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British BulletinBritish Bulletin
Home » Newcastle v the system – is Saudi 2030 vision unrealistic?
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Newcastle v the system – is Saudi 2030 vision unrealistic?

By britishbulletin.com23 March 20262 Mins Read
Newcastle v the system – is Saudi 2030 vision unrealistic?
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Newcastle may be in favour of the new rules, but they will still be well behind on spending power.

Analysis by Swiss Ramble, external shows that, based on the 2023-24 accounts, the Magpies’ SCR budget ranked ninth (£243m) in the Premier League.

Compare that with the big six: Manchester United (£597m), Manchester City (£580m), Arsenal and Liverpool (£449m), Chelsea (£407m) and Tottenham Hotspur (£397m).

Unless Newcastle generate higher income, the status quo will always be able to spend more, paying higher wages.

“Look at Newcastle’s wages of £220m [in 2023-24],” Maguire added. “It’s £100m less than Arsenal and Chelsea. And it was £200m less than Manchester City. So that is the problem.

“The desire to narrow the gap is a challenge. Football is a talent game. Talent follows the money in terms of both recruitment and wages – and it makes it difficult for Newcastle to make that step up.”

Newcastle face a battle to qualify for Europe – but not making it could be a positive.

Stay with us while we explain.

Uefa’s SCR system limits clubs in European competition to spending 70% of their income.

A club not in Europe would be able to go to 85% or above under the Premier League rules, designed to give teams not in continental competition some extra space to compete.

To show the impact by analysing the 2023-24 figures, West Ham (£267m) and Brighton (£276m) would have had bigger budgets than Newcastle, had these rules been in place.

And this is further underlined by another quirk which means being in the Conference League could be the worst thing financially.

The winners of the competition only earn about £20m, yet must work to the 70% rule. The difference between 70% and 85%, based on the 2023-24 figures? At least £33m less to spend.

Newcastle would prefer the riches of the Champions League, though even that competition further entrenches the position of the biggest clubs.

Uefa gives bonus payments under the ‘value pillar’, partly based on a club’s coefficient. It rewards historical success.

For this season’s league phase, Swiss Ramble calculated, external that Newcastle received £47m. But Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester City were all paid in excess of £79m.

Everywhere you turn it seems the football establishment wins again.

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