How Much Money Can Newcastle United REALLY Spend? | FFP Explained

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  • čas přidán 21. 06. 2023
  • Newcastle look set to complete the signing of Sandro Tonali from AC Milan to get their 2023 transfer window underway. But is this just the first of many big-money deals that they'll be involved in this summer, or after 2 seasons of major spending are the club risking breaking the Premier League's Financial Fair Play rules?
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Komentáře • 236

  • @falconarrow
    @falconarrow Před rokem +50

    The Ashley/Bruce era was a real sh*t show. Absolutely no professionalism from those above while it's been proven that some of the players do care and are capable. Cannot have been happier since the takeover. What a man Eddie Howe is!

  • @barrylongstaff2816
    @barrylongstaff2816 Před rokem +28

    FFP is in place merely to keep the “big clubs” ahead of the game. If season after season my club earns more and can spend more (through being successful on the field) how can anyone ever catch up? It’s a total con

  • @ir0nMonKie
    @ir0nMonKie Před rokem +78

    Financial “fair play” is such a misnomer… how is it fair play that some clubs are allowed to spend 100s of millions more than others, regardless of whether the clubs can afford it. These rules are in place for only one reason, to protect the classically large clubs who have a lot of influence.

  • @thezyg6311
    @thezyg6311 Před rokem +22

    Hendrick and Fraser to SA in £200m deal.

  • @CarolusIMagnus
    @CarolusIMagnus Před rokem +51

    Newcastle are on the Rise! 📈🌟

  • @tcaky
    @tcaky Před rokem +24

    Remember that commercial revenue will be increasing on a regular basis. They will like stagger ending dates of commercial contracts to ensure they are continually increasing the pressure for larger commercial deals as they negotiate new contracts.

  • @peteylang3401
    @peteylang3401 Před rokem +10

    There is still a lot of "deadwood" in our squad that will free up quite a bit in wages when moved on. Ashley had a habit of sticking bang average players on bumper contracts for some reason. I also think the new fanzone will produce a lot of revenue directly to the clubs pockets with fans wanting to go for the build up atmosphere. Fingers crossed on the plans for the St James expansion as well. FFP is obviously a hurdle but one that I'm confident we can get past.

  • @michaeljohnson9040
    @michaeljohnson9040 Před rokem +9

    Idk where you popped out from but you are one of the best football channels on here

  • @badofcheese
    @badofcheese Před rokem +20

    The commercial revenue not even flatlining but regressing is one of the many, many negatives of Ashley’s tenure that that doesn’t get enough column inches. Once it’s stacked up alongside the growth for other clubs over that awful 14 years, and analysed in the context of the relative positions before his arrival, it’s really scary. It clashes with the ‘great businessman’ narrative as it was so short-sighted to put no effort into it and to create such a toxic brand that faltered so badly whilst others were seeing exponential growth in that key revenue stream.

  • @tomthetit2419
    @tomthetit2419 Před rokem +17

    Curious to know how much Santiago Muñez would go for in todays market.

  • @garrycatherall3515
    @garrycatherall3515 Před rokem +3

    Thanks for breaking that down. It’s difficult to understand the limitations of what Newcastle can spend due to FFP. Please make more videos with Newcastle content as the analysis is always on point!

  • @deanharding740
    @deanharding740 Před rokem +6

    Very good explanation - some more major sponsorship deals would elevate revenue and they’ve got some of the best commercial people behind the scenes from what I understand. The other thing to bear in mind is once they get, say, 5 years under their belt they’ll be able to sell current players for a profit while new ones comes through but whilst they’re still getting there all player acquisitions are huge costs to the club. The ffp rules favour established big clubs with established revenue and acts as a barrier for smaller clubs to break into the top tier. The only way to do it is to maximise the revenue and spend up to the limits for 4/5 years - getting into the champions league was an unbelievable break this early in the project.

  • @blackwhitearmy8525
    @blackwhitearmy8525 Před rokem +1

    Great video mate, very interesting👏

  • @videomotif
    @videomotif Před rokem

    This is a great video and really bloody clear! Thank you. I've just sort off switched off everytime FFP is mentioned in the media but now I have a chance to understand what they are on about

  • @gsingh-ih2gk
    @gsingh-ih2gk Před rokem +19

    Bruno G, Tonali & Maddison is a ridiculous midfield😐🔥

  • @flyer1658
    @flyer1658 Před rokem +4

    Newcastle are clearly trying to do things the right way but i want to know how Chelsea get away with what they are doing and what is the actual punishment going to be for City if any of the hundreds of charges are proven

  • @gonufc
    @gonufc Před rokem +1

    How is it a surprise that commercial revenue decreased? Ashley paid £0 for advertising that should have cost millions!

  • @marknewlands614
    @marknewlands614 Před rokem +3

    Finally I understand the murky rules of FFP! Thank you 🙏

  • @stuartmcphail1676
    @stuartmcphail1676 Před rokem

    Another great video. Excellent content

  • @1574john
    @1574john Před rokem +4

    FFP is just the “Big Six” pulling the ladder up behind them.