Christian Purslow on Villa's neutral ground stance. Echoing Brighton owner. Pl need 14 teams to agree.
Assuming Norwich, Villa, Bournemouth, Watford, West Ham and Brighton all feel the same, they need either Southampton or Newcastle to get onboard. Or maybe snother club who could still get dragged into it as most of their points come at home (looks to us and our 'away' record)
On Tuesday the chief executive of the League Managers Association, Richard Bevan, said he expected the season would be cancelled if clubs did not agree to neutral venues but Purslow argues the plan would punish clubs such as Villa, who have taken 17 of their 25 points at home. Concluding the season would bring television revenue but Purslow pointed out the financial cost of being relegated after playing all games away from Villa Park could be far greater"
“At the bottom end of the table there’s a much smaller revenue base but the risk of relegation is probably a £200m catastrophe for any club that mathematically could still go down,” Purslow told TalkSport. “When you say to any club, ‘We want you to agree to a bunch of rule changes that may make it more likely that you get relegated’, they’re not thinking about TV money, they’re thinking: ‘My goodness, am I going to agree to something that results in me being relegated and losing £200m?”’
Assuming Norwich, Villa, Bournemouth, Watford, West Ham and Brighton all feel the same, they need either Southampton or Newcastle to get onboard. Or maybe snother club who could still get dragged into it as most of their points come at home (looks to us and our 'away' record)
On Tuesday the chief executive of the League Managers Association, Richard Bevan, said he expected the season would be cancelled if clubs did not agree to neutral venues but Purslow argues the plan would punish clubs such as Villa, who have taken 17 of their 25 points at home. Concluding the season would bring television revenue but Purslow pointed out the financial cost of being relegated after playing all games away from Villa Park could be far greater"
“At the bottom end of the table there’s a much smaller revenue base but the risk of relegation is probably a £200m catastrophe for any club that mathematically could still go down,” Purslow told TalkSport. “When you say to any club, ‘We want you to agree to a bunch of rule changes that may make it more likely that you get relegated’, they’re not thinking about TV money, they’re thinking: ‘My goodness, am I going to agree to something that results in me being relegated and losing £200m?”’









