One man's fun is another man's financial impropriety.Originally Posted by higgins
I'm broadly with Stu on this one (if only because the fact that we agree on something will floor him.....![]()
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Chasing the dream is all very well, but more often than not it ends in disaster. Having clubs act like footballing versions of the mayfly - rising quickly from obscurity to glory, before withering back to obscurity a short time later - is not in the interests of the game overall. Leeds Utd tried it, and failed spectacularly. Numerous other clubs have tried it and failed as well.
The problem is that failure usually involves recourse to bankruptcy etc, which not only screws over creditors but also creates an extremely negative image of the game. We have enough of an image problem in Irish football without adding the circus of countless financial implosions to the heady mix.
Well-run businesses/football clubs may lack somehwat in glamour. They may preclude the overnight rise and fall of otherwise unfashionable teams (Drogheda ?). But they also don't distort the natural rules of competition with 'unnatural' financial behaviour, they don't creat an image of your industry as reckless, risky dangerous for outsiders to get involved in, and they don't feck off fans by seeing their teams go from glory to disaster in the blink of an eye-lid.
As for clubs beinfg adult in their attitude towards spending money !?!? There is something peculiarly intoxicating about football that makes otherwise sensible/shrewd people take thoroughly reckless financial risks - usally in pursuit of "the dream". This is truie the world over. When it comes to football, I'm afraid history has shown again and again that many individuals and clubs are incapable of acting in an "adult", prudent or sensible manner.
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