Home Hunts Sandman Hotel Newcastle

Business Directory

Browse the Directory

Sign Up to the Directory

Sports CRM Summit 2012

Arsenal, an example to follow according to UEFA

Wed 12th Jan 2011 | Money & Finance

Arsenal Football Club have been held as an example of a well run club by UEFA after it published its third club licensing benchmarking report on European club football.

The European Club Footballing Landscape covers financial results from nearly 650 top-division clubs from UEFA's 53 member national associations.

And it doesn’t make good reading for the majority of clubs.

With Arsenal being identified as an example of best practice, other clubs are being warned they must bring their costs under control after the report revealed how player wages increased faster than club income.

UEFA’s Financial Fair Play regulations come into force next season and under their new rules, clubs will face possible bans from European competition from the 2014/15 season if they spend more than they earn over a three-year period.

UEFA's general secretary Gianni Infantino held up Arsenal as an example of a well-run club who have boosted their income without ever overspending.

He said: "Ten years ago Arsenal reported less income than Chelsea, Liverpool and Newcastle. Now it is more than those clubs and in 2009 more than double Newcastle's.

"This shows what is possible with good management and careful investment.

"What kind of healthy business model is it to wait for a knight rider on a horse with a lot of money to throw around and then one day jump back on his horse and ride away?"

Infantino admitted the new rules are targeted at the amount spent by clubs on players' wages.

"It is about better cost management, in particular the wages of players - it is an indirect salary cap."

Manchester City's recent £121million losses mean they are the club in England facing the greatest difficulty to abide by the rules - even though owners are also allowed to inject £12million a year (15m euro) into their side.

They are one of 11 clubs competing in Europe this season that would fall foul of the rules were they in force now.

Leading Italian clubs also face problems but UEFA president Michel Platini said whatever their stature, the European governing body would not hesitate to take action.

Platini, speaking at UEFA's headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, said: "If a club doesn't fall in line and follow the same rules as everyone else then it will be time to face the music.

"Certainly it is not something we want to see.

"Our objective is not to put clubs into financial difficulty. Financial fair play is to help them escape from this devilish spiral and have a viable economic strategy in the long term. I will leave no stone unturned to do this.

"This is not a witch-hunt, this is so they no longer continue blindly and mindlessly."

Manchester City have already sent officials to meet UEFA about complying with the financial rules.

Andrea Traverso, UEFA's head of licensing, said: "We are in talks with the club - they are aware of the rules and they probably have a strategy to raise their income.

"They have been to see us and they are confident that they can manage this challenge."

 

RETURN TO LATEST NEWS SECTION

 

SUBSCRIBE TO THE F.C. BUSINESS RSS FEED

 

If you have any football business related news stories you’d like to share then please contact us – agourley@fcbusiness.co.uk or ryan@fcbusiness.co.uk

Add to: Google Google | Yahoo Yahoo | Live Live | del.icio.us del.icio | Digg Digg |

Related Articles

Manchester City 'best value for money' for fans

Tue 22nd May 2012 | Money & Finance

Manchester City have won the Premier League title and are also top of the league of value for fans, according to the ING Direct Value table. The bank chart compares club season ticket costs with...

Manchester United remain world's most valuable football brand

Tue 22nd May 2012 | Money & Finance

Manchester United remain the world’s most valuable football brand with a value of €672.9 million (£543m), despite ending the 2011-12 campaign without a trophy. The Brand Finance...

Gold welcomes financial benefits

Mon 21st May 2012 | Money & Finance

David Gold admits West Ham would have been in big financial trouble had they failed to make an immediate return to the Premier League. Gold reckons that Ricardo Vaz Te's goal three minutes from time...

Liverpool Count Cost Of Stadium Ambitions

Thu 3rd May 2012 | Money & Finance

Liverpool’s latest accounts show the true extent of Hicks and Gillett’s troubled tenure with over £35m wasted on the failed Stanley Park project. In an interview on the club’s...