Neymar 06:34 - Aug 3 with 686 views | bwildered | Will earn £775k a week and £40m a year before tax ( do they pay any ). Nice to see the UEFA FFP working for the top clubs has usual . | |
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Neymar on 12:43 - Aug 3 with 676 views | durham_exile | According to the Times after tax he wil be paid £26,780,000 a year £515,000 a week £73,571 a day £3,065 an hour £51 per minute But will it make him happy? Messi will have to survive on only £500,000 per week Up the impoverished SuperU's | |
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Neymar on 12:55 - Aug 3 with 672 views | pwrightsknees |
Neymar on 12:43 - Aug 3 by durham_exile | According to the Times after tax he wil be paid £26,780,000 a year £515,000 a week £73,571 a day £3,065 an hour £51 per minute But will it make him happy? Messi will have to survive on only £500,000 per week Up the impoverished SuperU's |
It may or may not make him happy, but I can't see him turning it down. Safe travelling to those going to Accrington, by the way. Up the U's | | | |
Neymar on 13:07 - Aug 3 with 670 views | gerry_us |
Neymar on 12:43 - Aug 3 by durham_exile | According to the Times after tax he wil be paid £26,780,000 a year £515,000 a week £73,571 a day £3,065 an hour £51 per minute But will it make him happy? Messi will have to survive on only £500,000 per week Up the impoverished SuperU's |
But will it make him happy? Ecstatic I would think Peter. Suprised we didn't try for him! | | | |
Neymar on 13:33 - Aug 3 with 667 views | Leadbelly | In Spain a transfer involves the player himself paying the sum stipulated in the buyout clause to La Liga. Following completion of the transfer La Liga pays the selling club. In the case of Neymar, his lawyers have tried to pay La Liga £198m but they have rejected it. Rather amusing. PSG are supported by money from Qatar which, as we all know, is everyone's least favourite Gulf state at the moment. Other Gulf states have severed diplomatic ties with Qatar due to it alleged funding of terrorism and other equally public spirited activities. Sleep well Neymar. | |
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Neymar on 13:34 - Aug 3 with 667 views | durham_exile |
Neymar on 13:07 - Aug 3 by gerry_us | But will it make him happy? Ecstatic I would think Peter. Suprised we didn't try for him! |
Not sure we would have rated him Gerry Compared to Suarez and Messi he doesn't rate as highly Player games goals assists Suarez. 97 85 43 Messi. 97 99 36 Neymar. 90 51 29 Up the U's | |
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Neymar on 22:40 - Aug 3 with 635 views | wessex_exile |
Neymar on 13:07 - Aug 3 by gerry_us | But will it make him happy? Ecstatic I would think Peter. Suprised we didn't try for him! |
We could afford about an hour tops I reckon - but if it was the telling last 60 minutes of a play-off final, I reckon we'd be happy paying it? My point being if Neymar can get it, actually good luck to him - it's not his fault that he's a supremely talented footballer, it's the fault of a media-based system that craves success, and thus creates this level of demand in the first place. | |
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Neymar on 07:14 - Aug 4 with 619 views | noah4x4 | I wonder at what point insurers will say "no more"? I can't see the global reinsurance market having the inclination or capacity to support (say) £200m compensation payments should a SINGLE player's career be prematurely ended by death or injury. So if no fall-back of insurance, will clubs still be willing to invest such ridiculous sums? We already have a situation where it is alleged that Everton FC could be financially sustainable on zero crowds as TV money will suffice, but all external financial markets have capacity limits. At what point do shareholders of TV/media companies say "no more"? The recent BBC salary revelations are a simmering time-bomb. ECB has just woken up to the fact that an entire generation of kids have never seen televised cricket and the lack of terrestrial coverage is damaging the appeal of the game. It has hence been willing to accept lesser media payments to broaden its audience. I suspect football has stepped over a threshold where something wil eventually implode. But that will be a consequence of possibly unexpected external market forces. I actually think the financial prudence of Robbie Cowling has much to commend. [Post edited 4 Aug 2017 7:17]
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