Southampton have appointed Mauricio Pellegrino as their new manager. He's currently house hunting on Merseyside.

Southampton have appointed Mauricio Pellegrino as their new manager. He's currently house hunting on Merseyside.

How many times did they double check that they weren't accidentally offering a contract to Manuel Pellegrini?Southampton have appointed Mauricio Pellegrino as their new manager. He's currently house hunting on Merseyside.
Southampton have appointed Mauricio Pellegrino as their new manager. He's currently house hunting on Merseyside.
How many times did they double check that they weren't accidentally offering a contract to Manuel Pellegrini?
They should be getting big crowds
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/40383690
Well done indeed this is a proper use of the wealth in football.This is a great gesture and so good to see a club reward loyalty. Well done Huddersfield.
Won't be much bigger........and that's a lot of money they are going to lose.They should be getting big crowds
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/40383690
No chance, gate receipts are peanuts compared to PL money and TV rights these days.Won't be much bigger........and that's a lot of money they are going to lose.
The bossman obviously didn't expect his team would be playing in the premier.....
No chance, gate receipts are peanuts compared to PL money and TV rights these days.
All clubs should be able to do this without much of a loss whilst building a greater fan base from the people who actually love the game.
You're right but at the same time the difference is significant enough for most PL chairmen to take it very seriously.
@The RDBD can do the proper number crunching but extrapolating 30,000 fans paying an average of £10 for an average of 30 home games (including cups and europe etc.) fetches £9m across a season. Raise the average ticket price to £40 (still not outrageously high in this day and age) and you collect £36m in gate money across a season. That will pay the wages of your top 5 or 6 earners every season and could give you the leeway to offer improved contracts to fend off the vultures.
Generous, but very stupid from the Huddersfield chairman.
Except it's for just around 4000 fans for Huddersfield. As you say if that includes europe which they do not have so really its costing the club just £3.5m which is chump change.
Secondly their season ticket price is 200 quid so i guess they undercharge anyway.
Third their capacity is only 24,500
).As I said, I didn't know the fine print of their number game (that's RDBD's department. Or "Rainman" as Spurlock calls him).
I was looking at the general question of 'couldn't all major clubs just lower their ticket prices to pittance if, stacked up against TV rights and endorsements etc., they amount to pittance as it is?'
Whilst tempting, I think that even using modest figures as starting averages, the difference across an entire season - bearing cup and Euro games in mind - is certainly large enough to keep notion in the realm of dreams. Would be lovely, but cannot see it happening - even as TV deals grow exponentially.
Of the three promoted teams I honestly believe Huddersfield will be going straight down.Sorry! Sunderland coming straight back. I wonder about Brighton,though......and Man U buying a new team so Mourinho can keep his job!
) and also weren't much to write home about defensively. Lots of 1-0's that simply don't get you very far in the PL.