While the football side of things looks worse than ever, I fear that the financial side is even more desperate.
FFP calculations are measured on a three years rolling basis. We had a decent year from a financial point of view in 2020/2021 when we sold Eze in the beginning of that financial year. This makes up the first of the three seasons we are now measured against. However, this has been the only sale worth mentioning during the three years period, and of that reason the 2021/2022 and 2022/2023 financial years have produced heavy losses (the figures are not published yet, but I think there is little doubt that they look dark red). Despite the Eze sales we struggle to stay inside the FFP boundary of maximum loss of £39m for the three years in question, if Ferdinand's recent interview is correctly interpreted.
Next season, the Eze-year will be out of the equation. To stay inside FFP boundaries we are probably in need of raising some significant transfer fees during the next two transfer windows. We have three key players with one year left on their contracts this summer. This is Dieng, Willock and Dykes, provided we take up the option of prolonging Willocks contract. With the form and the injury record of the latter two I do not think they will command much more than a couple of million each at most, if there will be any bids at all. Dieng is worth more. However, he isn't Premier League material, so I do not think we will receive bids of more than £3-4m. There is a chance no bids will be forthcoming. We know from the past that once we approach the end of the transfer window, the value of players with a year left on their contracts, that do not want to sign contract extensions, are modest. We could experience a Manning situation for all three if we get to the end of August and none of the mentioned players have left. If I recall right, we got £250.000 for Manning. We got around £4-500.000 for BOS with half a season left of his contract.
I think there will be no other options than to sell Field, Paal and Chair, our most attractive assets, during the early part of the transfer window, to reduce risk. However, to clinch a sale there must be a bid.
However, I fear that disposing off Willock, Dykes, Dieng, Field, Paal and Chair will not necessary free up much money for any serious reinforcements. I will only help plug the FFP hole.
We will be left to sign freebies and loans or stay with what we have.
The catastrophic scenario appears if there are no bids for any of the players, or sales of just one or a few for a total fee that cannot plug the FFP hole. In such case we are looking at a breach of FFP and a point deduction. Given our previous hefty FFP fine, we will probably be docked 10 points or more.
So if we get relegated this season, which looks very likely based on present form, prepare for a new relegation fight next season.
FFP calculations are measured on a three years rolling basis. We had a decent year from a financial point of view in 2020/2021 when we sold Eze in the beginning of that financial year. This makes up the first of the three seasons we are now measured against. However, this has been the only sale worth mentioning during the three years period, and of that reason the 2021/2022 and 2022/2023 financial years have produced heavy losses (the figures are not published yet, but I think there is little doubt that they look dark red). Despite the Eze sales we struggle to stay inside the FFP boundary of maximum loss of £39m for the three years in question, if Ferdinand's recent interview is correctly interpreted.
Next season, the Eze-year will be out of the equation. To stay inside FFP boundaries we are probably in need of raising some significant transfer fees during the next two transfer windows. We have three key players with one year left on their contracts this summer. This is Dieng, Willock and Dykes, provided we take up the option of prolonging Willocks contract. With the form and the injury record of the latter two I do not think they will command much more than a couple of million each at most, if there will be any bids at all. Dieng is worth more. However, he isn't Premier League material, so I do not think we will receive bids of more than £3-4m. There is a chance no bids will be forthcoming. We know from the past that once we approach the end of the transfer window, the value of players with a year left on their contracts, that do not want to sign contract extensions, are modest. We could experience a Manning situation for all three if we get to the end of August and none of the mentioned players have left. If I recall right, we got £250.000 for Manning. We got around £4-500.000 for BOS with half a season left of his contract.
I think there will be no other options than to sell Field, Paal and Chair, our most attractive assets, during the early part of the transfer window, to reduce risk. However, to clinch a sale there must be a bid.
However, I fear that disposing off Willock, Dykes, Dieng, Field, Paal and Chair will not necessary free up much money for any serious reinforcements. I will only help plug the FFP hole.
We will be left to sign freebies and loans or stay with what we have.
The catastrophic scenario appears if there are no bids for any of the players, or sales of just one or a few for a total fee that cannot plug the FFP hole. In such case we are looking at a breach of FFP and a point deduction. Given our previous hefty FFP fine, we will probably be docked 10 points or more.
So if we get relegated this season, which looks very likely based on present form, prepare for a new relegation fight next season.
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