Premier Togel Hongkong League Play-Offs
Soccerphile explores more proposals for change in the English Premier League.
As Soccerphile has documented over the last few years,
suggestions with regards to restructuring the Premier League have been
plentiful. There was talk in 2008 of a 39th fixture being added to the annual
schedule, with each club playing outside of England for this game. There were
rumblings about the Old Firm (Rangers and Celtic) joining England’s elite
league once again this season, while Bolton Phil Gartside also proposed the
idea of a two-tier Premiership with no promotion or relegation outside of it.
The in-vogue discussion ahead of the next Premier League
chairman’s meeting in April is of a play-off system being introduced which
would see the clubs finishing between fourth and seventh battling for a spot in
the Champions League. The idea Togel Singapore behind such a move would be to inject more competition into
a league that has seen the same four clubs – Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool and
Manchester United – qualify for the competition from the Premier League for the
past six seasons.
As with other potential areas of change that have been mooted
over the past few years, there are supporters and detractors of this latest
proposal. Perhaps unsurprisingly it is the current ‘chasing pack’ behind the
Premier League’s ‘Big Four’ that have stepped forward to champion this
suggestion. Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp believes that introducing a Champions
League play-off system in the Premier League would increase excitement and work
as well as the Football League Play-Offs. Aston Villa’s Martin O’Neill thinks the system would
reinvigorate the aspirations of mid-table teams.
Liverpool manager Rafa
Benítez has poured scorn over the ideas, believing more games would lead
to players being exposed to great risk of injury and clubs “playing until the
end of the century”.
"People should analyse carefully what they say and think
before they put these ideas in the newspapers," Benítez told The Guardian
newspaper. "Yes it is good for the papers and it's a good talking point
but we have too many games and injuries as it is. We have to be realistic. We
have too many injuries in all the top European sides because we play too many
games and we have too many competitions. When are we going to play more games?”
The Premier League has refused to comment on the proposals,
saying they only talk about advancements to the division when they are
concrete. Opinion on the topic has been free flowing from every other quarter
of the English game however and with so many pros and cons to the Premier
League introducing this play-off system, it is clear why views are so split.
The success of the Football League Play-Offs is the strongest
reason why this idea should be given real consideration. The system, though
unpopular with some, has reinvigorated the lower divisions in terms of
competitiveness. Even in the last week of a season, most clubs in the Football
League are either in with a shout of promotion or battling against relegation.
The Premier League meanwhile has become far more predictable with the top four
spots usually decided by May and relegation issue usually a question of which
three clubs from four will go down. For the remaining twelve or so clubs, there
is very little motivation left towards the end of the campaign with no tangible
goal to work towards.
The Premier League Play-Off system would mean that most teams
would be heading the last weekend of the campaign with a massive prize to fight
for. Middle table obscurity come March would be a thing of the past and the
drama of the play-offs themselves would be immense. Suddenly clubs from outside
the ‘Big Four’ would have an even greater chance of qualification for the
Champions League. The play-offs would hopefully see different clubs in the
competition, aside from the same four and crucially, ensuring the distribution
of wealth in the division would become more balanced.
The arguments against the play-offs are strong though. The
obvious first argument is why should a team that has finished seventh, maybe as
many as 20 points behind the team in fourth be given a chance of playing in the
Champions League? Indeed it raises the more salient point of should teams other
than national champions actually be a part of this competition?
From a supporters’ point of view, as much as a play-off system
would bring excitement for more clubs, there’s a cynical suggestion that this
is just other way to make more money out of television revenue and gate
receipts. With a number of key members of the Premier League’s executive
committee so keen on a 39th game a few seasons back, one wonders whether this
is just a dressed up version of that proposal?
While all this talk of restructuring the Premier League for the
league and the club’s gain, Portsmouth FC are on the brink of becoming the
first top flight team in English football to go into administration. West Ham
United, by their own admission, are also in a grave financial situation. And
there’s Liverpool and Manchester United who are competing in the Champions
League despite debts to combined worth of over one billion pounds.
Maybe the real restructuring the Premier League should be
focusing on is getting their own house in order. Wigan chairman Dave Whelan
called for the debt culture in the league to be acted on by Football’s
governing bodies this week and restricting clubs to borrowing no more than 25%
of their annual turnover. This suggestion is something that should take
precedence over the play-off idea for sure.
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