Bishop
John Lacy
True, but ambition doesn't necessarily equal common sense.Or a relative abundance of common sense.
In real life, ambition requires risk and boldness.
True, but ambition doesn't necessarily equal common sense.Or a relative abundance of common sense.
I think there's a reasonable argument to made that by paying a lower percentage of our revenue on wages than our "rivals" that it shows our relative lack of ambition.
I actually think we have some fans who think we will actually perform better by paying more on wagesDepends. We're taking a snapshot of our wage to turnover ratio as it stands currently and comparing to our rivals, currently all of our main competitors are further ahead with their squad development than we are (more or less) so our wage bill is naturally going to reflect that (detailed in an earlier post but essentially we have & are clearing out our older deadwood players while bringing in younger players to develop) as we develop over the coming seasons this should be reflected with the wage bill growing. Arsenal's wage bill dropped down a fair bit for a couple of season recently while they were gutting the pre Edu & Arteta mess iirc
Another point to mention is that our revenue has grown considerably in a short amount of time, so as a ratio the wage bill will lag somewhat behind that and take time to 'catch up'
I actually think we have some fans who think we will actually perform better by paying more on wages
I actually think we have some fans who think we will actually perform better by paying more on wages
For me, that summer says everything that was wrong.
Hindsight tells us that this was the time to part ways and find the right next step. Instead, perhaps because he couldn't stand the thought of being unpopular, Levy went out of his way to patch up with Poch, including sanctioning signing those two. Having done that, he then promptly allows himself to be snowed by that charlatan Mourinho and once he knows he has Mourinho in the bag (he would had to have had a written memo at least with him behind Poch's back) promptly sacks Poch knowing that he can unveil Mourinho within 24 hours.
I think it is perfectly fair to not quite trust Daniel in these moments. I still think the way he handled Poch was a total disgrace personally.
It follows closer the teams who spend the most on players and wagesPerformance/results do closely follow wage expenditure tbf but it's not as simple as spending more on wages to get results - you need to build a squad with top talent across the board to be successful and that obviously costs money - but you can spend the money badly and not get the results.
I actually think we have some fans who think we will actually perform better by paying more on wages
Performance/results do closely follow wage expenditure tbf but it's not as simple as spending more on wages to get results - you need to build a squad with top talent across the board to be successful and that obviously costs money - but you can spend the money badly and not get the results.
Right. Do we think that perhaps Lo Celso and Ndombele have proven 'scary' to some in that regard? And would there be agreement that if that was the case, it would be a position which lacks context?
I will say that curiously, our biggest ticket signings generally have not worked out (Rebrov, Bobby S, etc)...curious...
Right. Do we think that perhaps Lo Celso and Ndombele have proven 'scary' to some in that regard? And would there be agreement that if that was the case, it would be a position which lacks context?
I will say that curiously, our biggest ticket signings generally have not worked out (Rebrov, Bobby S, etc)...curious...
NoCome on mate, that's a cheap shot. I think you know the discussion being had, and it is absolutely nothing like as binary as you've tried to represent it there.
Paratici did that review I believeI'd hope that there was some kind of internal review regarding what went wrong over this period and I think I remember reading that prior to Paratichis appointment maybe even alongside it, there had been something along those lines regarding a review of how we operate, football wise, which led to the new structure being put in place.
No
I hear it all the time
We don’t spend enough
We never spend enough
Look at the squad
Blah, blah, blah
You have said many times in the Pod about the painful rebuild and this is it
We pay the players what we need to get them to join the club. It’s a fudge load of money too.
Why would we wanna pay anymore
It’s an odd fixation
And the key collation is big wage players come with big transfer fees. That’s a much more valid discussion.
I won't get into your initial comment versus this reply, except to say that I still do not believe anyone on GG thinks that if we pay the players we have more money they will play better. That's frankly silliness.No
I hear it all the time
We don’t spend enough
We never spend enough
Look at the squad
Blah, blah, blah
You have said many times in the Pod about the painful rebuild and this is it
We pay the players what we need to get them to join the club. It’s a fudge load of money too.
Why would we wanna pay anymore
It’s an odd fixation
And the key collation is big wage players come with big transfer fees. That’s a much more valid discussion.
Players might not want to come here, irrespective of how much we offer, clubs might not want to sell to us if they perceive us as a rival.
Being fully backed doesn’t mean getting your preferred player in every slot, even Pep never got that.
Managers have to be able to work with alternatives.
Jose and Conte were not extended that defence, Ange shouldn’t be either.
I think that's because we've tended not to actually spend big money on guaranteed players or those at the very top of their game. Its that prolonged period of previous performance and results that confers that status and what usually justifies the extreme cost. Our bigger signings have rarely been in that mould, I mean, I honestly can't think of any since Klinsmann. So with our bigger spends, there has always been an added element of risk vs the signings some of our rivals tend to make. The ones we buy tend to be the players the bigger clubs have already evaluated and decided against them or are biding their time to see if that player can make the next step at which they will then swoop in, those are the kind of signings we don't get involved in.Right. Do we think that perhaps Lo Celso and Ndombele have proven 'scary' to some in that regard? And would there be agreement that if that was the case, it would be a position which lacks context?
I will say that curiously, our biggest ticket signings generally have not worked out (Rebrov, Bobby S, etc)...curious...
Your back to the past but we’re talking about how we’re spending now
Apologies, only just got around to reading all your responses to my earlier posts.
Perhaps the reason I am optimistic about our spending power and our attractiveness to players is that we're following a successful model that has won trophies. It was always the way of Fergie and has been emulated by Pep in the modern era. Your core platform as a club comes when you start investing in younger players and they become the core of your team and squad for 5 years or more. In order to do this, you have to consistently spend and not just when you pocket from a major player sale, or get one-off CL final revenues. It looks like Spurs are now consistently net spending. As someone said above, where we still need to improve is by making even more from sales.
When I study websites like this (https://www.transfermarkt.co.uk/tottenham-hotspur/alletransfers/verein/148) I feel that the trend is positive. You see spending year after year. You see an opportunity to get a couple wrong and it doesn't affect the overall direction of travel too much.
I also think Ange's tactics will have a bigger impact on our success that sales or purchases. It definitely has with Pep even though people want to talk about the players. I'm still on the fence whether it will be the same with Ange, but try to stay in his corner.