Freez wrote:That’s your opinion, maybe he stays because he is loyal and wants to see the job through??
Just a thought.
And the budget was supposedly up by 15% according to our new owners, quoted in the Visitor.
However, talk to the other directors, there has been no increase on last season, despite this claim.
It’s a shit show.
Freez wrote:As for the budget, perhaps that’s the entire football staff?
BerlinWaller wrote:So when the new owners said and then reiterated that this seasons budget is bigger than last seasons at the pre season fans forum, they were lying?
Shrimpy123 wrote:Freez wrote:As for the budget, perhaps that’s the entire football staff?
So in a total wage bill of £2m, you think £1m+ is non-football staff? Some expensive pie servers there (when there is any left).
marky No.1 wrote:Shrimpy123 wrote:Freez wrote:As for the budget, perhaps that’s the entire football staff?
So in a total wage bill of £2m, you think £1m+ is non-football staff? Some expensive pie servers there (when there is any left).
I have to agree with that, well said, something doesn't quite add up. Without working it out, is the difference about 60 full time staff on living wage
OLDHAMADE wrote:The club has suffered all ends up since that fateful move from Christie park, somehow it was the best of everything and much more suited both in its location and held massive attachment to the folk who live and work in this town on low money,
Who knows? Jim might have had far greater success on the pitch at C.P in that very unwelcoming, intimidating fortress away sides hated but instead he's on a hiding to nothing at a ground I very much doubt many managers would find success at, in all of its majestic hollow pointless appearance.
Gone_Shrimping wrote:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lcs3JG90nZc
Posh wrote:The sooner we get a local owner with community ethics, like an Andy Holt, we can become a better club.
steve mfc wrote:According to some people on here the playing budget for last season was lower than the previous season however this was proven to be untrue when the accounts were distributed to the shareholders at the AGM.
KenH wrote:Posh wrote:The sooner we get a local owner with community ethics, like an Andy Holt, we can become a better club.
No point in hoping for something that's unlikely to happen. PMG had it on the market for a few years and the "rich local owner" never appeared, so why do you think someone is just around the corner now? We have new owners who are keeping the club afloat, which is an achievement in itself. We have the fans' preferred joint chairmen running it. We have loyal staff, we have Jim and Ken, we have Drummy and a good youth/academy set up. We have a new stadium with massive earning potential. It's time for the management to step up, take ownership/responsibility of their roles, and take advantage of a couple of years of financial stability to make a start on improving things. Carrying on feeling sorry for ourselves, limping along as whipping boys of L2, empty hospitality rooms most days of the week, Jim aiming to grind out draws, just waiting for someone rich to splash the cash ISN'T a viable option. In fact, if there was an end to the ridiculous "little old Morecambe" rubbish and a new "can do" attitude around the place, things may improve and we may attract the attention of the mythical "Mr Rich".
CityShrimp wrote:I agree about the ‘defeatist attitude’ comments.
I normally hate the constant comparisons with what Coleman has achieved at Accy, but positivity is a big difference between Jim and Coleman.
Jim chooses to play himself and the team down, to manage expectations which in a way is fair enough. But John Coleman, in exactly the same boat, always gives you the impression that he expects his team to win, whether the opposition is a Sunday league side or Man City. It works.
We do have a good team. And this season we’ve played good football, yet we don’t win games. I really think that the Morecambe sides of years gone by have had much less quality in the ranks and yet they were competitive and achieved safety each season.
The problem is mental - we just aren’t ‘winners’. I do wonder if that is coming from the manager. We go out, play some decent football, go a goal down and then heads drop and we don’t recover. How many times have we made a late comeback in a game, like the 4-3 against Crewe? That spirit in the team isn’t there any more.
marky No.1 wrote:"If you wanted a David and Goliath you would say Man United and it would always be Accrington Stanley. As of late, we are not that. We are trying to get away from that.” A second FA Cup fourth-round appearance in three seasons and a remarkable title triumph in between illustrates the progress made. “Oh I don’t want that to be the end,” adds Coleman on winning League Two last year. “You should always strive to be better.”
Preparations are under way for Saturday’s visit of Derby County on the morning The Guardian takes a look behind the scenes at the Wham Stadium. A commercial deal is being struck to hire digital advertising screens to go around the perimeter of the pitch. They will generate extra revenue on top of the £150,000 for being live on BT Sport and will be removed on Sunday.
Last season Accrington won League Two on the second-smallest budget in the division, posting a modest profit as they did so. This season, with the lowest budget in League One, they sit 14th. A club that was once synonymous with financial failure and averages gates of 2,850 is now self-sufficient, debt-free and owns its own ground.
KenH wrote:Posh wrote:The sooner we get a local owner with community ethics, like an Andy Holt, we can become a better club.
No point in hoping for something that's unlikely to happen. PMG had it on the market for a few years and the "rich local owner" never appeared, so why do you think someone is just around the corner?
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