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What is the credit crisis going to do to league in 2009?

coach

Guest
Messages
1,431
If you have not already read Jeff Walls column (Off the Wall) here on League Unlimited then I suggest you do so. It is a well written piece about if our game will survive the financial crisis.

For some time I have been asking the question will sport survive the finacial crisis? Like it or not sport is not imune from what is going on at the moment.

There is no guarantees that the NRL will survive or at least in its current format of 16 teams. In my opinion come 2010 we will not have a 16 team competition. As Jeff mentions in his column most if not all league clubs are already suffering financially and this is before the financial crisis really has impact on mainstream Australia. Really would not surprise me if some leagues clubs go under or at best cut back what money they give football clubs.

Will fans be able to afford to attend games? Will they be able to afford to buy supporters gear? Will companies be able to afford to continue sponsoring teams?

Jeff in his column talks about the NBL team the Cairns Taipans, who are in severe financial trouble. I don't expect them to be that last basketball team to get in to trouble. Would not surprise oif the NBL goes under and soon.

Formula one racing is another sport that is really feeling it. FIA and the racing teams have reached an agreement on cost cutting measures. A story broke in the USA yesterday about Arena Football League and the real chance that sport will not run its competition next year. While the AFL is not a major player in the US sports field it is still a multi-million dollar sport. The NFL, the USA's biggest richest most popular sport has had to put off staff.

Times are tough and they will get tougher.
 

Rockin Ronny

Juniors
Messages
1,769
There is one simple rule of business that is often breached - and then all hell breaks loose. Do not pay what you can't afford.

The game needs to keep player payments at reasonable levels. Player managers need to be restrained significantly to achieve this. The game is being cheated of key revenue for as long as News Limited effectively negotiates with itself on TV rights.

If a club is still unable to raise the money required to field a competitive team, then that club must fold - or a 2nd tier comp is established to enable that club to rebuild and aim again for the top tier.

None of this will happen while News Limited bleeds the game of every spare cent to repay its investment and props up clubs like the Storm. It also doesn't help when most club executives are good at downing schooners but are completely useles when it comes to raising millions of dollars from the corporate sector.

If a genuine"criteria" was done now, I would be surprised if more than 3 clubs were anything but basketcases.

meanwhile, the NRL finds every excuse it can to prevent a Singo-backed CC Bears team coming on board. Idiots.
 

kbw

Bench
Messages
2,502
Clubs will use this crap to cut costs and reduce junior funding, its an easy excuse for things they are trying to do anyway.
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,870
Another Millenium bug scenario? Lots of doom and gloom, plenty of people and companies make a lot of money out of the impending disaster and low and behold it wasn't as bad as first thought!
 

Moffo

Referee
Messages
23,986
Another Millenium bug scenario? Lots of doom and gloom, plenty of people and companies make a lot of money out of the impending disaster and low and behold it wasn't as bad as first thought!

so, do you know how many companies around the world have gone bust in the last 12 months? I can assure you its no millenium bug scenario, its here, its happening around you, we have to deal with it. the head in the sand/ignorant approach will get us nowhere
 

Cockadoodledoo

First Grade
Messages
5,045
so, do you know how many companies around the world have gone bust in the last 12 months? I can assure you its no millenium bug scenario, its here, its happening around you, we have to deal with it. the head in the sand/ignorant approach will get us nowhere

Moffo is 100% correct here.. Anyone who thinks this is going to go away in a hurry with minimal impact on the NRL or other sports is kidding.
 

VictoryFC

Bench
Messages
3,786
Well, it wont have an impact on a club in the way that it might a soccer club for example. NRL clubs aren't reliant on credit from banks for loans the way a soccer club might be. As for hitting its fans, then yeah that could have some impact, but ultimately that all depends on how Australia deals with the economic pressures and whether it can prevent the damage that is being inflicted on other nations so far
 

morley101

Juniors
Messages
1,025
Already having an effect on Rugby in Britain..


TWO clubs could face the axe from the English Premiership as recession takes its toll.
Poor attendances and difficult trading conditions are forcing the owners of England's top rugby clubs to consider a cut in the number of teams. At a recent meeting of owners and chairmen, proposals were discussed for a 10-team league which might start next season.
Bristol, with average home attendances this season of 7776, are especially vulnerable, and insiders say the club needs to find additional funds of £1 million ($2.3 million) to pay players' wages. Newcastle, where home attendances have shrunk to 5298, are also in trouble despite a recent deal in which their ground was sold.
"It's fairly common knowledge that one or two clubs are finding it difficult," Harlequins chief executive Mark Evans said. "Rugby union cannot expect to be immune from what is happening in the wider world. We're at the stage where we don't know the extent of the downturn. I'm not at all surprised that we're starting to have some chatter about a 10-man league."
Even the big clubs in the 12-team premiership are experiencing difficulties. The champions, Wasps, declared a loss of £2.8m last year and will announce a deficit of about £2m this year. Bath recently posted a shortfall of £375,000. Leicester's principal sponsor has shed jobs, and the company that produces their match programs is out of business.
"If I were a player and somebody offered me a new contract, I wouldn't go round saying: 'You've got to pay me an extra £20,000.' I'd sign it like a shot tomorrow because I suspect we've seen salaries hit their peak," Leicester's chairman Peter Tom said.
Martin Johnson's England may be a long-term beneficiary of the difficulties. One initiative floated at the owners' meeting was to renegotiate the eight-year deal with the Rugby Football Union. The idea is to get rid of promotion and relegation thereby avoiding the costly parachute payment to the relegated club, and reducing the need to buy expensive foreign players to avoid the drop. Johnson and the RFU would benefit from a greater proportion of England-qualified players in the smaller league.
The Telegraph, London
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
69,870
The idea is to get rid of promotion and relegation thereby avoiding the costly parachute payment to the relegated club, and reducing the need to buy expensive foreign players to avoid the drop.
The Telegraph, London

Still following the lead of RL!:D

How on earth are Wasps surviving with deficitis like that??
 

KalgoorlieRed

Juniors
Messages
2,014
We keep hearing of certain sponsors going into administration or bust, so would mergers be on the table again?
 

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