Chairman acts to cut costs.... | Vital Football

Chairman acts to cut costs....

Spursex

Alert Team
Message from the Chairman
@SpursOfficial


As recently as 18 March I said: “We shall all need to work together to ensure the impact of this crisis does not undermine the future stability of the Club.” The decision by governments around the world to effectively close down economies with unheard of peacetime impacts on civil liberties in order to minimise the terrible effects of the COVID-19 pandemic is the right one to protect human lives. The crushing devastation on industries in many countries, the inter-dependence of international trade and travel in every aspect of our daily life is only now beginning to be felt. Every person on this planet will be affected and in my lifetime I cannot think of something so impactful.

When I read or hear stories about player transfers this summer like nothing has happened, people need to wake up to the enormity of what is happening around us.

With over 786,000 infected, nearly 38,000 deaths and large segments of the world in lockdown we need to realise that football cannot operate in a bubble. We maybe the eighth largest Club in the world by revenue according to the Deloitte survey but all that historical data is totally irrelevant as this virus has no boundaries.

The Club’s operations have effectively ceased, some of our fans will have lost their jobs and most will be worried about their future. Our sponsors will be concerned about their businesses and our media partners have no certainty when we may play games again or whether we will be allowed to play in front of our fans. In the meantime, the Club has an annual cost base running into hundreds of millions of pounds.

We have seen some of the biggest clubs in the world such as Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Juventus take steps to reduce their costs. Yesterday, having already taken steps to reduce costs, we ourselves made the difficult decision – in order to protect jobs – to reduce the remuneration of all 550 non-playing directors and employees for April and May by 20% utilising, where appropriate, the Government’s furlough scheme. We shall continue to review this position.

We hope the current discussions between the Premier League, PFA and LMA will result in players and coaches doing their bit for the football eco system.

I have no doubt we will get through this crisis but life will take some time to get back to normal. I hope we will never take for granted so many basic things such as getting off the train at Seven Sisters, walking along Tottenham High Road, entering our stadium with our family and friends, and buying a beer and pie ahead of watching Spurs play at home.

Many families will have lost loved ones, many businesses will have been destroyed, millions of jobs lost and many Clubs whether big or small may struggle to exist. It is incumbent on me as Chairman to ensure we do everything we can to protect our employees, our fans, our partners, our Club for future generations – and equally important – our wider community where we have such an immense sense of responsibility.

I wish everyone good health, a speedy return to normal life and watching Spurs at home in front of our fans. Stay safe.
 
I expect clubs to hand players for free in order to clear their books, and a lot of free agency.
 
Sorry no premier league football club should be allowed to use the furlough method. That includes you're cleaner or tea lady working at these clubs.

There money should come from the footballers and chairman. Not off the government.

He and all the players should take instant pay cuts, if that means 80-90% so be it.

By doing this method the average man will be punished with huge tax bills for decades to come.

It's always take take take with this guy. I have had enough of him.

The man is a first class ****.
 
At least he's taken a slight pay cut. Feels like a message to the players that they should be doing the same.
 
Sorry no premier league football club should be allowed to use the furlough method. That includes you're cleaner or tea lady working at these clubs.

There money should come from the footballers and chairman. Not off the government.

He and all the players should take instant pay cuts, if that means 80-90% so be it.

By doing this method the average man will be punished with huge tax bills for decades to come.

It's always take take take with this guy. I have had enough of him.

The man is a first class ****.




When you think of the PL awash with money, paying agents 40 mil for doing FA , players earning hundreds of thousands a week, then poncing off the government, it's obscene really.
 
Sorry no premier league football club should be allowed to use the furlough method. That includes you're cleaner or tea lady working at these clubs.

There money should come from the footballers and chairman. Not off the government.

He and all the players should take instant pay cuts, if that means 80-90% so be it.

By doing this method the average man will be punished with huge tax bills for decades to come.

It's always take take take with this guy. I have had enough of him.

The man is a first class ****.

The clubs are in negotiations with the PFA - I am told that so far, the PFA aren't being as accomodating as you'd expect.


"We hope the current discussions between the Premier League, PFA and LMA will result in players and coaches doing their bit for the football eco system."
 
Levy could take a pay cut from 7 mil to 5.5 mil, how is he going to cope ?

He only 7 mill because of the deferred 3mill bonus from the year before, his base is 4mill (highest paid director in the accounts), he'll drop 20% of that and the chances of him meeting any bonus criteria this financial year will be close on nil.

Everything's relative.

What I really want to see is the players and coaches agreeing to it now.
 
"The £3 million bonus was paid to Levy even though the new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium was delayed and opened in April 2019 instead of September 2018. The bonus was deferred from the previous year due to the delays; Levy’s pay increased by £1 million on the year before.

“The highest-paid director received remuneration of £4 million for the year in addition to the bonus deferred from the prior year of £3 million,” it says in the accounts.

The accounts, posted at Companies House, show that Spurs paid £25.6 million in interests to service the debt on the new stadium, but the club is benefiting from an extra £27 million in premium seating and sponsorship.

Tottenham’s total salary bill rose by 21 per cent compared to the season before, from £147.6 million to £178.6 million, partly fuelled by bonus payments to players for reaching the Champions League final.

Spurs remain comfortably the lowest payers among the big six: Manchester United are the top payers with a wage bill last season of £332 million, not far off double Tottenham’s. Arsenal, the club closest to Spurs in the “salary league table”, had a bill of £230 million.
 
He only 7 mill because of the deferred 3mill bonus from the year before, his base is 4mill (highest paid director in the accounts), he'll drop 20% of that and the chances of him meeting any bonus criteria this financial year will be close on nil.

Everything's relative.

What I really want to see is the players and coaches agreeing to it now.

When you say everything is relative does that mean his son being a relative and being lined up to take over ?
 
God forbid anyone should be rewarded for developing a billion pound stadium and in the process creating jobs, revitalizing a section of a major world city that badly needed it and in the process bringing up the property values of those that live around it.
 
Is a 75 % bonus on your wages a reasonable amount for delivering the stadium while taking your eye off the team development ?
 
Is a 75 % bonus on your wages a reasonable amount for delivering the stadium while taking your eye off the team development ?

I've heard that many times, but much of this cumulative bonus was set by the remuneration committee based on our finishing places over the set period - which was the previous 3 years as I recall.

Based on that and what the club gained from it (financially) he was fully entitled to it.
 
That 20% isn't gonna plug the hole, barely scratches the surface imo. There will be another wave of measures, especially the players' wages slashed or asked to forgo for a month or 2.