No it doesn't.
It seeks to punish clubs who 'win' at least £120,000,000 by taking a chunk of those winnings in fines (with another chunk of it going to paying off the debt accrued in winning it, it reduces the gain side of the risk/reward equation thus making it so teams will see that the...
Wasn't that in the face of threats of other restrictions while the challenge raged on? (I can't remember specifically, something like not being allowed to enter the champions league while the challenge was under way or something)
Taken on their own, no. But when you factor in that our wages included around £1m in redundancy payments, at least one bonus for Paul Barber clinching a big new sponsorship deal, that several of our deals signed in league one were in their final year, and that when they were announced it was...
Isn't it January? All the finance reports are due in December, and the results will be known in time to stop people doing business in the January window. In theory.