In comparison to the teams were competing with our ticket prices are generally fantastic for th level we are playing at. Imagine paying double. Imagine the club could sell double or treble the amount. New stadium and higher prices equals more cash to spend. It's what the clubs above us do http://www.theguardian.com/news/dat...ier-league-ticket-prices-club-charge-the-most
Most expensive season ticket at spurs £1800!
If you get the stadium for free maybe it does.
A new stadium costs around £200m for a bog standard 50k seater stadium.
Interest alone on this borrowing would be £14m a year, so with repayment you are looking at £20m a year of additional cost for a new stadium.
Assuming a ticket price of £40 for the new stadium and assuming attendances increased by 10k a match over Goodison (I don't agree with either of these assumptions btw) then we'd had £40x10kx21 home games (=£8.4m additional income). Add in too the increased prices for the other 35k fans. £4x35kx21 (£2.94m additional income) and another £3m of additional corporate income (another HUGE boost in income).
Then add up all those figures and you get an additional £15m of income (before costs) and additional costs of £20m a season.
So a loss of £6m a year on having more fans in paying more money.
Even if we were handed this £200m stadium for free and all the assumptions about these 10k additional fans with a spare £40 a game to spend were true then the best case scenario is another £15m a year to spend.
To put that into perspective another £15m is enough to buy 1 player for £5m and pay him £40k a week on a 5 year contract.
The real thing that is holding us back is commercial income. Liverpool get nearly £70m a year in various kit deals. We get less than £5m.








