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Didn’t we get Chopra initially for £500k or something, then sell him to Sunderland for £5m only to buy him back for a very similar amount the season after, which suggests to me that very little of the transfer fee that Sunderland were supposed to pay, actually came our way and we got him back for close to zero, especially as we were skint at the time?
No way would we pay £5m for anyone back then!
I can remember using it after Chopra scored four in that 6-1 win over Derby, but it was a phrase that had been around in cricket for a o long time before that. I first heard it used in relation to the batsman Graham Hick who had a fantastic record with Worcestershire in county cricket, but found the step up to test cricket very difficult- he barely ever came up with a score when the pressure was really on or the conditions were testing.
https://www.walesonline.co.uk/sport/...-down-15944305
You're not wrong. We paid £23m in bonuses at the end of that season.
It certainly has merits.
In the two seasons 2009/10 and 2010/11 we scored 4 or more goals on 11 occasions. In all of our Championship seasons since 2011 we've scored 4 or more goals on 10 occasions! Those sides knew how to steam roller the opposition.
On the other side of the coin, in 2009/10 we failed to score in 12 games, which is higher than our Championship average since promotion in 2002. We had the lowest number of games where we scored just 1 or 2 and would still be low even if you considered that we scored 4 or more more often. That 2009/10 season is ranked 5th best in terms of clean sheets but 5th worst for conceding 3 or more goals in a game. The figures are better for 2010/11.
In an attacking sense, those two seasons were pretty exciting, but for every yin there's a yang and we paid for it defensively. Both of our promotions were built on a solid defence. Teams that win automatic promotion don't usually have the defensive stats that we had in those seasons. Those that did, tended to need to add another 10-15 goals to their 'for' tally.
Was it? The average wage bill for the Championship in 2009/10 was apparently £15 million. City's wage bill that year was £16.7 million - above the average for sure, but one of the highest in the division? I don't have the figures for every club, but Newcastle's wage bill was £47 million, Middlesbrough's was £31 million and West Brom's was £23 million.
also Middlesbrough, Newcastle and west brom had all been relegated the season before, and would have had a parachute payment and had a squad full of premier League wages. seems as though West brom were the best prepared for relegation, Newcastle brute forced it and Middlesbrough were a total mess.
I don't recall that. However, as you've already noted, Ridsdale and Jones definitely devised a strategy based around paying above-average wages and paying either below-average fees or no fees at all. It would be almost impossible to calculate exactly how much each squad in the division cost their clubs in terms of fees and wages combined, but I have very little doubt that City were generally punching above their weight under the Ridsdale and Jones regime.
I definitely agree that we did punch above our weight, all things considered.We did keep increasing our debt, but that seems to be of less a concern in football nowadays. Certainly Ridsdale's contacts and footballing knowledge way exceeds that of the current board. Our transfer activities over the last 7 or 8 seasons have been far poorer.