Not true. Stadium opened in April 2019.
Net spend
16/17: -€31.2
17/18: -€17.2M
18/19: +€5.3M
19/20: -€86.0M
20/21: -€97.2M
21/22: -€61.3M
22/23: -€141.2M
23/24: -€151.4M
24/25: -€120.1M
In dieser Statistik werden die Transferbilanzen der letzten fünf bzw. zehn Jahre der Vereine der Premier League miteinander verglichen.
www.transfermarkt.us
Annual Wage Bill
16/17: £71.3M
17/18: £80.4M
18/19: £90.5M
19/20: £106.4M
20/21: £135.8M
21/22: £110.4M
22/23: £117.0M
23/24: £132.2M
24/25: £104.8M
Capology | Football Salaries & Finances
www.capology.com
There has been a very noticeable and significant uptick in spending since the opening of the stadium directly related to the increased revenue created by the stadium. Many of Levy's detractors/critics haven't evolved with the new ecosystem.
The biggest problem hasn't been spending. It's be wasteful spending. Poor scouting. Buying square pegs.
so let’s say to keep it simple wages were going up by 10% a year in the old stadium (and to Wembley which we paid a high rent for) looking at your figures , seems a reasonable and in fact conservative ( 16-20 is more than 10% each year ) assumption. I know, I know Wembley , but the rent was a big negative on income .
Let’s look at the new stadium where logically there should be similar wage inflation, every other big club is suffering wage inflation it seems.
20-21 initial spike to 135 million
21-22 should be 148 million is only 110 million
22-23 148M should increase to 163M is only 117 million
23-24 163M should now be 179M is only132M
24-25 179M should now be 197M but is a paltry 104M
Based on the very conservative 10% annual increment that one might expect in such a competitive market for quality players salaries we have actually underpaid by
38M
46M
47M
And last but not least a staggering 93M
Giving a total squeeze on salaries of 224M
25-26 season salaries based on 10% increase should be roughly 217M. This figure is a staggering more than 100% increase on this seasons salaries .
Let’s not pretend they are investing , they are spending on players to repair the damage their incompetence has caused , but slashing salaries to try and offset the spend .
This is my opinion of their strategy admittedly , but in my view the numbers based on your figures allowing for wage inflation back it up
If I did it on actual real percentages annually 16-20 instead of the conservative 10% the squeeze would be far greater , but I wanted to keep the math simple.
Finally , to negate the but Wembley argument . If someone else can be arsed to do it please feel free . Take the 71.3M salaries last year in the old stadium pre Wembley and increase it at an extremely conservative 5% per annum for 8 years , I suspect the figure will be similar to and maybe slightly above what we paid in salaries last year . This paints a very clear picture of the business model, allowing for inflation salaries similar to that in the old stadium
Edit : I just did it , if we had never built the stadium and salaries went up by 5% from last year at the old stadium the figure would be 105.3m this season , so 500k more than this season in the new stadium .
Lol , the new stadium will allow us to compete
Back of the net as Alan Partridge might say , the prosecution rests