This article has been delayed, in part, because new
information has come out which has required me to reconsider my analysis. At least two well informed articles about
Southampton FC were published by The Telegraph.
(Here and here.) A video of Les Reed’s speech to the 2014 Global Sportstec Innovation
Conference was posted on Youtube.
Les Reed’s speech can be found here.
While interesting in several ways, the articles’ primary
relevance to this discussion is that they make it quite clear that Southampton
intends to operate with, what I called in Part Two, sustainable money. In other words, Katharina Liebherr wants to
stop putting money into the team and have it start paying its own way. This presents a significant barrier to our
European ambitions. If we are to get
into the Champions League we must compete successfully with teams like
Manchester City and Chelsea. The owners
of both teams still appear to be willing to put money into their teams, but are
limited in how much they can put in by UEFA’s Financial Fair Play (FFP)
rules. Rounding off to the nearest million
pounds and using recent Euro-Pound conversion rates, clubs are allowed to lose £24 million pounds every three years—which
amounts to allowing owners to kick in £8 million pounds a year. But this is not the end of the permissible contributions
because UEFA FFP does not count all expenses as expenses. Clubs do not have to count infrastructure development, youth development, and community
development costs in calculating their losses.
Thus, Roman Abramovich can directly fund Chelsea’s youth program and any
stadium expansion out of his own pocket without creating any FFP problems. Our undoubtedly expensive academy could be
paid for the same way, but, instead, will have to be paid for out of profits
from the rest of the club.
On
the other hand, a decision to operate on a sustainable basis, if executed,
means that FFP is completely irrelevant to Southampton. If the club breaks even every year we will
never come close to exceeding the allowable FFP losses. (In fact, our player trading profits for this
year probably means that we will have no FFP problems for the next three years.) This means that the only financial
limitations on Southampton are the salary cap rules and the self-imposed need
to break even.
As I
have discussed before, the BPL salary cap is £56 million this year and £60 million next year but can be increased by
the amount of the “Club’s Own Revenue Uplift” which is defined as
any increase in a Club’s revenue in a
Contract Year when compared with its revenue in Contract Year 2012/13
(excluding Central Funds fee payments from its revenue in both the Contract
Years).
(BPL Handbook
2014-2015 Rule A.1.35.)
In other words, all
of the club’s revenue except the money it receives from the BPL directly—primarily
TV money—can be used to increase the
salary cap. In the alternative, the
salary cap can be increased by the profit from player trading, or the two
combined. Southampton starts out
at a disadvantage relative to the bigger teams who are already receiving
European TV money. But there is nothing that
can be done about this. Instead,
Southampton will have to compete by increasing its other revenue.
In order to figure
out where Southampton stands—relative to other BPL teams—I looked at the
financial summary of BPL teams published by The Guardian. The 2012-2013 results are here.
I have taken the
liberty of creating this chart. Amounts
are in millions of pounds.
Club Match Day Commercial Total Non-TV Revenue
Arsenal 93 44 190
Aston Villa 13 16 36
Chelsea 71 84 155
Everton 17 14 31
Fulham 12 11
24
Liverpool 45 98 143
Man City 40 143 183
Man U 109 153 262
Newcastle 28 17 45
Norwich 17 8 25
QPR 8 9 18
Reading 9 5 15
Southampton 17 7 25
Stoke 10 8 23
Sunderland 19 13 32
Swansea 10 6 16
Tottenham 33 57 90
West Brom 7 10 17
West Ham 18 20 29
Wigan 5 2 12
As I discussed in
earlier posts, if Southampton is to compete for Europe, we need to both punch
above our salary weight and increase that weight. Surprisingly, we are not as far from that
target as it might appear—Everton is only £6 million ahead of us. On the other hand, Manchester United,
Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, and Manchester City are probably beyond our
reach. For that reason, Tottenham should
be our target. Tottenham has finished
fourth twice in recent years. If Southampton
can increase its revenue to the Tottenham level, and continue to do an
outstanding job with its academy and transfer business, the club would have a
shot at getting into the Champions League some years and would be competitive
for Europe in most years. We would also avoid
the annual relegation battle.
One problem with
this goal is that it is a moving target.
As my recent post about stadium expansion discussed, Tottenham is
planning to build a new stadium which will bring in at least £15.3 million a
year in increased match day income and probably a lot more. Tottenham has also increased its commercial
income since 2013, but figuring out by exactly how much is not easy. I am guessing they have increased it by £10
million, but who knows. You can check
some of the articles here, here, and here.
Combining the numbers, Tottenham’s non-TV revenue will hit at least £115
million. Is there any way for Southampton
to grow its non-TV revenue by £90 million?
(Keep in mind that Tottenham will continue to grow their income while we
try to do the same.)
I think the answer
is clearly no. Our ability to increase
match day income is minimal, if we do not expand St. Mary’s, and I do not
believe such an expansion is financially viable at this time. (See my stadium capacity blog post
here.) Because Tottenham is a London team it has clear advantages in increasing
attendance and charging higher ticket prices.
We will never be able to match that. Plus, they are more famous than us so they are
more desirable to commercial sponsors. We
can certainly increase our commercial income significantly, but probably not by
£90 million—at least not unless we are appearing in Europe regularly.
This is not to say
that significant increases in income are not available. Southampton can play a more profitable set of
preseason friendlies by going to the United States. If we maintain our league position from last
season and our reputation for an attractive style of play we ought to be able
to draw crowds in the United States next summer. While we are unlikely to fill The Big House
with nearly 110,000 people like Manchester United and Real Madrid did on August
2, 2014, we can certainly make more money than we did by visiting Brighton,
Bournemouth, and Swindon. (Although our preseason schedule certainly prepared
us well for the new season and that must be the priority.)
Southampton could
try to set up some kind of profitable relationship with a club in the United
States. I would suggest Seattle,
Vancouver, Portland, or San Jose. Last year Seattle averaged 38,500 fans per
game and their stadium can hold 67,000. A west coast tour could be profitable and create more Southampton fans in the
United States. (Plus, a visit to San
Jose or Los Angeles would let me see the team play in person—the highest of
priorities.)
More and more people are watching the BPL in the United States.
There might be American sponsors who cannot afford Manchester United, who would
like a BPL link. I am relatively
confident the club is already working on this, but that should be a high
priority.
It would also help
if we had someone paying us to make our kits—although I assume that is the plan
and this year was an aberration.
Southampton can
increase its income to be more competitive with other established BPL teams
like Aston Villa, Newcastle, and Everton.
However, we are unlikely to be able to compete with the biggest
teams. In fact, the only way we can hope
to compete with them, at least in the foreseeable future, is by doing what we
did this year—selling players at a profit, buying new, good players cheaply,
and using the proceeds to fund our academy, our scouting system, and increased
salaries for the players we keep.
However, this
limitation is not the result of a glass ceiling created by FFP and the salary
cap. It is a limitation that is imposed
by not having a very rich owner who is willing to spend insane amounts of her
own money on the team. If our owner were
willing to spend money like Roman Abramovich and Sheikh Mansour, FFP and the
salary cap would limit her ability to do so, but there is no reason we should
expect her to spend that kind of money.
(Assuming I have read the official club accounts properly, in the fiscal
year ending on June 2013, she made a capital contribution of £25,988,244 and
bought one share of stock for £11,999,999.
That is a pretty generous contribution to the club although I would
avoid characterizing it as insane. There
is no reason to expect that to reoccur every year.)
Going back to the
original question which triggered this series of posts, Martin Samuel is right
that there is a glass ceiling that blocks our progress, but wrong about it
being imposed on Southampton by FFP. He
is right that it is risky to sell good players every year, but wrong when he
says we should not do it because it is the only way we can grow the club.
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