League Attendance Table

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
I've already said that Cardiff City Football Club owns 100% of the Stadium, if you think this is wrong then prove it.
 
I've already said that Cardiff City Football Club owns 100% of the Stadium, if you think this is wrong then prove it.

I have a 24 inch penis. Prove me wrong.

Just because you say something doesn't make it right. I have given you a link to a Government Department which will reveal the truth. It's up to you if you want to pursue it.
 
I have a 24 inch penis. Prove me wrong.

Just because you say something doesn't make it right. I have given you a link to a Government Department which will reveal the truth. It's up to you if you want to pursue it.

What your a 24 carat knob, sounds about right.
 
I think it's fair to say that ground capacity is not that critical in this day and age of TV revenue!.......................<ok>






PS: That wasn't a very nice welcome you gave out team coach, how childish of you, some things never change!................<cheers>
 
I think it's fair to say that ground capacity is not that critical in this day and age of TV revenue!.......................<ok>






PS: That wasn't a very nice welcome you gave out team coach, how childish of you, some things never change!...

Like Swans PLAYERS with silly flags and silly actions, mind you I thought the bald one was showing that they were out of their depth.
 
I think it's fair to say that ground capacity is not that critical in this day and age of TV revenue!.......................<ok>






PS: That wasn't a very nice welcome you gave out team coach, how childish of you, some things never change!................<cheers>

Funny how Liverpool, Spurs, West Ham are all building or moving and Arsenal have just spent the last 8 or so years struggling to pay for their new ground at the expense of squad development. Pity they didn't read this thread before wasting all those millions.

PGF - go and read about leasehold agreements as you obviously can't wrap your head around the idea. Once you've done that you either understand why we own our ground (via a mortgage) or you are a moron/wum. You pick.

I should add you can be a moron and wum if you want...
 
DPJ

Read my earlier comment about the greeting and cheerio your rabid fans gave Cardiff supporters at the Library. Somewhat more than a few verbals.
 
Yes there is the point of growing wage bills, but when you are the lowest in the league and finish 11th, then there is no rush to go out and increase that wage bill substantially, just look at QPR on how NOT to run a football club by spending stupidly trying to buy success. A way that has proven to be useless on a number of occasions. Its all about living within your means and also about running the club correctly, now our way is just one of a number of ways you can correctly run a club. We have no debt, we have no sugar daddy, yet we are still here competing with the best, and have done for the past 2 years, we are now in the Europa league, which goes to show what can be done by running a club in the right way. Is it sustainable, we don't know, of course as success grows, so will our wage bill, and fee's paid out to new players, but at the same time, whilst we are not running into debt over it, then there is nothing to really worry about.

I know somewhere in this thread someone claimed we sold Allen to bring in cash, however we had no choice with Allen, as Liverpool met his buy out clause, we wanted to keep Allen, however we didn't exactly sniff at the £15m we gained form his sale. We are not a selling club, we will not sell our main assests unless its out of our hands, such as the Allen case. If we were in it for the money, we would have looked to have sold Ash during the summer, but instead basically set his price high enough so Arsenal would not bother, same as we set Michu's price high enough that people won't bother, why? Because we are not a club who sells our biggest assets.

Sorry I didn't really make the point about the wages properly.
Williams and Michu are attracting richer sides (I wont say bigger). In the summer their agents will say something along the lines of "Arsenal want him again, they'll pay £80k a week match it or he's not signing a deal and leaving for free or throwing his toys out of the pram".
Therefore to stand still as a successful side you'll need to massively increase that wage bill. As players develop they'll attract richer sides. If they're not wanted then you're probably not doing that well.

Something that is in your favour is how badly Sinclar and Allen have done since leaving for big money. I'd be scared of taking on one of your stars for big money after seeing those 2 fail as miserably as they have. They were both massively overpriced (great business by Jenkins).

So I agree you will probably be able to price your players out of moves as Jenkins price list doesn't represent any sort of value but keeping players happy when Arsenal and co are circling is a different matter unless you smash your pay structure and move the club forward year on year.

The reason I said 38 games is the bench mark is our home matches after Saturday will have been City, Utd, Arsenal, Spurs, Everton (5 of last seasons top 6), Swansea and Newcastle! You have to play everyone to make a fair comparison but I said before a ball was kicked I expect us to finish below Swansea this year.
 
Indeed Hilts, otherwise you could be a Wolves (31,700), a Leeds (39,460), a Leicester (32,262) sort of club. So even bigger stadiums cannot help you..

... very true - our ground was built with a stated ambition (foundations / structure) of expanding to 45,000 in due course - a city the size of Leicester (and with a county with only one league team) should be capable of attracting such attendances for top flight football - unfortunately we've never been established in the Prem long enough since the new stadium was built to even contemplate it <laugh>
 
Sorry I didn't really make the point about the wages properly.
Williams and Michu are attracting richer sides (I wont say bigger). In the summer their agents will say something along the lines of "Arsenal want him again, they'll pay £80k a week match it or he's not signing a deal and leaving for free or throwing his toys out of the pram".
Therefore to stand still as a successful side you'll need to massively increase that wage bill. As players develop they'll attract richer sides. If they're not wanted then you're probably not doing that well.

We don't tend to buckle under threats such as those, hence why Pratley left on a free (one player that was crucial to our way of playing), and as did Dorus (another who wanted silly wages). Players may think they are worth however much they like, but we as a club will only pay them what we think they are worth, how many times did you see us go for players who would not suit our wage budget, that we have walked away from, we won't be dictated to by agents, players and the like, the players who come here know the deal, it of course won't always work like that, but if Ash came in demanding a wage hike because another club have offered it, then we tell him where to go and run his contract out, he is currently contracted to 2015 i believe, so that is 2 years, and for someone who is 29 already, well would be just short of his 31st birthday, who will offer him 80k a week then.

The problem is people seem to think we buy a player, and that he can then dictate what he wants, if a player refuses to sign a contract with what we want to offer, then I am more than happy for them to be shown the door when their contract ends, but no sooner than that. They are after all contracted to us. Its the problem with the game, such as Rooney getting his way by dictating at United, players hold all the power, however to the best of my knowledge, we have never been put in the position that we have folded to player demands, we instead sit them on the bench, or in the reserves, or run their contracts out.

Something that is in your favour is how badly Sinclar and Allen have done since leaving for big money. I'd be scared of taking on one of your stars for big money after seeing those 2 fail as miserably as they have. They were both massively overpriced (great business by Jenkins).

So I agree you will probably be able to price your players out of moves as Jenkins price list doesn't represent any sort of value but keeping players happy when Arsenal and co are circling is a different matter unless you smash your pay structure and move the club forward year on year.

Even if the likes of Arsenal came a calling, they pay our value for a player, or they move along. We turned down Liverpool when they offered I think it was £14m for Allen (i think, i can't really remember) and £14m for Allen would have been a steal, but we didn't want to sell him. Money is not everything. But it certainly does help.

The reason I said 38 games is the bench mark is our home matches after Saturday will have been City, Utd, Arsenal, Spurs, Everton (5 of last seasons top 6), Swansea and Newcastle! You have to play everyone to make a fair comparison but I said before a ball was kicked I expect us to finish below Swansea this year.

That is fair enough, it is a tough run of games, which is why I agreed with your point about it not being set in stone til after the season is over, as our current standings are based on teams we have played, which your home run has been tougher than ours, although ours hasn't been that easy either. But, I am merely repaying the favour of what we endured over on 606 during our time in the Championship :) and it is a nice feeling :)
 
Funny how Liverpool, Spurs, West Ham are all building or moving and Arsenal have just spent the last 8 or so years struggling to pay for their new ground at the expense of squad development. Pity they didn't read this thread before wasting all those millions.

Increasing the capacity of a stadium is part of growing as a club, but the point being made is it is not as beneficial as some seem to believe.

There are a few factors, and clubs like us need to consider these factors. When your stadium is bigger, you may be able to sell out, but it also comes down to supply and demand. Now you could sell out a premier league game of 33k seats, but to do so you would have to drop your prices, we on the other hand have invested that money in our youth system, which in the long term will put our club in a better position, and even then we can sell our ticket prices for higher due to supply and demand, and still make just as much money.

Now lower prices serve fans well, as it means it becomes more affordable, but we are not talking about affordability for fans, we are talking about profits for a club. Now if you look at Man Utd, they have the demand, so can sell out their much bigger stadium, at a high price, same as Arsenal with their huge stadium, and high price, us smaller clubs do not have that luxury.

If you look at us and yourselves, now we class our games as cat a and b, which is £45/£35 for adults and £22.50/£17.50 for kids and oaps. That is all round the ground. So a flat figure. Your club however don't do that, you have 3 classes, and zone 4 in your stadium for example can be bought for as little as £20 for an adult.

So you may have a bigger stadium, but as you do not offer flat rates, and your highest prices are on par with us, do you really earn more money for a home game than us?
 
We don't tend to buckle under threats such as those, hence why Pratley left on a free (one player that was crucial to our way of playing), and as did Dorus (another who wanted silly wages). Players may think they are worth however much they like, but we as a club will only pay them what we think they are worth, how many times did you see us go for players who would not suit our wage budget, that we have walked away from, we won't be dictated to by agents, players and the like, the players who come here know the deal, it of course won't always work like that, but if Ash came in demanding a wage hike because another club have offered it, then we tell him where to go and run his contract out, he is currently contracted to 2015 i believe, so that is 2 years, and for someone who is 29 already, well would be just short of his 31st birthday, who will offer him 80k a week then.

The problem is people seem to think we buy a player, and that he can then dictate what he wants, if a player refuses to sign a contract with what we want to offer, then I am more than happy for them to be shown the door when their contract ends, but no sooner than that. They are after all contracted to us. Its the problem with the game, such as Rooney getting his way by dictating at United, players hold all the power, however to the best of my knowledge, we have never been put in the position that we have folded to player demands, we instead sit them on the bench, or in the reserves, or run their contracts out.



Even if the likes of Arsenal came a calling, they pay our value for a player, or they move along. We turned down Liverpool when they offered I think it was £14m for Allen (i think, i can't really remember) and £14m for Allen would have been a steal, but we didn't want to sell him. Money is not everything. But it certainly does help.



That is fair enough, it is a tough run of games, which is why I agreed with your point about it not being set in stone til after the season is over, as our current standings are based on teams we have played, which your home run has been tougher than ours, although ours hasn't been that easy either. But, I am merely repaying the favour of what we endured over on 606 during our time in the Championship :) and it is a nice feeling :)

Pratley was never worth £15-20 mill though!
 
Increasing the capacity of a stadium is part of growing as a club, but the point being made is it is not as beneficial as some seem to believe.

There are a few factors, and clubs like us need to consider these factors. When your stadium is bigger, you may be able to sell out, but it also comes down to supply and demand. Now you could sell out a premier league game of 33k seats, but to do so you would have to drop your prices, we on the other hand have invested that money in our youth system, which in the long term will put our club in a better position, and even then we can sell our ticket prices for higher due to supply and demand, and still make just as much money.

Now lower prices serve fans well, as it means it becomes more affordable, but we are not talking about affordability for fans, we are talking about profits for a club. Now if you look at Man Utd, they have the demand, so can sell out their much bigger stadium, at a high price, same as Arsenal with their huge stadium, and high price, us smaller clubs do not have that luxury.

If you look at us and yourselves, now we class our games as cat a and b, which is £45/£35 for adults and £22.50/£17.50 for kids and oaps. That is all round the ground. So a flat figure. Your club however don't do that, you have 3 classes, and zone 4 in your stadium for example can be bought for as little as £20 for an adult.

So you may have a bigger stadium, but as you do not offer flat rates, and your highest prices are on par with us, do you really earn more money for a home game than us?

We're having 2 different arguments here though. It's the future potential of the club that is being discussed, there are plenty of ours that will debate whether we need a bigger stadium now.
Its about that new fan base and the possible evolution to established PL club, then to successful PL club, then to etc etc.
Both clubs have progressed massively and that's easy to acknowledge as "success achieved" but our owner in particular has aims way above just being in the PL. How realistic those aims are is anyone's guess and I'm not trying to have a Cardiff compared to Swansea argument.

One point I do wholeheartedly agree with is that it's essential to be able to fill those seats as there's nothing worse than too few fans bouncing around in an empty ground.
 
Well if that is the case Stevo, then there is no point building seats if the demand is not there, I know we have a waiting list, so there is demand for extra seats in regards to the Premier League games, so think we could up our stadium to around 25k and still sell out. But then we are currently focused on spending our money on the future of the club using different avenues, its all well and good if your stadium is big, but if your youth system is not up to scratch, as ours wasn't, then you can't grow your own future stars. Only have to look at Southampton to see what a club with a good youth system can accomplish. Not to mention the first team training facilities, which will help us with the on pitch success, which again is more important than a few extra seats in regards to the future of the club.

That is where our money is currently being invested, training for both first team and youth setups. The stadium is on the cards, but there are higher priorities, like building the foundations of a good club. Something we have been doing for the past 10 years. So why would we change that ideology when it has got us to where we are. Also if we go down, we haven't wasted money increasing a stadium that will most likely not be full at championship level, but are still able to utilise training setups throughout the club levels. And use that process to get ourselves back up.

As I have said, people focus too much on stadium sizes having an effect, there are much higher priorities when it comes to building a stable club, and seating is far from top of that list.