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Author Topic: Norwich season ticket sales  (Read 4140 times)
ronnie21

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« Reply #15 on: Wednesday, May 13, 2009, 07:20:21 »

Chairman and chief executive both resign!!  Local paper reporting that the chief exec. was on £180,000 per year - that's a damn sight more than the prime minister!  Methinks Norwich are in deep shit financially.
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Summerof69

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« Reply #16 on: Wednesday, May 13, 2009, 08:34:00 »

They are. There was talk of an investor last season, but they pulled out at the last minute.

Don't worry, Delia can write another cook book to get some money in.
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STFC_Gazza

« Reply #17 on: Wednesday, May 13, 2009, 09:31:22 »

I think norwich will win the league next year. Can't wait until that cunt Cureton comes back here!!! Not that he gets a game these days but....
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Sippo
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« Reply #18 on: Wednesday, May 13, 2009, 09:32:45 »

I'd love it if she came on the pitch at half time pissed up against us...
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Fred Elliot
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« Reply #19 on: Wednesday, May 13, 2009, 09:49:04 »

They are. There was talk of an investor last season, but they pulled out at the last minute.

Don't worry, Delia can write another cook book to get some money in.

A damn sight better than pulling out of Delia at the last minute !
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oxford_fan

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« Reply #20 on: Thursday, May 14, 2009, 22:41:39 »

East Anglia and Naaarch is a one-off market as has been mentioned elsewhere, but they still deserve credit for shifting that many and so soon.

If you live in Norwich and support Norwich chances are you have a season ticket because nobody ever leaves the county. Many residents have never in their life left the four square miles which they inhabit.

How were Man City's season ticket sales when they plummeted a few years ago? Pretty good?
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SCM

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« Reply #21 on: Friday, May 15, 2009, 12:28:45 »

I think norwich will win the league next year. Can't wait until that cunt Cureton comes back here!!! Not that he gets a game these days but....
I don't. Bryan Gunn's clueless and they're gonna lose their best players:- Hoolahan, Clinghan, Russell.

They'll finish mid-table at best.
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Spencer_White

« Reply #22 on: Friday, May 15, 2009, 13:37:53 »

I don't. Bryan Gunn's clueless and they're gonna lose their best players:- Hoolahan, Clinghan, Russell.

They'll finish mid-table at best.

Agree 100%. They could be down for a while.

I think Charlton have the best chance of bouncing back up.
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Don Rogers Shop

« Reply #23 on: Friday, May 15, 2009, 14:37:30 »

If southampton do not get and experienced players i can see them really struggling.
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Doore

« Reply #24 on: Monday, May 18, 2009, 00:55:45 »

I think what we are seeing is essentially a fall out of the financial free for all of the late 90s, early 2000s.  The winners of this period are now what we have come to know as the "big four" - and isn't football more boring for this.  The losers are the clubs that tried to buy in to it and failed - hence us seeing Norwich, Southampton, Charlton, and of course Leeds down with us.

before anyone says that relegation from the premier league will inevitably lead to financial problems, see WBA.  OK, maybe a yoyo club, but properly run and consistently stable. 
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Bob's Orange
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« Reply #25 on: Monday, May 18, 2009, 10:33:04 »

I think what we are seeing is essentially a fall out of the financial free for all of the late 90s, early 2000s.  The winners of this period are now what we have come to know as the "big four" - and isn't football more boring for this.  The losers are the clubs that tried to buy in to it and failed - hence us seeing Norwich, Southampton, Charlton, and of course Leeds down with us.

before anyone says that relegation from the premier league will inevitably lead to financial problems, see WBA.  OK, maybe a yoyo club, but properly run and consistently stable. 

Being a Yoyo club at least brings its share of success and failure. Imagine the elation Baggies fans must have felt a few seasons back when they were the first club to survive relegation despite being bottom at Christmas. And then again winning promotion back to the Premiership.
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Phil_S

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« Reply #26 on: Monday, May 18, 2009, 10:40:26 »

I'd rather be a yo yo club than a mid table club with nothing to play for every year.
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« Reply #27 on: Monday, May 18, 2009, 11:03:44 »

I think what we are seeing is essentially a fall out of the financial free for all of the late 90s, early 2000s.  The winners of this period are now what we have come to know as the "big four"

I guess so.

Technically aren't Man U in something like 3/4 billion of debt, and Liverpool something like 400 million in debt.

I guess the point is with their income and assets they can at least maintain their debt levels and service their interest charges.
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