- Jan 19, 2010
- 1,786
Mighty oaks from little acorns do grow.
Nothing stays the same; the growth of interest in China and America and the wealth available will likely eclipse the Premier League within a decade.
The deal isn't done yet.Can't believe he slipped through our net.
Paul Winstanley out.
It makes no difference how poor the national side is. They have a lot of money (a lot more than us) and want to make football big in China. So they're going to do it. Simple.It's still a surprise, surely? They're forking out HUGE sums.
Ley's be honest, in terms of football they're third world.
80 St. Kitts and Nevis
82 China
83 Faroe Islands
If they build good teams that are well supported (by the billions of fans) with the best players, why won't people around the world watch it?I just can't see how this works out well for them in any way.
Our model 'works' because the viewers are there across the Far East to justify humongous overseas tv rights deal but the thing with a Chinese Super League is no one outside China will want to watch it let alone pay through the nose for the privilege.
I think they do. They also have the will of the government, and that's a big deal over there.I'm predicting that the Chinese Super League is going to fail unless they have enough owners to bankroll the operation for at least a decade
I think they do. They also have the will of the government, and that's a big deal over there.
so watching World Class players against League 1 & 2 players would get tedious quite quickly.
You seem confident there are many L1&2 quality domestic players over there.
Indeed, but the more they persuade the better the league can become and the easier it becomes to persuade the players. If they go all in, it could work.The hardest bit for them is convincing world class players - already rolling in money - that they are not taking an easy option when they could be proving themselves in Europe.
I just can't see how this works out well for them in any way.
Our model 'works' because the viewers are there across the Far East to justify humongous overseas tv rights deal but the thing with a Chinese Super League is no one outside China will want to watch it let alone pay through the nose for the privilege.
Well they'll have to change that rule if they want decent football.They have a policy that only four overseas players can be on the pitch for a team at anyone time.
Overseas markets are helpful to the PL but the majority of the money is still Sky and BT Vision on domestic rights.
It's definitely interesting.
Wonder what Dunk is worth in Renminbi now?
If they build good teams that are well supported (by the billions of fans) with the best players, why won't people around the world watch it?
1.5bn audience...