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Steve@Mose
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Topic: Seven Premiership clubs are balance sheet... Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 11:31 |
It feels like Groundhog Day every time an article like this gets published.
Seven Premiership clubs are balance sheet insolvent, finance report warns
Seven of the 10 English Premiership clubs are balance sheet insolvent, according to an independent financial industry report which has prompted a stark warning that unless the sport embraces change it is “heading for a precipice”.
A comprehensive study analysing the financial sustainability of all the Premiership sides, unveiled by the leading UK corporate recovery and insolvency firm Leonard Curtis, concluded that only three clubs – Leicester, Northampton and Gloucester – would be viable without the backing of wealthy owners and said they must face “some harsh realities”.
The report, which has aggregated the latest publicly available audited figures, says the 10 clubs collectively lost around £30.5m in the year 2022‑23, adding further to an already significant debt mountain. Overall the clubs have net debts of £311m, with nine having made losses of more than £1m in the 2022-23 season.
Neither Premiership Rugby nor the Rugby Football Union were involved directly in the report which runs to 67 pages and ranks among the more comprehensive pieces of work on the state of the modern English club game.
The former England international James Haskell, who supplied the foreword, said the study “paints a bleak picture” and expressed his wish that “it wakes rugby up” to the need to change the way it thinks and operates. “This is now a line in the sand moment where all the spin and bravado around how rugby is faring needs to stop,” said Haskell, who won 77 caps for England and played most of his club rugby at the now defunct Wasps.
“Rugby for me appears to believe that just because we have always done it in a certain way that is the right way, when it’s clear that unless drastic change happens our game is heading for a very untenable position in the future. We say we are professional but in my humble opinion we are far from it and at times resemble the wild west.” |
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Steve@Mose
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 11:39 |
‘A line in the sand moment’: Premiership’s troubles laid bare by report
Rarely has the gap between how rugby would like to be perceived and the unvarnished reality felt wider than it did on a grey midweek lunchtime in the City of London. The Honourable Artillery Company – “Turn right just past the cannon, sir” – remains a seriously valuable piece of real estate which made it an interesting choice of venue from which to launch a coruscating critique of the financial state of English club rugby.
It was certainly instructive to sit among seated rows of money men and lawyers listening to assorted experts, academics and – boom, tish! – the former England flanker James Haskell assessing the findings of a newly published independent report into the health of the Premiership’s finances. Interrupted only by the occasional chiming of a splendid grandfather clock, it was the most contemporary of debates in the most old school of settings.
The crux of it was simple: rugby urgently needs to get its head out of the sand. The report, commissioned by the respected UK corporate recovery firm Leonard Curtis, declared seven of the 10 English Premiership clubs to be balance sheet insolvent and warned that further trouble awaits if attempts are not made to do something radically different.
If the individual figures themselves are not especially new – they are drawn from the last public set of club accounts from the 2022-23 season – the aggregated conclusions were impossible to ignore. Total combined debts of £311m and the patronage of a few individual – mostly elderly – backers is not the soundest of foundations from which to build a flourishing professional sport.
The report’s co-authors – Jonathan Dyson, Professor Rob Wilson and Dr Dan Lumley – have received guidance and insight from, among others, the former Harlequins chief executive Mark Evans and the ex-Bath and Scotland winger Simon Danielli, who now works in private equity. Alex Cadwallader, once of England Under-21s, Bristol, Newport, Newcastle and London Welsh and now a specialist restructuring adviser, has also been driving the project which, tellingly, has not been backed by either the Rugby Football Union or Premiership Rugby.
And there, sitting up on the top table determined to tell it absolutely like it is, was the aforementioned Haskell who, in fairness, knows something about this particular subject. At one point he even told a story about going in to see a leading Wasps official when the then Coventry‑based club was heading down the tubes and threatening to smash up his office if he and his teammates were not paid. “If I was a rugby player I’d be terrified by this report,” he told the Guardian, clearly talking from experience. “I think this is now a line in the sand moment where all the spin and bravado around how rugby is faring needs to stop.”
Haskell is not always everyone’s cup of Earl Grey but in this instance he has a point. One audience member made clear that, if certain clubs were normal everyday businesses, they would instantly be declared lost causes. All of them declared a net loss in 2022‑23, with nine of the 10 losing more than £1m and Saracens topping the table with a £5.3m shortfall.
As Cadwallader was keen to stress, every business must eventually live within its means. While the clubs have signed the new Professional Game Partnership with the RFU – worth a guaranteed £3.3m per club per year for the next four years – wages and costs are still too high and the salary cap has gone back up to £6.4m. Six of the clubs had a higher volume of debt at the end of 2022-23 compared with a year earlier, not all of which can be blamed on Covid. The report suggested Sale’s wage bill took up 92% of their revenue; the corresponding figure for Newcastle Falcons was 82%.
Thankfully there were a few glimmers of hope. Harlequins emerged top of the tree based on an index combining results and financial returns since 2018-19, with Northampton and Leicester also on the podium. Playing standards in the league continue to improve and digital engagement is steadily increasing.
There are, however, wider issues at play. A lack of mass‑market visibility outside the Six Nations Championship and the World Cup is clearly not helping the game’s wider profile. Recent research suggests the typical profile of a Test attendee at Twickenham – sorry, Allianz Stadium – is a 55-year-old white male who works in financial services. No wonder the game’s bosses are twitchy about the future.
Haskell, however, thinks it is time for everyone in authority to be braver, whether it be making the game less confusing to new fans, reducing the number of bodies on the field or biting the bullet and moving to a franchise club league. “I don’t think people are thinking clearly. The RFU do a lot of good but they’re an organisation trying to be all things to all men,” he says.
“Unfortunately those days are gone. World Rugby as well. They’re a very slow, creaking organisation in my mind. Is it fear, bureaucracy or incompetence that is holding things back? We are sitting and watching this thing disintegrate. I think someone needs to stand up and make a decision.”
One thing is for certain: rugby’s grandfather clock is starting to tick louder than ever. |
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Mark Smith
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 14:20 |
And it's not much better in the much-lauded French league, where most clubs are also losing money: https://assets.lnr.fr/1/6/8/6/5/0/Rapport-CCCP-2024_24dc227bbe9d959656047208809eee81.pdf
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FHLH
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 17:20 |
Four issues:
1. How to bring the clubs out of insolvency
2. How to return the clubs to profit or, at least, break even, currenly -£0.5m to -£5.3m (leads to 1)
3. How to bring the wages bill down (report says staff costs are £10.8m to £15.2m), but this is total so will include administrative staff. Also tjhere's Pension & NI (leads to 2)
4. Increase gate receipts (currently range £10.2m to £26.8m) - but can Newcastle expect to reach Quins total? (leads to 2)
Drivers for recovery:
(i) control player salary expectations - but short player earnings window, downward spiral of product quality
(ii) reduce squad sizes - what's the relationship between Academy and Premeiership squads & funding?
(iii) sell rugby outside the current rugby fraternity
or is that too simple?
Edited by FHLH - 26 Sep 2024 at 17:23
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Halliford
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 18:23 |
One issue is that of increasing crowd revenues. At the moment the easy option for those Clubs is to raid the gates at lower levels which damages our financial sustainability. There is a way of dealing with it which would involve co-ordination so that Level2/3/4 games don’t clash with those locally at Level 1.
Duck! It’s a pig!!
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FHLH
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 19:08 |
Halliford wrote:
One issue is that of increasing crowd revenues. At the moment the easy option for those Clubs is to raid the gates at lower levels which damages our financial sustainability. There is a way of dealing with it which would involve co-ordination so that Level2/3/4 games don’t clash with those locally at Level 1.
Duck! It’s a pig!! |
Do Plymouth Argyle / Albion coordinate?
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"My father told me big men fall just as quick as little ones, if you put a sword through their hearts."
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FHLH
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 19:09 |
Halliford wrote:
One issue is that of increasing crowd revenues.
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I've often wondered if a Cambridge United / Cambridge Rugby joint season ticket might wirk
Edited by FHLH - 26 Sep 2024 at 19:10
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"My father told me big men fall just as quick as little ones, if you put a sword through their hearts."
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tigerburnie
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 19:10 |
The thing I am hearing on various forums is that more Huckleberryly Pearen non rugby fans are actually driving away the more traditional fans. Clubs are in danger of driving away the life blood chasing the £, voting to increase the salary cap when clubs are struggling looks like financial suicide to me. Newcastle cutting their cloth accordingly will bear fruit in the long term if they can find a few home wins. Some of the salaries being paid are unsustainable.
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Halliford
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 19:23 |
FHLH wrote:
Halliford wrote:
One issue is that of increasing crowd revenues.
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I've often wondered if a Cambridge United / Cambridge Rugby joint season ticket might wirk |
Only with Cambridge Uni
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Halliford
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 19:25 |
It is worth noting that most Premiership soccer clubs are also balance sheet insolvent, i.e. their liabilities (owner’s loans) exceed their assets ( players plus stadium)
Edited by Halliford - 26 Sep 2024 at 19:26
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Rabbie Burns
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Posted: 26 Sep 2024 at 20:58 |
When Blackheath were at Rectory field there was a noticible drop in the crowds especially when Charlton were in the premier league. I was told many years ago that Charlton and Blackheath were never home on the same day. I don’t think there is any influence currently. I do think that less people are travelling as our 2 home games this season have been against London rivals with good weather and no travel issues and the crowds have been very poor considering the history of the fixtures
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So many Christians not enough Lions
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JZSmith
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Posted: 27 Sep 2024 at 12:51 |
Halliford wrote:
It is worth noting that most Premiership soccer clubs are also balance sheet insolvent, i.e. their liabilities (owner’s loans) exceed their assets ( players plus stadium)
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Yes that's probably true but the big difference is that when the football club owners decide they have had enough there is always someone to buy them out and so the clubs continue. It is rather different in Premiership rugby as London Irish and Worcester in particular discovered.
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