NUFC Tiger
Brownlow Medallist
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2011
- Posts
- 18,679
- Reaction score
- 16,988
- Location
- Melbourne
- AFL Club
- Richmond
- Other Teams
- NUFC, Socceroos, FGR, NewcastleJets
It's good business no? They're still bringing through English talent like Ward-Prowse, Targett etc. from the famed academy and found cheaper foreign talent to play with them and improve their results on the pitch. In 2-3 years time when Ward-Prowse gets snapped up by a City or United for £25m they'll bring in another cheaper foreigner with HG talent still coming through supporting them. They're the exact template progressive clubs should follow, and if they did England would be back to a top 10 nation in world football. Problem is out of the 72 football league clubs only about 4 clubs (MK Dons, Spurs, Southampton, Crewe, perhaps Villa will go that way now they have Sherwood) look to operate in such a way. Like I've said many times the problem isn't with City or Chelsea, with the riches they have and pressure that goes with playing there their U21 talent has to be extreme top level (Hazard) to even get a look in. It's the clubs like Stoke, Newcastle, QPR etc. who are bringing in bog average players from all over the world and regressing as football clubs!
Southampton are definitely a model of success and that is great business by them but is it a sustainable one? No one can tell if a young player will develop into a star or whether potential shown as a junior will materialise into ability as a senior player. What is the point for Southampton to keep developing talent if they will be poached by bigger teams in 1-3 years and they need to start from scratch? Will they (should they) be content to be like Everton in recent times and trying to crack into that top bracket without ever establishing themselves?
Its all well and good to make talent (I think every club would love to produce their own players - especially if they are quality like some of the Southampton lads have been) but if you lose talent to the established top order, how can you realistically expect to progress? Whether youth or buying foreign talent, there is always a degree of gamble involved.
Also I think its unfair to say that only the big clubs have to deal with pressure. Promoted clubs or lower tier PL teams have just as much pressure to remain in the PL given how lucrative the league has become. Why should they have to (in their eyes) be forced to play more English/U21 players if they feel/can sign better quality players from abroad?
Just on ourselves, while we've picked up a few duds over the years (every club does) by and large (when we do actually spend money), we 'generally' do quite well in the transfer market with foreign acquisitions (at least in recent times anyway).
End of the day the clubs will run themselves however they choose fit with or without regulations in place. Some will try and be cost effective and take chances on older guys or foreigners over youth. But at the end of the day supporters of clubs like Sunderland, Newcastle, QPR & Villa (clubs with fan bases or financial support) have to surely get pissed with the way clubs like Southampton & Swansea have so easily passed their clubs running it in a correct way. 5-7 years ago neither of those 2 clubs had any right to be above at least 3 of the 4 mentioned but they've turned it around big time. Surely their supporters should be hoping their clubs get run the same way
Can't speak as a fan of the other teams but as a Toon fan, my (and many others) frustration starts and ends with Mike Ashley.
When looking at sides like Swansea and Southampton with admiration, there is a pang of jealousy because many of us feel that Newcastle (as a club) has more potential to be a top side (IMO) than those 2 and yet finds itself languishing under Mike Ashley's model of running the club. IF we had an owner who genuinely wanted to progress the club and we were signing hacks like we did under Freddy Shepherd, then I think many would agree with you but when we've chosen to spend money, we've generally done alright - the fundamental issue is Ashley has no ambition for the club other than pocketing easy money With no ambition, there is no real need to improve things (in Ashley's eyes) because that generally costs money.
A lot of Toon fans also don't really care for England's national side (or the FA) either from what I've read and seen. Hodgson, Capello and even Erikson very rarely ever graced the north east/St James' to watch our games or to see any of our players who were playing well at the time. Won't even go into the Owen saga.
Would you rather your club be run like Southampton/Swansea or Newcastle/Sunderland?
This isn't a right now sort of prospect. Would you rather be a Newcastle/Sunderland supporter going forward with the same practices as now, or would you like to see an overhaul of things and move forward in another direction?
Obviously both Newcastle and Sunderland fans would choose (if they could) to have things run differently to the present - both clubs are guilty of poor management (stemming from the ownership of the club).
That being said, I think your criticism of our academy is a bit harsh too given we've had plenty (8) of our academy graduate players appear in the PL this season. Had a quick look and we've had academy graduates start 69 times so far this season and 21 further appearances off the bench; so its more than just token 5/10 min cameos off the bench - we're giving kids a chance, perhaps not by desire but out of necessity given our horrible injury list this season. Regardless, I'd reckon we'd be one of the better (top 10 at least) for appearances by academy players this season.
FYI - here's a thread I made late last year on the topic (at the time, we were ranked 4th behind Man Utd, Spurs and Arsenal). If not for injuries to guys like Aarons (only 3 sub apps this season) and Dummett (out for the season), the number of appearances would be much higher I suspect.
http://www.bigfooty.com/forum/threads/academy-graduate-players.1083871/
How is this loaded?
Scenario 1: spend money on more older players and finish 12th-20th
Scenario 2: spend money on youth facilities and development and see what happens?
Scenario 1: clubs like Sunderland, Bolton, Portsmouth, Newcastle
Scenario 2: Southampton, Swansea, Fulham (post-Magath), Brentford, Crewe, MK Dons
It's not a who would you rather on March 25, 2015. It's going forward as a club which business model would you prefer?
Not saying it is an exact science. Just look at Crewe and MK Dons, they've had mixed levels of success in the league. But they're seeing that throwing money at things won't put them ahead of the competition so what's the point
You're probably talking generally here but Newcastle very rarely buy 'older' players - Ashley's model is to buy cheap and young foreign (and local occassionaly) talent, develop them and sell them on for profit. I actually support Ashley's vision of buying promising young talent on those rare occasions he needs to buy (not so much the selling aspect but he generally gets good prices back - if only he reimbursed the money!)
Just on business models, I think one of the thing good things Mike Ashley has done is make the club financially viable. We are one of the few teams in recent years to post successive profits - probably helps when Ashley is so tight fisted - though he also forgoes plenty in commercial and matchday revenue by polluting St James' Park with all his (free of charge) Sports Direct banners!






