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moonraker

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Everything posted by moonraker

  1. I dont know and dont care, if they enjoy it thats their call, I certainly cant explian it. I assume that the Stazi have never done anything slightly off the wall in their lives or if they have I bet they have a great reason why!
  2. Why do people get dressed up? Because they obviously enjoy it and I assume it makes them feel good and part of something. I personally don’t get it, but in a free society I have no right to question there actions, if it makes them happy that’s all that matters. As unusual Dune and his fellow Stazi members miss the irony of their dictatorial musings, he claims to understand history and to be an English patriot, well Dune the English have been dressing up for high days and holidays since time immemorial and if a saints promotion party is not a high day then I don’t know what is.
  3. Interesting piece on today this morning with reference to the inevitable decline in the influence importance of newspapers, the nationals are loosing significant readership year on year. Whilst we must project a positive image i do not think "keeping the press (written media) sweet" is a golden rule for achieving this, most people get the news from the TV and internet with the BBC being miles out in front as the most trusted and used news website. Cant remember Utd having any problems when Fergie refused to speak to BBC journos, i know its Utd. Its simple treat them with respect and treat them equally but do not cow tow to them or let them dictate anything.
  4. I could not be there today, gutted, Markus thank you for saving my club and setting back on the road in tye right direction, thank for Nicolas, thank you for the JPT and two promotions.
  5. You are not funny, well possibly in the peculiar sense.
  6. Season tickets are not the be all and end all. Modern lifestyles mean people want flexibility there is a large constituency of Saints supporters who for whole raft of good reasons cannot or do not wish commit to a season ticket, at the Dell and at times at SM in the prem you had to plan weeks in advance, if work, family or other good reasons prevented you from doing this confidently then like me you either very rarely went (the Dell) or only targeted Bronze type games, in itself not an issue as I go to watch SFC. My point is a greater capacity will when the team is successful provide greater flexibility especially for those of us who have a life outside football. Finally even at 45k its not guaranteed that Cocky B**gger Fry would be able to turn up on the day and get a ticket for MU or a handful of other clubs come to that, another throw away statement presented as a fact!
  7. Im hoping for fair and affordable pricing for all not just cheap pricing. Expand capcity and keep current prices no bother dont expand and signicantly hike prices wont be impressed. The table provided above is interetsing and the mid table (pricing table) prices seem very fair.
  8. Thanks for a thoughtful and though provoking response. My reference to the phew was obviously tongue in cheek! I still don’t accept your Apple argument they control the retailing yes, as do many exclusive brands, this is not really the same as controlling the supply as I said do you know anyone who wants an Apple product but cant get one. I can’t agree with but do understand you point about exclusivity, my problem with it is the next step is elitism and there is no place for that in football supporting circles. Going by the rate at which Tesco’s and Sainsburys are building and opening local stores in here in Bath they are certainly making capital investments in infrastructure that will be there for a long time. You point juxtaposing selling as much as is possible and profitability is as I stated most often constrained by factors outside the direct control of the business or factors that usually lag the upswings in demand i.e. production and recruitment. Nowhere in my argument am I advocating increasing capacity beyond a sustainable level, where I fundamentally disagree with the don’t expand argument is I believe, initially in the short term, that in the prem we can regularly (not always) attract larger crowds than SM can accommodate and if we build on our success and become an established top half prem team able to have a crack at the top six spots then the occasions when SM will be seen to be to small will increase and we will have lost an opportunity to maximise revenue and therefore improve our chances of sustaining the club at the levle we all desire. And your final point is the key reason why I prefer expansion, if those became the standard ticket prices many long standing Saints Fans would be disenfranchised due to cost. Some would ration their attendance some would give up all together and as for taking your family and bringing on the future generations of fans this would be beyond most people. A very good point was raised earlier in the thread wrt NC doing his homework to establish whether expansion is right for the business the fact that he has mentioned more than once publicly tends to suggest the evidence is tending towards an extension. 50k plus a Wembley whilst one off it is an indicator tough and should not to be dismissed, also how many are on the database? Apologies to those who complained for continuing the economics debate, but essentially ground extension is just that a debate about the clubs economics.
  9. As you seem to favour opening or closing your posts with an insult I thought I would mimic you, you’re an economic ignoramus, oh that makes me feel superior. Back to the debate, and a couple of points: My Example was to illustrate one extreme (you illustrated the other) of the capacity argument the one you are arguing for i.e. that you maximise revenue by controlling the supply this has some merit when market conditions lead to an increase in demand and therefore you are able within limits to set the price high until supply and demand are in equilibrium. This is fine when the supply side cannot be adjusted to meet demand due to real scarcity (diamonds, gold, good wine) I would argue that whilst there is a limit on the amount of supply in terms of football stadia we haven’t come close to reaching it with SM. Your Apple example is so completely wrong, Apples business model is not based on controlling supply, anyone who wants an apple product could go out and buy one today. The apple model is based on: exclusivity (not the same as demand), market access due to Microsoft dominance and the need to differentiate, first to market with new gizmo’s and first class customer service. It is these business model attributes that allow Apple to set premium prices not the control of demand. For a football club it would be difficult to replicate exclusivity indeed it is the antithesis of what a successful football club should pursue, MU are hardly exclusive but hey they are successful, they attempt to service demand to the maximum possible, (not comparing us to MU, just and example, just in case you do your usual thing and mis-interpret) whereas the phew have tried the exclusivity model by not extending FP and discouraging all but the bestest fans in world, and look where that got them. To counter your “Most businesses I know do not go out to sell as much of their thing as is humanly possible” conversely most well governed businesses I know (ignoring window cleaners or makers of bespoke furniture etc.) do the opposite, they are occasionally constrained by cash flow or the ability to respond to the market often due to production or resource limitations. I certainly don’t see Tescos or Sainsburys letting there shelves run empty or Fiord or Nissan reigning in car production, unless demand dries up, but they maintain the infrastructure to respond to the upswing in demand For capital expenditure read capital investment, now let me see, invest for the future, how many times have the majority of Saints fans pointed out that failing to do this is what got the phew to where they are now, the riskiest “investments” in footballers are transfer fees and wages not infrastructure. It wasn’t the SM mortgage that got us into trouble it was relegation and a misguided attempt to buy our way out of the Championship. Hope that helps I may not be right but I do actually think about what I am saying, since when has the crisp supply been controlled, production is geared to meet demand.
  10. You very conveniently ignore the fact that we more than doubled our capacity when we moved from the Dell, if your logic had been applied we would have built a smaller stadium than we did.Ccontrolling supply when demand is high is a high risk strategy and not very common, why not have a 10k stadium (a lot less overhead) and charge £200 a seat? a bit far fetched i Know but it illustrates my point. I want to give the maximum number of fans the chance to watch the saints at affordable prices.
  11. There is little doubt that NC is ambitious, Staplewood attests to this. There have been many posts on here about catchment area and potential, expansion has little to do with us current fans it is all about new fans and armchair fans. Whilst the ubber fans will moan and criticise it is this constituency that must be cattered for and attracted to the SM and the only way is to provide more opportunity to get tickets. The Reading plans are of real significance to us, our catchment areas overlap and non committed fans who want to watch premiership football will watch the club that provides easiest access and the best facilities. When we moved from the Dell few thought we would average over 30k (in the prem) at SM, they got that wrong, the only way we will find out what level of support we can sustain is to expand and expand as soon as possible.
  12. Went to the Gambia in the late 80's lovely people, great to see the video thanks.
  13. I forgot to put Ted Bates in my list, never saw him play but he is without the rreatest of all Saints legends.
  14. Unless there is an agreed criteria as to what constitutes legendary status we will never agree. For me it is longevity at least 200 games, loyalty publicly committed to the club and delivers on the commitment, can not be any other clubs legend and one who most supporters respect. So in my 48 years following the Saints my legends are George O'brian, Tommy Traynor, Terry Paine, Mick Channon, Ron Davies, Bobby Stokes (FA Cup guarantees his place), Nick Holmes, Danny Wallace, Matthew Le God, Francis Benali, Jason Dodd and yes Kelvin Davis. So no Shilton (Leicester have first call on him), no Keegan (take your pick from S****horpe, Liverpool and the Barcodes), and as of today no Lambert but he is well on the way.
  15. You have got to visit the Coronation Tap near the Suspension Bridge (Enter from Sion or Lames Placehttp://www.thecoronationtap.com/,) in Clifton, its is a cider mecca thier own Exhibition Cider is only served in 1/2 pints!. If you start there you can work your way all the way down the hill via numerous bars to the City Centre for the Watershed area.
  16. From my experience it is standard practice to provide names of guests in hospitality areas at sporting events, stand fast the grammer, i dont see any porblem with this.
  17. I think Sharps main role at the moment is back up for RL, he is different type of player to Lee who as other have said above is about pace and stretching defences. Connolly understands what is required when he comes on as a sub BS is still bedding in and getting Saints fit, he will get his chance and I am sure will make an impression.
  18. Hope this works! http://s1170.photobucket.com/albums/r529/aquasaint/?action=view&current=DSC_1022.jpg
  19. Ooops will try again!
  20. Is this you Got it right further down
  21. 54, born in Colerne Wiltshire now live in Bath, never lived in Southampton tough have lived in Fareham and Gosport when in the RN, father from Southampton. First home game Reading 63 I think, first one I actually remember was 68 Wolves, first away game, sort off, a Saints XI pre season friendly at Twerton Park late 60’s. Missed the 76 final due to be under the sea somewhere of Scotland! But was at both West Brom games and the semi v Palace.
  22. This is intersteing as changing pensions already in payment will be open to serious legal challenges, defered pensions (for ratings who did not complete 22 years from age 18 or 16 years from age 21 for an officer) may be a different matter, I belive these normally commencae at age 60. Just let me get to my 55th in August to get all my commutation and index linking restored before they do it. I am afraid DD your figures for senior officers are a bit out, I used the Pensiosn Calculator (any one can use thsi and be any one they like) available on the MOD website for a Vice Admiral leaving on VERS and got the following results, Start of Reckonable Service 02/04/1977 End of Reckonable Service 06/07/2012 Leaving NATO Rank OF 8 Reckonable service length 34 years Retirement age 56 Final Pensionable salary £138569 Pension Scheme AFPS 75 Pension £69285 Terminal Grant £207854 So half pay which is which definately better than other ranks with similar pensionable service, I have to say the terminal grant is very nice to!
  23. I was there with my dad and brother and remebder the traffic backing up on the aproach road that overlooked the ground, sainst fans getting of coaches and walking along the motorway to get in before kick off, shame about the result. Sadly Eastville is long gone covered by IKEA, TESCO's and a range of non discript shops.
  24. Senior officers do not remain on full pay, as usual you don't know your facts.
  25. The simple answer to the OP is NO, Nige's job is to manage a succesful First Team and to ensure that all other activities within the club are focused on making his life as easy as possible. All he had to do in this instance was say NO and leave it to others to communicate the Clubs position. Jewells statment is about him not Saints, he is saying I am trying my best, I knew RL would succeed in this league even before he kicked a ball and therefore I am football visonary and it isnt my fault Ipswich are not in the top 2.
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