Sky_Blue_Dreamer
Well-Known Member
Even if the premier league gave everyone else in the football league another 5m each per season on average (staggered/divided up however you like), all it would do is cause wage inflation and end up in footballers pockets again, and you'd have the same battle between clubs trying to get in the higher leagues to get the bigger bucks and again spending above their means to do it. You'd still get clubs going pop.
You need salary caps if anything is going to change really, and I think it's too late for that now because of the power of the premier league.
Bit of a pie in the sky idea but - the only way the premier league would lose any power is if the rest of the EFL broke away and got rid of promotion to that league and relegation from it. Would kill the competition in the prem for everyone cemented outside of the top 7.
The Championship is more entertaining in my view anyway...
That would be a ballsy move, and probably one the PL would agree with. I think the initial reaction from fans, even those of the lower clubs, would be "great, no worry of relegation" but after a few years of constantly being at the bottom and losing more than winning even with spending £100m+ on transfers and £100k+ a week on salaries it'd get dull for them. It got pretty dull for us after 30 odd years and was only made bearable by some exciting relegation scraps - they wouldn't even have those.
Plus they'd have the danger in the American system - start a season badly and the players just give up and tank - there's no incentive to try as they won't be relegated.
It could be better long term but would result in a short term loss. That's why the EFL club chairman and owners wouldn't go for it - most of them are there for the PL pot of gold - take it away and they're not interested. Clubs would be devalued without it so their investments would be worth less. They're certainly more bothered about the £ in their pocket rather than the future of the game
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