by Winston Biscuit » 31 Mar 2024 19:29
by Sutekh » 01 Apr 2024 08:53
Winston Biscuit Everton's accounts are out
Loss in 2023 of £89.1M
Loss over 3 seasons of £255m
by Winston Biscuit » 01 Apr 2024 08:57
by Winston Biscuit » 02 Apr 2024 18:06
by Clyde1998 » 02 Apr 2024 18:56
Winston Biscuit Opposite end of the scale to Everton is Brighton, who have released their accounts showing last financial year they made a profit of £123M and that doesn't even include the money for Caicedo or Sanchez
by Clyde1998 » 02 Apr 2024 18:59
by Stranded » 03 Apr 2024 07:34
Clyde1998Winston Biscuit Opposite end of the scale to Everton is Brighton, who have released their accounts showing last financial year they made a profit of £123M and that doesn't even include the money for Caicedo or Sanchez
Apparently that's a Premier League record. Even though it doesn't include money for Caicedo or Sanchez, they made a transfer profit of £121m. They had a pre-transfer loss of £16m.
Brighton showing how selling players can make a club sustainable and competitive above their natural revenue.
by Snowflake Royal » 03 Apr 2024 13:42
StrandedClyde1998Winston Biscuit Opposite end of the scale to Everton is Brighton, who have released their accounts showing last financial year they made a profit of £123M and that doesn't even include the money for Caicedo or Sanchez
Apparently that's a Premier League record. Even though it doesn't include money for Caicedo or Sanchez, they made a transfer profit of £121m. They had a pre-transfer loss of £16m.
Brighton showing how selling players can make a club sustainable and competitive above their natural revenue.
Brighton are absolutely the model. Buy "cheap" especially from untapped markets and drive the highest price possible, as you build up cash reserves, you can shop in a slightly more expensive market but still look for the value and potentially turn bigger profits.
by Sutekh » 03 Apr 2024 16:41
StrandedClyde1998Winston Biscuit Opposite end of the scale to Everton is Brighton, who have released their accounts showing last financial year they made a profit of £123M and that doesn't even include the money for Caicedo or Sanchez
Apparently that's a Premier League record. Even though it doesn't include money for Caicedo or Sanchez, they made a transfer profit of £121m. They had a pre-transfer loss of £16m.
Brighton showing how selling players can make a club sustainable and competitive above their natural revenue.
Brighton are absolutely the model. Buy "cheap" especially from untapped markets and drive the highest price possible, as you build up cash reserves, you can shop in a slightly more expensive market but still look for the value and potentially turn bigger profits.
by Sutekh » 03 Apr 2024 16:43
StrandedClyde1998Winston Biscuit Opposite end of the scale to Everton is Brighton, who have released their accounts showing last financial year they made a profit of £123M and that doesn't even include the money for Caicedo or Sanchez
Apparently that's a Premier League record. Even though it doesn't include money for Caicedo or Sanchez, they made a transfer profit of £121m. They had a pre-transfer loss of £16m.
Brighton showing how selling players can make a club sustainable and competitive above their natural revenue.
Brighton are absolutely the model. Buy "cheap" especially from untapped markets and drive the highest price possible, as you build up cash reserves, you can shop in a slightly more expensive market but still look for the value and potentially turn bigger profits.
by Clyde1998 » 03 Apr 2024 17:55
SutekhStrandedClyde1998 Apparently that's a Premier League record. Even though it doesn't include money for Caicedo or Sanchez, they made a transfer profit of £121m. They had a pre-transfer loss of £16m.
Brighton showing how selling players can make a club sustainable and competitive above their natural revenue.
Brighton are absolutely the model. Buy "cheap" especially from untapped markets and drive the highest price possible, as you build up cash reserves, you can shop in a slightly more expensive market but still look for the value and potentially turn bigger profits.
Big clubs won't like that. Expect some "rule changes" before long....
by Clyde1998 » 03 Apr 2024 17:56
SutekhStrandedClyde1998 Apparently that's a Premier League record. Even though it doesn't include money for Caicedo or Sanchez, they made a transfer profit of £121m. They had a pre-transfer loss of £16m.
Brighton showing how selling players can make a club sustainable and competitive above their natural revenue.
Brighton are absolutely the model. Buy "cheap" especially from untapped markets and drive the highest price possible, as you build up cash reserves, you can shop in a slightly more expensive market but still look for the value and potentially turn bigger profits.
I like the way the ones they sell to Chelsea instantly turn to cr@p.
by From Despair To Where? » 03 Apr 2024 19:11
StrandedClyde1998Winston Biscuit Opposite end of the scale to Everton is Brighton, who have released their accounts showing last financial year they made a profit of £123M and that doesn't even include the money for Caicedo or Sanchez
Apparently that's a Premier League record. Even though it doesn't include money for Caicedo or Sanchez, they made a transfer profit of £121m. They had a pre-transfer loss of £16m.
Brighton showing how selling players can make a club sustainable and competitive above their natural revenue.
Brighton are absolutely the model. Buy "cheap" especially from untapped markets and drive the highest price possible, as you build up cash reserves, you can shop in a slightly more expensive market but still look for the value and potentially turn bigger profits.
by Mr Angry » 05 Apr 2024 12:08
Clyde1998 Leicester made a £90m pre-tax loss last season, despite extending their financial year by a month in order to include the Maddison transfer fee in that season's accounts.
They made a gross loss of £124m.
by Winston Biscuit » 05 Apr 2024 18:30
by Sutekh » 05 Apr 2024 20:24
SutekhStrandedClyde1998 Apparently that's a Premier League record. Even though it doesn't include money for Caicedo or Sanchez, they made a transfer profit of £121m. They had a pre-transfer loss of £16m.
Brighton showing how selling players can make a club sustainable and competitive above their natural revenue.
Brighton are absolutely the model. Buy "cheap" especially from untapped markets and drive the highest price possible, as you build up cash reserves, you can shop in a slightly more expensive market but still look for the value and potentially turn bigger profits.
Big clubs won't like that. Expect some "rule changes" before long....
by WestYorksRoyal » 05 Apr 2024 22:03
StrandedClyde1998Winston Biscuit Opposite end of the scale to Everton is Brighton, who have released their accounts showing last financial year they made a profit of £123M and that doesn't even include the money for Caicedo or Sanchez
Apparently that's a Premier League record. Even though it doesn't include money for Caicedo or Sanchez, they made a transfer profit of £121m. They had a pre-transfer loss of £16m.
Brighton showing how selling players can make a club sustainable and competitive above their natural revenue.
Brighton are absolutely the model. Buy "cheap" especially from untapped markets and drive the highest price possible, as you build up cash reserves, you can shop in a slightly more expensive market but still look for the value and potentially turn bigger profits.
by Clyde1998 » 08 Apr 2024 16:43
by Sutekh » 08 Apr 2024 17:12
Clyde1998 Everton have just been deducted a further two points for failing PSR - https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/68723109
by Mr Angry » 09 Apr 2024 11:03
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