That the wage structure has not been deliberately restructured to prevent acquiring players of higher quality, development, and cost who would require more competitive wages than this wage structure apparently allows for at this point while claiming money is available to spend
I belive(

) that the wage structure is in place to somewhat stop the Mercenary type player from coming to Arsenal is Yaya Toure worth £200k per week was Robiniho worth the 1000's that man city paid fo him. Players see bigger clubs as cash cows and somewhere along the line a line has to be drawn and I belive Arsenal to some extent have drawn it along with clubs like Villa. Manchester City will have to fininsh 8th or higher to pay for Yaya Toure's wages this season, Chelsea recived 16 million for winning the PL last season that pays for Terry and Lampard. It was estimated that the owners of Man city have spent over 1 billion pounds since they have taken over which does not include wages. So how would you describe "more competitive wages" if you bring in one player on £120k per week how long before others start questioning why they are not on the same level.
Yes I would be great for all supporters to see a world class player sign for Arsenal but Arsenal at the moment are running within thier means and in a time of bust rather than boom this is surely a prudent way of running a football club?
That the youth system under construction is meant first and foremost to benefit the football team on the pitch and not solely to increase the Club’s profits from the transfer market annually
I think you will find that the youth system at the moment is set up more for the benifit of the first team than ever before especially regarding my above point.
That any or all of the well over 100 million in savings now in the bank is intended to go to the football team first and not to shareholders or to help finance selling the club
I think the answer you will get will be "It wil be used where Arsenal see fit to use it".
As I understand it the club's 08-09 accounts show the bonds issued to finance the building of the Emirates stadium was £244.9m. This is repayable over a 20 to 22-year term at a fixed interest rate of 5.3 per cent that works out at about £17 million per year. Arsenal are also paying off some of the principal sum of the bond each year (£5.3m in 08-09), which means that Arsenal, will not be saddled with debt indefinitely. The bank loan taken out by the club with Barclays to finance the Highbury Square stood at £137m, with a repayment date of December 2010 and an interest rate of 2-2.5 per cent above the London inter-bank lending rate (Libor). Since then, however, the club has reduced the property bank loan to £47.1m, financed by selling apartments at Highbury Square for a discount.
So would it be a good or bad thing if Arsenal used some of that money to pay off the debt?
That the Board is fully behind the manager spending any part of that money as is best for the football team and only behind a manager ready and willing to spend any portion of it that way
I think the board are 100% behind the manager spending what he does and more importantly the manager seems 100% behind the board in doing what they are doing
That if that money is meant to be used for early debt repayment instead how using it that way is of primary benefit to the football club now and/or in the future and if it is not being used for either at this point why and how that benefits Arsenal Football Club in any way primarily on the pitch
If it is used to pay of debt then it will have no primary effect on what is happening on the pitch now but it will give Arsenal and Wenger an advantage in the future.
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That if the Club is being sold imminently that the Board would publicly commit to not selling to any individual or group of owners who would be using debt leverage to purchase Arsenal. Given the very real problems at Liverpool and the potential problems at Manchester United that have resulted from debt leverage at those clubs we would like to know that the Board consider selling to anyone else using debt leverage unacceptable altogether.[/quote]
What options are open to the board when or if they do sell up? 1)A multi-billionaire who has the funds to bank roll the club Chelsea/man city like. 2)A debt leverage take over Man U/Liverpool like or 3)Another 2 or 3 investers like Kroneke and Asmaninov?
1)Billionaire investers seem far and few between but would relish a club like Arsenal with it's lack of debt and history but in the end would they want their money back at some point?
2)We have all seen the problems with debt leverage but if this was the only option available to sell on the club would they turn it down?
3)Would Arsenal find other investors who would work with Kroneke and Asmaninov and be happy not to have overall control?
I am sure there are a few other options!!!!!!
there you go a post nearly as long as an USMartins

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