Soccer Super Thread

(from another page)

Relegation explained and how it affects club:


If Tottenham Hotspur get relegated, here’s what it would actually happen to the team:
First, nothing happens instantly to contracts. Every player remains tied to the club. Relegation doesn’t cancel deals, they are still legally Spurs players.
However, the big change comes from money and ambition.
Spurs would lose a huge amount of revenue, especially from Premier League TV rights. Because of that, the club would need to reduce spending quickly. This is where player exits begin.
Top players would almost certainly leave. Not because they are forced to, but because:
• They want to keep playing at the highest level
• Other big clubs would come in for them
• Spurs would be open to selling to balance finances
Some players may also have relegation clauses in their contracts. These clauses can:
• Allow them to leave for a lower transfer fee
• Reduce their wages automatically
So even those who stay might earn less.
The squad would then start to change a lot. Spurs would rely more on:
• Younger players
• Squad players who stay
• Loan signings
And this is where it gets even tougher, coming back up is not guaranteed.
Because many of their best players would leave, the overall quality of the squad drops. Even though Spurs are a big club, the Championship is very competitive and physical, and without top talent, promotion becomes much harder.
In short — relegation doesn’t “remove” players, but it triggers a chain reaction:
➡️
Stars leave
➡️
Wages drop
➡️
Squad gets rebuilt
➡️
Promotion becomes more difficult
That’s why relegation is such a big risk, even for top clubs.

Big troubles for any club dropped ......
Let's hope WHU and Spurs find a way to both stay up
 
🚨
🎙️
Jose Mourinho on Tottenham Hotspur’s Relegation:


“Tottenham? They are a club with a disease. They sack the coaches who actually deliver. Pochettino gave them a Champions League final — gone. They did the same to me days before a cup final. And now? They win the Europa League after 17 years without silverware, thanks to Ange, and what do they do? Sack him 16 days later. No loyalty, no vision, just excuses and a big stadium. They betray the men who fight for them. One day this will catch up — maybe not relegation tomorrow, but they will keep falling until they learn: you don’t build success by destroying the winners.”

Hard to argue.
 
(from another page)

Relegation explained and how it affects club:


If Tottenham Hotspur get relegated, here’s what it would actually happen to the team:
First, nothing happens instantly to contracts. Every player remains tied to the club. Relegation doesn’t cancel deals, they are still legally Spurs players.
However, the big change comes from money and ambition.
Spurs would lose a huge amount of revenue, especially from Premier League TV rights. Because of that, the club would need to reduce spending quickly. This is where player exits begin.
Top players would almost certainly leave. Not because they are forced to, but because:
• They want to keep playing at the highest level
• Other big clubs would come in for them
• Spurs would be open to selling to balance finances
Some players may also have relegation clauses in their contracts. These clauses can:
• Allow them to leave for a lower transfer fee
• Reduce their wages automatically
So even those who stay might earn less.
The squad would then start to change a lot. Spurs would rely more on:
• Younger players
• Squad players who stay
• Loan signings
And this is where it gets even tougher, coming back up is not guaranteed.
Because many of their best players would leave, the overall quality of the squad drops. Even though Spurs are a big club, the Championship is very competitive and physical, and without top talent, promotion becomes much harder.
In short — relegation doesn’t “remove” players, but it triggers a chain reaction:
➡️
Stars leave
➡️
Wages drop
➡️
Squad gets rebuilt
➡️
Promotion becomes more difficult
That’s why relegation is such a big risk, even for top clubs.

Big troubles for any club dropped ......
And crowds drop off, not good when you’ve got a shiney new stadium, although our record there is atrocious.
There’s no upside, and no guarantee they’d bounce back up from the Championship.
But enough of this negative talk, as the Chinese say “ don’t die twice” so let’s focus on that potential miracle I mentioned last week.
A couple of surprise victories and we’re on our way. Lets start at home v Brighton this weekend.
🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞
Come on Ye Spurs !
 
And crowds drop off, not good when you’ve got a shiney new stadium, although our record there is atrocious.
There’s no upside, and no guarantee they’d bounce back up from the Championship.
But enough of this negative talk, as the Chinese say “ don’t die twice” so let’s focus on that potential miracle I mentioned last week.
A couple of surprise victories and we’re on our way. Lets start at home v Brighton this weekend.
🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞
Come on Ye Spurs !
Both WHU and Spurs fans need to cheer on Burnley this weekend as they vs Forest
 
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@full80


A dramatic turn of events at AAMI Park!
Eli Adams' late penalty seals a point for Newcastle Jets FC who edge closer to clinching the Premiership


Newcastle with one hand on the plate after draw in Melbourne​


Newcastle have gone one step closer to claiming the Premiers Plate after earning a point with a late equaliser against Melbourne Victory at AAMI Park.

Eli Adams and Charles Nduka both scored doubles in a tense match that saw momentum swing wildly a number of times throughout.

Newcastle weathered an early storm of Victory chances in the first 15 minutes, before hitting the front through Adams’ finish from outside the box on the counter.

Some patience from Jordi Valadon and Josh Rawlins in the second phase of play from a corner saw the ball find Nduka in behind the defence to tap-in the equaliser on the half-hour mark.



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After 25 years, Coventry are back in the Premier League.

It has been 9,113 days since they were relegated - by a 3-2 defeat at Aston Villa on 5 May 2001 - with the Sky Blues then tumbling to the brink.

After spending 11 years in the Championship, they were relegated to League One and fell into administration in 2013.

A return to the top was a distant dream amid the dramas of two groundshares with Northampton and Birmingham, a detested ownership in Sisu, multiple protests and parliamentary mentions.

Sky Blues fans organised marches while there were also pitch invasions against an ownership who sold to Doug King in 2023 after 13 years, during which the club dropped to the fourth tier for the first time in 59 years.

Their resurrection comes under Frank Lampard and, after sealing their promotion on Friday with a 1-1 draw at Blackburn, the Sky Blues can celebrate again.



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@BZN
@Dr_Ice
@Odessa


Millwall cruised to a comfortable 2-0 win over Queens Park Rangers in a London derby to maintain their push for automatic promotion to the Premier League.

The hosts led inside three minutes, with Derek Mazou-Sacko and Camiel Neghli scoring in a totally dominant first half.

Alex Neil's side made their intent clear right from kick-off and, by the time Mazou-Sacko stroked home his first goal for the Lions, QPR had barely had a kick.

Mazou-Sacko was the quickest to react to a loose ball on the edge of the area and placed his left-footed shot clinically beyond the dive of keeper Joe Walsh.

QPR's defence was being ripped apart, and when Neghli cut back to wrong-foot Jonathan Varane and curled into the corner, Millwall were well worthy of their two-goal lead and in total control after just 17 minutes.

The win moves them up to second place, with promotion rivals Ipswich Town and Middlesbrough facing off on Sunday.



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@kiwitiger



Wellington keep finals hopes alive with win that consigns Wanderers to first ever wooden spoon

Wellington Phoenix have kept their slim Isuzu UTE A-League finals hopes alive with a 2-1 win over Western Sydney Wanderers at Apollo Projects Stadium in Christchurch.

The result consigns Western Sydney to their first ever Isuzu UTE A-League wooden spoon, with the Wanderers five points behind Brisbane Roar with one game to play.

The Phoenix were the stronger side and deserving of the win, which was sealed via headed goals from talismanic striker Ifeanyi Eze and Japanese midfielder Kazuki Nagasawa, both of them assisted by Tim Payne.



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@happy_tiger


Melbourne City lock in finals spot with Marcus Younis inspired win over Brisbane​

Melbourne City have locked in a finals spot after another brilliant display from Marcus Younis led the reigning champions to a 3-2 win over Brisbane Roar at Suncorp Stadium.

Younis cemented City’s 12th consecutive finals campaign as well as his status as the most in-form player in the Isuzu UTE A-League with two goals in five second half minutes, the first of which cancelled out Justin Vidic’s 44th minute opener.

Mehden Memeti then scored off the bench to make the result safe for City in the 80th minute, before Youstin Salas put in a nomination for goal of the season with an amazing volley in stoppage time.




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@Halbrowne61
@tiger_one



Top two finish slips away from Sydney FC after fiery scoreless draw with Perth Glory​


Sydney FC now sit three points back from second-placed Auckland FC after only managing a point in a heated 0-0 draw against Perth Glory at Allianz Stadium.

After a slow start from both teams, the intensity and desperation over missed chances picked up culminating in frustration on the pitch.

Glory keeper Matt Sutton did well to keep the match at 0-0 on the 20 minute mark, first blocking Al Hassan Touré’s low shot then Alexandar Popović’s close range poke at goal from the subsequent corner.

Tensions boiled over when Rhyan Grant laid a two-footed challenge on Sam Sutton in the 35th minute, Nicholas Pennington then went into confront Grant before Alexandar Popović stepped in to defend his teammate. The end result was a yellow card for Grant and Sutton.

Jaiden Kucharski created a golden chance when he cut the ball back across the six-yard box for one of Gabriel Popović or Pennington to finish off, but neither could connect.



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