Nazario1985
Senior Member
He had every reason to believe Tebas would be willing to make some concessions though.
How ? like how ?
even if it was possible, after spitting in the face of Tebas with Perez's ESL shit he would be a moron to think that
He had every reason to believe Tebas would be willing to make some concessions though.
How ? like how ?
even if it was possible, after spitting in the face of Tebas with Perez's ESL shit he would be a moron to think that
Surely the politician thing to do is to keep Messi and accept that CVC deal and leave the financial disaster to the next president something which Bartomeu would have done. Here is how I see it , Laporta was hoping that Tebas would lift/relax those wage restrictions as La Liga was about to start , obviously that didn't work out so told Messi he couldn't sign him.
I just don't see the benefit of Laporta not wanting Messi.
Laporta wasn't interested in the CVC deal. His plan was always the Super League and is pushing for that even now, with Perez and Agnelli. They just get more money and have more control in a league created by them.
He had every reason to believe Tebas would be willing to make some concessions though. Every other big league has done just that. As he said in the press conference - they reached two different contract agreements with Messi and presented them to La Liga, who then rejected it. And the reason La Liga rejected it is because they want the CVC deal to go through and they were hoping to strong-arm Barca into accepting the deal so we could keep Messi. These specific nuances are not something Laporta could've predicted 5 months ago.
But Laporta wouldn't be here to reap the benefits of that compared to the CVC deal and him being considered a hero in Barcelona for keeping Messi.
But Laporta wouldn't be here to reap the benefits of that compared to the CVC deal and him being considered a hero in Barcelona for keeping Messi.
As far as I understood it, the Salary cap and the Sports payroll to revenue ratio are related. Meaning it's not a fixed number, but a percentage of what they make. Wether that's the 65-70% threeshold Laporta talked about though I'm not sure.
Laporta also spoke about the fact that this does not only include wages but also amortizations, which means (quoting some else)
So that's another issue.
Considering they are Arsenal and not 10th place from an actual competetive POV it means they are outperforming the relative expectations. And Arsenal isn't even a club that actually just relies on calm transfer windows and solutions from within. They are spending crazy and have barely had much youth coming since prime Wenger days. (which were also the days they were actually most succesful).
If you want to translate the example to another club, take Madrid for example who haven't been spending for several years and trusted in the squad that was already there, yet maintained top positions.
Not every time a club goes busy in a window, it has actually improved.
[MENTION=1732]jamrock[/MENTION] of course a transfer ban is a less worse than what Barca faces right now. But the point I'm trying to emphasize is how other top teams did not suddenly fall from grace because they decieded to rely on internal solutions for a temporary phase. Neither competetively nor from a marketing perspective. Barca as it is can not afford new signings, as they can hardly even afford to register the squad that already exists.
People here are going to tell me how boring it would be to abandon the chase of 'big stars' on the top of the market and rely on internal fixes. But this is the reality, and people have to face it. Competing for the top finishes and CL titles is realistically not a feasible target. And accepting that reality does mean to bend over to mediocrity, it means that you are willing to eat dirt to get back into the driver seat healthy as quickly as possible.
New spectacular signings are a cool thing. But Barca simply can't afford to register them right now as it probably seems. So even with 4 signings made, they might in the end not actually play a single competetive game. And yet they cost double digit millions in wages at a club that's already drowning in debt and FFP issues. It's time to accept that the club has to acknowledged the looming disaster, set realistic goals, make realistic transfers and stop talking about being one of the worlds greatest 3 clubs.
Shit hit the fan and this is where we are at.
I agree with you re competing for CL titles & signing big stars that's done for a while, but I do think we have to make a effort at it in the league, even if we don't win it.