Originally posted by QPROslo
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Man City Charged FFP
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Originally posted by topperharley View Post
Only if they don't sell them.
However, lets assume the player fails to impress, and the club wants to sell him after a year. The written down value after one year is £27m [£30m minus £3m). At the time of selling, the club needs to amortise the remaining £27m, which will eat into the budget big time. What looked like a good idea comes back to haunt the club the following year. Many clubs will not afford to sell unsuccessful players, as they will have to amortise the remaining part of the purchase price immediately, which will lead to lower head room for acquisition of new players.
If many players are signed at the same time on long contract, and the club spend the extra money (freed up by offering very long contract), the club will quickly find itself stuck with players it cannot offload. If all players are successful, this might work. If some are not, they cannot move them on and cannot create room for new signing.
To me it looks like a recipe for disaster. I hope the "doping" clubs go down this route.
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Originally posted by QPROslo View Post
If you buy a player for £30m and give him a 10 years contract, you have to amortize £3m a year. The annual cost is just £3m plus salary, as opposed to annual costs of £10m plus salary if you gave him a three years contract. At first glance, it looks as if it it a £7m saving annually, and it is correct that the head room for FFP calculations will be £7m more, which can be spent on other players.
However, lets assume the player fails to impress, and the club wants to sell him after a year. The written down value after one year is £27m [£30m minus £3m). At the time of selling, the club needs to amortise the remaining £27m, which will eat into the budget big time. What looked like a good idea comes back to haunt the club the following year. Many clubs will not afford to sell unsuccessful players, as they will have to amortise the remaining part of the purchase price immediately, which will lead to lower head room for acquisition of new players.
If many players are signed at the same time on long contract, and the club spend the extra money (freed up by offering very long contract), the club will quickly find itself stuck with players it cannot offload. If all players are successful, this might work. If some are not, they cannot move them on and cannot create room for new signing.
To me it looks like a recipe for disaster. I hope the "doping" clubs go down this route.
To an exteat we did this with Nico. He had many loans where we received a fee and had the majority of wages covered which offset our costs when theres a downside in performance.
The likes of Chelsea will puck up the best talent and choose where they play, nit to their nearest competitors, therefore attempting to buy an advanage through excessive player warehousing.
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