gate and match-day £9.6m
    TV and broadcasting £34m
    Commercial activities £4.9m
    Sponsorship £3.6m
    Other operating income £1.6m
    Wage bill £39.3m (up from £35.2m the previous year, an 11.6% increase)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 73%
    Profit before tax £3.2m

    Debts £197m, included £174m owed to Al Fayed
    Interest payable £1.8m

    Highest paid director Unnamed: £228,083

    State they're in Mohamed Al Fayed continued his extravagant funding of Fulham, increasing the loans from his companies to £174m, the second highest subsidy of any club by an owner behind Chelsea's Roman Abramovich. The loans are all interest free and during the year £9.5m was written off completely. Al Fayed, resident in Monaco, has had the reward this season of Fulham's highest ever finish, and he vehemently insists he has no intention of selling.
    quote:
    Hull City
    Ownership Isis Nominees, a company registered in Jersey, a tax haven

    Turnover (In the Championship) £9m (down from £9.5m the previous year, a drop of 5.6%)
    Wage bill £6.9m (up from £5.2m the previous year, a 33% increase)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 77%
    Loss before tax £2m
    Debts £1m
    Interest payable £52,000

    State they're in These figures predate Hull's 2007-08 promotion season; the latest accounts are now overdue. The chairman, Paul Duffen, said the major shareholder, property investor Russell Bartlett, invested £6m to finance the promotion push, and Hull appear to have come up with almost no debt. The manager Phil Brown's impromptu karaoke after City scraped Premier League survival, which means around £25m extra in TV money alone next season, will have been accompanied by sighs of relief from Bartlett.
    quote:
    Liverpool
    Accounts for the year to 31 July 2007 (accounts for 2007-08 are now overdue)

    Ownership Ultimately owned (via the tax haven of Grand Cayman) by Kop Investment LLC, registered in Delaware, a low tax US state. Tom Hicks and George Gillett are equal owners of Kop Investment LLC

    Turnover £159m (up from £134m the previous year, an increase of 18.6%)
    Gate and Matchday n\a
    TV and Broadcasting n\a
    Commercial activities n\a
    Visitors' Centre and Official Supporters Club n\a
    Wage bill n\a
    Profit before tax n\a
    Debts £280m
    Interest payable £21m (estimated)

    State they're in Tom Hicks and George Gillett swore they were not "doing a Glazers" when they took over Liverpool in 2007 but, as it turned out, they were. Liverpool, with Anfield full and Rafael Benítez's team improving, are a major, commercially successful club but the financial position is still dominated by the loans the pair have taken out, including £185m to finance their takeover. Hicks and Gillett are understood to have put £33m in themselves to finance player signings because, after paying the interest, the club no longer generates enough money. The club was sold to the pair solely so that they would finance the new stadium, but there is no sign of that at all yet.
    quote:
    Manchester City
    Ownership 90% owned by Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, a member of the Abu Dhabi royal family

    Turnover £82.3m (up from £57m the previous year, an increase of 44%)
    Gate and match-day £13.6m
    TV and broadcasting £43.3m
    Commercial activities £25.4m
    Wage bill £54.2m (up from £36.4m the previous year, an increase of 49%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 66%
    Loss before tax £32.6m
    Debts £147m
    Interest payable £10.7m

    Highest paid director Alistair Mackintosh: £477,000

    State they're in Looked to be heading over a cliff in August last year, with the owner, Thaksin Shinawatra, on the run from corruption charges in Thailand of which he was subsequently found guilty. Shinawatra's assets were frozen even before he took the club over, City's debts were mounting, the club borrowed a further £25m against the forthcoming season's TV money, then their worries were all wiped away with a wave of an oil sheikh's chequebook.
    quote:
    Manchester United
    Ownership Malcolm Glazer and his family via Red Football Limited Parnership and Red Football General Partner Inc, both registered in the low tax State of Nevada, USA

    Turnover £256.2m (from 210.1m the previous year, an increase of 22%)
    Gate and match-day £101.5m
    TV and broadcasting £90.7m
    Commercial activities £64m
    Wage bill £121.1m (up from £92.3m the previous year, an increase of 31.2%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 47%
    Loss before tax £44.8m
    Debts £699m
    Interest payable £69m

    Highest paid director David Gill: £1.739m

    State it's in The still-extraordinary spectacle of the "leveraged buyout". The Glazer family bought the world's richest club in 2005, then loaded it with the costs of their own takeover, and despite the glittering success over which they have since presided, the debts have continued to mount. By 2008, a staggering £263m in interest alone had become payable, yet the capital United owe had actually grown to £699m, because some of the interest, at high rates, accumulates. These massive debts are not threatening the club financially while it remains successful, but it is painful to think of the other uses to which United's vast earnings could have been put.
    quote:
    Middlesbrough
    Accounts for the year to 31 December 2007
    Ownership Steve Gibson via his company, Gibson O'Neill, of which he owns 75%

    Turnover £48m (the same figure as the previous year)
    Gate receipts £11.1m
    Sponsorship and commercial £7.5m
    TV & broadcasting £27m
    Merchandising £2.4m
    Wage bill £34.8m (the same as the previous year)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 73%
    Loss before tax £8.3m
    Debts £93m
    Interest payable £7.2m
    Highest paid director Gibson is the sole director and does not take a salary from the football club

    State they're in The debts of £93m, the result of Middlesbrough trying to punch above their weight for years, look alarming for a relegated club. Middlesbrough insiders, however, say the borrowings have been reduced since these accounts to below £30m. The owner-chairman Steve Gibson is expected to invest further, although the plan to balance the books next season by selling Stewart Downing has been ruptured by Downing's ankle injury in the penultimate game of the season.
    quote:
    Newcastle United
    Ownership Mike Ashley via his company, St James Holdings Limited

    Turnover £100.8m
    (up from £87m the previous year, a 16% increase)
    Gate and match-day £32.3m
    TV and broadcasting £41.1m
    Commercial activities £27.4m
    Wage bill £74.6m (up from £56.7m the previous year, a 31.6% increase)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 74%
    Loss before tax £34m
    Debts £106.2m (£100m is owed to Mike Ashley)
    Interest payable £6.6m

    Highest paid director Chris Mort, paid £1.357m via his law firm, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer

    State it's in A calamity. Mike Ashley could have been a hero. After buying the club for £134m in 2007, he repaid, with cash, around £94m of debts. Newcastle are almost debt-free, although Ashley paid the money off by lending £100m to the club himself, interest free, which has to be repaid if the ownership changes. Yet after appointments and decisions he admits himself have been awful and which led to relegation, he has not been thanked very fulsomely for his contribution. If he does not sell quickly, Ashley will need to stump up more if financial collapse is to be avoided next season.
    quote:
    Portsmouth
    Ownership Miland Development (2004) Limited, a British Virgin Islands company, which is controlled by Alexandre Gaydamak

    Turnover £70.5m
    (up from £40.2m the previous year, an increase of 75%)
    Gate and Matchday £12m
    TV and Broadcasting £51.2m
    Sponsorship £4m
    Retail £3.3m
    Wage bill £54.7m (up from £36.9m the previous year, an increase of 48.2%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 78%
    Loss before tax £17m
    Debts £57.7m
    Interest payable £6.6m

    Highest paid director Peter Storrie: £1.2m

    State they're in Pompey illustrate why every middling football club is begging for a takeover. Having overstretched to furnish Harry Redknapp with the formidable squad that won the FA Cup last season, the owner, Alexandre Gaydamak, has been hit by the recession and can no longer fund the club. Lassana Diarra and Jermain Defoe had to be sold in January to reduce bank borrowings, debts grew to around £65m, and Portsmouth were preparing to tighten belts until the chief executive, Peter Storrie, shook hands with Sulaiman Al Fahim. Fratton Park now expects it to rain oil money.
    quote:
    Stoke City
    Ownership bet365 Group, the online gambling company which is owned by the chairman, Peter Coates, and his family

    Turnover (2007-08, in the Championship) £11.2m (up from £7.9m the previous year, an increase of 41%)
    Wage bill £11.9m (up from £7m the previous year, an increase of 70%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 106%
    Loss before tax £5.6m
    Debts £2.3m
    Interest payable £49,000

    Highest paid director No director was paid a salary in 2007-08

    State they're in The financial picture of a club pushing for promotion from the Championship. Stoke are backed by Peter Coates and his family, who own the online gambling company, bet365. The Coates put £10m cash into the club, and supported it to make a loss and pay wages beyond the club's turnover. With the investment shrewdly managed by Tony Pulis, Stoke have the advantage of being debt-free next season when seeking to consolidate in the Premier League.
    quote:
    Sunderland
    Ownership Announced last week that Ellis Short, who is based in Dallas, is to take over 100%

    Turnover £63.6m (up from £26m the previous year, an increase of 144%)
    Gate and match-day £13.6m
    TV and broadcasting £35.6m
    Sponsorship and royalties £8.3m
    Commercial activities £6.1m
    Wage bill £37.1m (up from £23.7m, an increase of 57%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 58%
    Loss before tax £4.9m
    Debts £69.2m
    Interest payable £3.9m

    Highest paid director Niall Quinn: £939,317

    State they're in Apart from desperately seeking Premier League survival, the chairman Niall Quinn's consuming priority this year has been to secure the investment of the US businessman Ellis Short. The club is overspending, with £16.8m loaned from the Irish Drumaville consortium, and their fortunes have diminished in the downturn. Promotion to the Premier League brought the TV windfall, but Sunderland lost almost £5m and debts rose close to £70m. Sunderland's fanbase is also vulnerable to the recession, so Quinn was mightily pleased last week to announce that Short is to take 100% ownership and invest further.
    quote:
    Tottenham Hotspur
    Ownership 82% owned by Enic International Limited, registered in the Bahamas, a tax haven. Chairman Daniel Levy an d family own 29.41% of Enic. The controlling owner is Joe Lewis, resident in the Bahamas.

    Turnover £114.7m (up from £103.1m the previous year, an increase of 11.34%)
    Gate and match-day £28.6m
    TV and broadcasting £40.3m
    Sponsorship and corporate hospitality £27.8m
    Merchandising £9.7m
    Commercial activities £8.3m
    Wage bill £52.9m (up from £43.8m in 2007, an increase of 20.8%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 46%
    Profit before tax £3m
    Debts £65m
    Interest payable £3.95m

    Highest paid director Daniel Levy: £1m

    State they're in Fifth highest turnover in the Premier League, but Spurs have serially failed to convert that financial power into consistent performances on the field. They can be expected to keep traditionally high-spending manager, Harry Redknapp, happy by handing him funds again this summer. In a bid to propel the club towards the top four, Spurs plan to build a new White Hart Lane with 58,000 seats with a scheme including a supermarket, hotel, leisure, retail, and 450 apartments. They declared a dividend of 4p per share last year, which meant the club paid £2.5m to Enic, the holding company owned by Daniel Levy and Joe Lewis.
    quote:
    West Bromwich Albion
    Ownership Over 50% owned by the chairman, Jeremy Peace

    Turnover (2007-08, in the Championship): £27.2m (up from £24m the previous year, an increase of 13% mainly due to increased parachute payments)
    Gate and matchiday £7m
    Merchandising £2.2m
    TV and broadcasting £14m
    Other commercial income £4m
    Wage bill £21.8m (up from £17.4m the previous year, an increase of 25%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 80%
    Profit before tax £11.3m
    Debts £8.9m
    Interest payable £91,000

    Highest paid director Jeremy Peace: £625,000

    State they're in This is the portrait of a former Premier League club pushing for promotion in the Championship, with the benefit of parachute payments, which increased by £4.5m during the year. West Bromwich carry little debt, have reduced ticket prices, and under Jeremy Peace's chairmanship do not gamble when they are promoted. Can be expected to be strong in the Championship next season and to yo-yo back up while still under the Premier League's parachute canopy.
    quote:
    West Ham United
    Accounts for the year to 31 May 2007 (accounts for 2007-08 have been delayed)

    Ownership Owned in Iceland, by the chairman, Bjorgulfur Gudmundsson, via two companies, Hansa ehf and Olafsfell ehf

    Turnover £57m
    (down from £60.1m in 2006, a drop of 5.2%)
    Gate and match-day £17m
    TV and broadcasting £24m
    Catering and corporate hospitality £5m
    Commercial activities £9m
    Retail and Merchandising £2m
    Wage bill £44.2m (up from 31.2m in 2006, an increase of 41%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 76%
    Loss before tax £22m
    Debts £36m
    nterest payable £2m

    Highest paid director Paul Aldridge: £649,000 (Includes £521,000 for leaving West Ham on December 4 2006)

    State they're in West Ham's owner, Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson, is football ownership's highest profile genuine victim of the global economic crisis, his fortune gone the way of his country, Iceland's, economy – wiped out. The club is in the hands of his holding company's controlling banks, yet they have not put pressure on the club's finances or forced a sale because West Ham is the only valuable asset in the Gudmundsson portfolio. The banks, and the Icelandic courts, have allowed it protection, so that they can maintain a decent price when they finally sell it.
    quote:
    Wigan Athletic
    Ownership Dave Whelan and family, via Whelco Holdings, registered in the UK

    Turnover £43m (up from 27m the previous year, an increase of 59.2%)
    Wage bill £38.4m (up from £27.5m the previous year, an increase of 39.6%)
    Wages as proportion of turnover 89%
    Loss before tax £11.2m
    Debts £66.4m
    Interest payable £1.7m

    Highest paid director Brenda Spencer, amount not declared

    State they're in Wigan Athletic are where they are, in the JJB Stadium and in the Premier League, solely due to the patronage of local market trader made good, Dave Whelan. Interest free loans from his holding company were increased to £35.6m, and Wigan were given another unsecured loan of £7.5m assumed to have come from Whelan. Barclays Bank maintained their funding at £23m because of Whelan's backing. The accounts make it clear that Wigan, who expect to continue to make losses, would not be solvent without Whelan's financial backing.
    pi_69709436
    Nog eens alles goed door zitten te lezen, maar 14 van de 20 clubs maken gewoon een verlies van minimaal 5 miljoen pond per jaar. Dat is echt bizar in zo'n competitie met zulke tv gelden en omzetten.

    Dat stukje bij Liverpool is ook echt schrikbarend . Gewoon geen geld in kas, al is dat nu dit seizoen wel wat anmders, maar nog steeds gewoon zo arm als iets, ondanks de overnames.

    Arsenal zal misschien ook nog wel spoedig volgen. Ben benieuwd wanneer, hoe en uberhaupt of de FIFA danwel UEFA er nog tegen gaat optreden, want het zal je maar gebeuren dat een eigenaar zich terug gaat trekken... De waarde van Newcastle is ook al gehalveerd onderhand .
      Moderator / Redactie Sport / Weblog zondag 7 juni 2009 @ 23:58:56 #173
    17650 crew  rubbereend
    JUICHEN
    pi_69813341
    Alle clubs ook in privé handen, dat kan je je in Nederland niet voorstellen
    DeLuna vindt me dik ;(
    Op zondag 22 juni 2014 12:30 schreef 3rdRock het volgende:
    pas als jullie gaan trouwen. nu ben je gewoon die Oom Rubber die met onze mama leuke dingen doet :)
    pi_69813501
    tvp voor het moment wanneer Feyenoord weer in categorie 1 valt..
    pi_69819644
    quote:
    Op maandag 11 mei 2009 17:44 schreef BliksemSchigt het volgende:

    [..]


    Nederland krijgt komend seizoen flink minder uit de Media-pool van de CL omdat de NOS geen 30 miljoen meer per jaar betaald voor de uitzendrechten van de Champions League. AZ zal dus zeker niet aan de bedragen komen die PSV tot vorig seizoen ontving uit Geneve.
    Get it and Bet it
    pi_69837089
    quote:
    KNVB rekent op 2,5 miljoen winst, WK wordt duur
    08 juni 2009

    De afdeling betaald voetbal van de KNVB werkt komend seizoen met een begroting van ongeveer 60 miljoen euro. Dat is iets meer dan vorig jaar. In de begroting is rekening gehouden met een winst van ongeveer 2,5 miljoen euro. "We maken onze winstprognoses meestal wel waar", zei Henk Kesler, directeur betaald voetbal van de KNVB, maandag in Zeist na de algemene vergadering betaald voetbal.

    De afgevaardigden van de clubs kregen nog een begroting onder ogen met een beoogde winst van 1,7 miljoen. "Maar daarin is nog geen rekening gehouden met het extra oefenduel dat Oranje in 2009 tijdens de hoogtestage in Oostenrijk zal spelen. Zo'n duel levert ook altijd wel een tonnetje of zes op. Gezien onze conservatieve manier van begroten, kunnen we uitgaan van een winst van 2,5 miljoen euro."

    De kosten en baten van het komende WK-project van Oranje in Zuid-Afrika zijn door de KNVB niet meegenomen in de begroting. "Er staat nog helemaal niets op papier wat betreft ons WK-budget", gaf Kesler aan. "Pas op 4 december maakt de FIFA bekend op hoeveel geld de deelnemende landen kunnen rekenen, wat betreft startpremies, wedstrijdpremies en andere bonussen. Daarna kunnen wij pas financieel aan de slag."

    Kesler: "Het wordt in elk geval een duur toernooi voor de KNVB. Alleen al aan vliegkosten, zowel naar Zuid-Afrika als tijdens het WK naar de diverse speelsteden, zullen we veel geld kwijt zijn. Je kunt wel zeggen dat het voor de KNVB financieel pas interessant wordt als Oranje de kwartfinales haalt."
    pi_69923396
    Slecht nieuws voor de Schotse Premier League teams:
    quote:
    SPL clubs on brink if Setanta collapse

    There was hope on Wednesday night that Setanta will at least make it as far as the weekend as the troubled broadcasting company's directors tried desperately to put together a last-minute rescue package to save the firm from going into administration, with serious consequences for Scottish football.

    Despite a week of setbacks, the glimmer of hope remained after Setanta's chief operating director, Richard Sweeney, addressed staff in Glasgow but did not bring the anticipated news that they had been made redundant.

    However, as the crisis neared the end of its second week – it began on June 1 when Setanta failed to make a scheduled payment of £3 million to the Scottish Premier League – others queued to add their voices to the warning in Telegraph Sport that any collapse will mean a 'brutal summer' for some Scottish clubs, perhaps leading even to one or two going bankrupt.

    Setanta on Wednesday confirmed what had become obvious from the company's website the previous day and that it would not accept any more subscriptions, although a statement described the move as 'temporary'. It added that existing customers should not, however, cancel their subscriptions because their contracts were still valid.

    The same cannot be said for Setanta's agreement with the SPL, worth £134 million over the next four years, which went into default on Monday, after the expiry of the seven-day grace period built into the contract. It is understood that the SPL has begun the process of attempting recovery of the outstanding sum, as its directors are duty-bound to do, although with what chance of success is anybody's guess.

    After it emerged that Sky Sports had refused Setanta a £50 million cash advance against an agreement to screen 46 English Premier League games, Lord George Foulkes – the former chairman of Hearts – told BBC Radio 4 that a default was bound to force SPL clubs over the brink.

    "It is very serious. I think it puts the future of one or two SPL clubs in jeopardy. They are already struggling financially," said Foulkes.

    "In some clubs, it represents up to 20 per cent of their income and the loss of it would be really catastrophic. It's a difficult time enough for Scottish football, so this is a bit of a hammer blow and it's difficult for clubs to progress without it.

    "The bigger ones have got reserves that would carry them through even this kind of difficulty, but I know some of the smaller clubs in the SPL are in financial difficulty and this kind of thing would just tip them over into a situation they could not recover from."

    SPL chairmen in the middle and lower reaches of the division have voiced frequent warnings that a Setanta collapse would have dire repercussions, unless a swift rescue package is put in place.
    Ze hebben trouwens ook nog een pakket Premier League wedstrijden.

    Setanta's rights:

    Premier League:
    2009-10, 46 games, £130m; 2010-13, 23 games per season, Setanta paid £159m

    FA Cup, England friendlies and Community Shield
    2009-2012, £150m

    Scottish Premier League:
    2010-14, exclusive live rights, £125m
    Get it and Bet it
    pi_69925885
    Hoe kan een omroep uit een land dat een derde van de inwoners inwoners heeft van Nederland, zo veel geld uitgeven aan voetbalrechten?
    There's a monkey in the jungle watching a vapour trail. Caught up in the conflict between his brain and his tail.
    Winnaar Voetbalfoto-onderschriftcompetitie 2006-II, 2008-I.
    The Terrifying Snoman | De Wageningse Berg
    pi_69925998
    quote:
    Op donderdag 11 juni 2009 10:01 schreef EnGCatjuh het volgende:
    Hoe kan een omroep uit een land dat een derde van de inwoners inwoners heeft van Nederland, zo veel geld uitgeven aan voetbalrechten?
    Eeh, dat kan dus ook niet.
    pi_69926746
    Setanta Sports is een grote sportzender, onder meer te ontvangen in Amerika, Canada, Australie en UK.
    While we're living, the dreams we have as children fade away
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