LFC2007 wrote:That's a ridiculous statement. The Manc's had Ronaldo, another world class player in the making already in place; why then if you are using it to assess the situation Rafa faced at the time, would you remove him from your assessment? The same goes for Van Nistelrooy, Keane, Heinze and Saha. They also signed Rooney in the summer of 2004, a signing made possible by the fact they were minted, whereas Rafa had just inherited our record signing in Cisse and had his best striker in Owen, declare his intentions to leave.
LFC2007 wrote:I know, but you've omitted those who are no longer at top four clubs, as well as those who've moved abroad or who are retired. If your aim is to provide a fair assessment of the teams at a particular point in time, why not just provide the complete list?
fivecups wrote:I've listed what I think are players Rafa sold who were Houllliers. The total for them is £43,750,00 (done in my head).
1. Danny Murphy Charlton £2,500,000 10.08.2004
2. Michael Owen Real Madrid £8,500,000* 14.08.2004
3. El Hadji Diouf Bolton £3,500,000 15.06.2005
4. Alou Diarra Lens £2,000,000 23.06.2005
5. Milan Baros Aston Villa £6,500,000 23.08.2005
6. Zak Whitbread Millwall £200,000 13.06.2006
7. Djimi Traore Charlton £2,000,000 09.08.2006
8. Neil Mellor Preston £500,000 30.08.2006
9. Chris Kirkland Wigan Ath. £3,500,000* 27.10.2006
10. Darren Potter Wolves £250,000* 18.01.2007
11. Stephen Warnock Blackburn £1,500,000 22.01.2007
12. Florent S.-Pongolle Recreativo de Huelva£2,700,000 04.05.2007
13. Danny O' Donnell Crewe £100,000 13.06.2007
14. Djibril Cissé Marseille £6,000,000 09.07.2007
15. John Arne Riise AS Roma £4,000,000 01.07.2008
16. Anthony Le Tallec Le Mans Undisclosed 02.07.2008
Total: £43,750,000
s@int wrote:TRANSFERS
Year ending 1999
£32.2m Gross Expenditure
£6.8m Gross Income
£25.4m Net Expenditure
Year ending 2000
£20.1m Gross Expenditure
£5m Gross Income
£15.1m Net Expenditure
Year ending 2001
£20.5m Gross Expenditure
£13.7m Gross Income
£6.7m Net Expenditure
Year ending 2002
£38.8m Gross Expenditure
£15.4m Gross Income
£23.4m Net Expenditure
Year ending 2003
£16.9m Gross Expenditure
£4.7m Gross Income
£12.2m Net Expenditure
Year ending 2004
£19.2m Gross Expenditure
£2.3m Gross Income
£16.9m Net Expenditure
Year ending 2005
£46.1m Gross Expenditure
£13.2m Gross Income
£32.9m Net Expenditure
Year ending 2006
£41.7m Gross Expenditure
£16.8m Gross Income
£24.9m Net Expenditure
Year ending 2007
£70.0m Gross Expenditure
£26.0m Gross Income
£44.0m Net Expenditure
Total between 1st August 1999 and 31st July 2007
£305.4m Gross Expenditure
£103.9m Gross Income
£201.5m Net Expenditure
Between 1st August 2004 and 31st July 2007 LFCs transfer dealings were
£157.8m Gross expenditure
£55.9m gross income
£101.9m net expenditure
Since then can only be an estimate given some of the unknowns (Mascherano, Riera and Keane fees).
Figures ripped from RAWK supplied by TTNBD (He uses actual Liverpool accounts to obtain information)
red187 wrote:Ok so I thought the best way to illustrate my point would be to show the squad Rafa inherited and his current one, the arguement is that Rafa has wasted the money given to him, I sorry but looking at the squad lists, man for man it is a better squad than the one that was left when Rafa took over. Net and gross spend figures don't reflect the main issue, we are in a better position than five years ago.
GOALKEEPERS
JERZY DUDEK PEPE REINA
CHRIS KIRKLAND DIEGO CAVALIERI
PATRICE LUZI PETER GULACSI
DEFENDERS
SAMI HYYPIA DANIEL AGGER
STEPHANE HENCHOZ MARTIN SKRTEL
JAMIE CARRAGHER JAMIE CARRAGHER
STEVE FINNAN GLEN JOHNSON
JOHN ARNE RIISE FABIO AURELIO
DJIMI TRAORE EMILIANO INSUA
ALOU DIARRA SOTIRIOS KYRGIAKOS
JOHN WELSH PHILLIP DEGEN
JON OTSEMBOR ANDREA DOSSENA
ZAK WHITBREAD MARTIN KELLY
DANIEL AYALA
MIDFIELDERS
STEVEN GERRARD STEVEN GERRARD
HARRY KEWELL ALBERT RIERA
DIETMAR HAMANN ALBERTO AQUILANI
DANNY MURPHY YOSSI BENAYOUN
VLADIMIR SMICER JAVIER MACHERANO
SALIF DIAO RYAN BABEL
IGOR BISCAN LUCAS LEIVA
RICHIE PARTRIDGE DAVID AMOO
BRUNO CHEYROU JAY SPEARING
DARREN POTTER DAMIEN PLESSIS
MICHAEL FOLEY-SHERIDAN NABIL EL ZHAR
DANIEL SJOLUND
ATTACKERS
MICHAEL OWEN FERNANDO TORRES
EL HADJI DIOUF DIRK KUYT
MILAN BAROS DAVID NGOG
ANTHONY LE TALLEC ANDRIY VORONIN
FLORENT SINAMA PONGOLLE KRISTIAN NEMETH
NATHAN ECCLESTON
Pick the best eleven from both squads and I think anyone here would be hard pressed to make a case for the 2004/05 team beating the 2008/09 team on a regular basis.
Lets suppose for a second we could take five years of the 2004/05 squad apart from the players still in the squad how many would make it into our first team. As I see it depending on formation maybe Owen Riise and Smicer on a good day.
LFC2007 wrote:made in UK wrote:Then without a source your pie in the sky statement is bollox really. Considering this thread has many posters who find statements from all over the web that do not correlate with one anothers about our 'net spend'. It would be appropriate to find out whether your source (and that is of course if you had one) is/was reliable about our wages, obviously not though.
'Passing fan' thats a bit rich coming from LFC2007
You clearly haven't understood my post, so i'll simplify.
If you think the argument that Chelsea's ability to spend more on wages than ourselves can only have put us at a disadvantage in the transfer market amounts to 'pie in the sky', you must be a complete f'ucking tool.
Cue the thought police.
fivecups wrote:LFC2007 wrote:That's a ridiculous statement. The Manc's had Ronaldo, another world class player in the making already in place; why then if you are using it to assess the situation Rafa faced at the time, would you remove him from your assessment? The same goes for Van Nistelrooy, Keane, Heinze and Saha. They also signed Rooney in the summer of 2004, a signing made possible by the fact they were minted, whereas Rafa had just inherited our record signing in Cisse and had his best striker in Owen, declare his intentions to leave.
I suppose it fits best with net spend.
A common discussion on here goes:
- We've spent more money under Rafa than United or Arsenal.
Someone else then says:
- We'll the other teams had most of their players in place before Rafa came so of course they've spent less.
It's useful from that point of view.
fivecups wrote:LFC2007 wrote:I know, but you've omitted those who are no longer at top four clubs, as well as those who've moved abroad or who are retired. If your aim is to provide a fair assessment of the teams at a particular point in time, why not just provide the complete list?
I think that's in this thread somewhere, I was planning to bring it forward like some of the other more useful posts (they're interspersed with pages of classic Gybs/LegBarnes). Players who have left clubs are already accounted for in net spend (accepting that some of them will have left for nothing and others for massive amounts).
As always theres no one parameter that tells the whole story, but it's useful to put some agreed lists/numbers together to help the debate.
LFC2007 wrote:fivecups wrote:LFC2007 wrote:I know, but you've omitted those who are no longer at top four clubs, as well as those who've moved abroad or who are retired. If your aim is to provide a fair assessment of the teams at a particular point in time, why not just provide the complete list?
I think that's in this thread somewhere, I was planning to bring it forward like some of the other more useful posts (they're interspersed with pages of classic Gybs/LegBarnes). Players who have left clubs are already accounted for in net spend (accepting that some of them will have left for nothing and others for massive amounts).
As always theres no one parameter that tells the whole story, but it's useful to put some agreed lists/numbers together to help the debate.
Cheers mate - I couldn't work out what use the list would have in conjunction with net spend figures. Anyway, I've sussed why I couldn't and it's because it doesn't make for an accurate comparison between the clubs.
The sale of Ronaldo reduces the net spend figure of the Manc's by £80m , yet he isn't included in the list of Man U players who were already in place upon Rafa's arrival. If that £80m is to be used in the overall net spend comparisons, then so should the fact that he was an asset that was already in place prior to Rafa's arrival, because that fact demonstrates that it was far from a level playing field when Rafa arrived. His subsequent influence in their successes proves this.
Looking at it chronologically avoids such distortions.
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