Those who expect massive splurges on the transfer market or a quick abandoment
of our wage structure will be disapointed.
Not exact matches
Key policy directions have been trade liberalisation and a move away from the formerly rather regulated and centralised
structure of wage determination.
Likewise, the NDP called for a higher minimum
wage and a tax
structure that shares the cost
of running a province fairly, both items that are expected to be in today's throne speech too.
We rightly take up the legitimate question
of whether our present economic
structures provide a living
wage for ordinary people.
To apply such a principle to a market economy, the law should first specify the
wage required to maintain the worker in his social position as the price
of the commodity he produces should then adapt to the cost
structure so established.
From a nation
of individual property holders — farmers, artisans, and merchants — we have become a nation
of bureaucratic
wage earners, dependent on vast institutional
structures that we do not control.
Dr. Smith preaches a gospel that takes the church beyond its own wall — to
wage war against drugs in the street, to form coalitions
of Hispanics, Asians, and Caucasians to work for changes in social systems and
structures.
No manager should have that say, it can lead to poor
wage structure and a waste
of funds, I don't care what manager we get next... Wages should be a board thing with input from manager.
People are talking about all these people coming to the club, but I don't see how that works... out
of the champions league, losing all our stars and unlike manure, who were in a somewhat similar position, restricted by a
wage structure.
Their move for a Manchester City star and the renewal
of a key player's contract are under threat from a strict
wage structure...
Meanwhile Milner currently earns # 120,000 a week with the Citizens, which is also outside
of the Reds»
wage structure, AS Roma are thought to be ready to pounce if the England international doesn't agree a move to Liverpool.
The
wage structure at Arsenal one
of delusion, and it causes us so many problems.
Penny pinching and the socialist
wage structure of his.
Arsenal seem to have this team philosophy for the
wage structure, where everyone should be on almost the same level
of pay.
If an increase in salary is only going to cost 5 - 7 %
of the allowed
wage structure than I say sure do it as it would cost more to pay a transfer fee and a new salary for a player matching the caliber
of either player.
My initial remit was to conduct a massive overhaul
of the playing squad, lower the overall
wage structure of the playing staff and achieve this whilst keeping the club in the Barclays Premier League.
It was a drain on the
wage structure and quite a few
of the players in it, like Kieran Gibbs, Carl Jenkinson, Joel Campbell and Lucas Perez were not likely to play much.
Mertz should never have been our captain in the first place... who has ever heard
of a team that makes 11th hour transfer buys (Arteta & Mertz) then seemingly places those same individuals into prominent leadership positions from the get - go... indicative
of the problems that have permeated our clubhouse for the better part
of 7 years under the Kroenke & Wenger... what is wrong with the players chosen and / or the management style
of Wenger that doesn't develop and / or encourage strong leadership from within... Mertz was the fine collecting lackey from year one... this is what happens when you don't get world - class players because many times they want to have a voice on and off the pitch and this can't happen when you play for a fragile manager who has developed a coddling
wage structure where everyone is rewarded for simply wearing the shirt and participating in the process... not enough balance between performance and pay, combined with the obvious favoritism shown to some players regardless
of their glaring lack
of production... remember that Ramsey has played in positions that make no sense considering his skill - set (out wide) and has forced other players off the field or into equally unfamiliar positions with little or no justification (let's remember when you read articles about how Ramsey's goals this upcoming season being the potential X-factor for our success that this is the same individual who didn't score a goal until the final week last season)... this
of course is just one example
of many... before I hear another word from Mertz I want this club to address the fact that no former player
of any real consequence has any important role in the management
structure of this club, yet several former Gunners have expressed serious interest in just such an endeavor (Henry, Viera, Adams, Bergkamp... just to name a few legends)... there is only one answer: an extremely insecure manager!!!
Up front we have a few world - class players surrounded by some serious pretenders... Sanchez is by far the most accomplished player in our attack but the controversy surrounding his contractual mishandling could see him go before the window closes or most definitely by season's end... obviously a mistake by both parties involved, as Sanchez's exploits have never been more on display than in North London, but the club's irresponsible
wage structure and lack
of real intent have been the real undoing in this mess... Lacazette, who I think has some world - class skills as a front man, will only be as good as the players and system around him, which is troubling due to our current roster and Wenger's love
of sideways passing... Walcott should have been sold years ago, enough said, and Welbeck should never have been brought in from the get - go... both
of these players have suffered numerous injuries over their respective careers and neither are good enough to overcome such difficulties: not to mention, they both are below average first - touch players, which should be the baseline test for any player coming to a Wenger - led Arsenal team... Perez should have been played wide left or never purchased at all; what a huge waste
of time and money, which is ridiculous considering our penny pinching ways and the fact that fans had been clamoring for a real striker for years... finally Giroud, the fact that he stills wears the jersey is a direct indictment
of this club's failure to get things right... this isn't necessarily an attack on Giroud because I think he has some highly valued skills, but not for a team that has struggled to take their sideways soccer to the next level, as his presence slows their game even more, combined with our average, at best, finishing skills... far too often those in charge have either settled or chosen half - measures and ultimately it is us that suffer because no matter what happens Wenger, Gazidis and Kroenke will always make more money whereas we will always be the ones paying for their mistakes... so every time someone suggests we should just shut - up and support the team just think
of all the sacrifices you've made along the way and simply reply... f *** off
wilshire is just not worth his wages thats why hes paid 80k a week, and thats too much along with most
of the team IE iwoi, Ozil and laCassette all these should have a sliding sscale
wage structure, If you play and score yu get your money plus a bonus If yu play like Arsenal do I'd pay them zero and fine them to boot We are too soft if they e \ were out in the real world and performed like that they;d be sacked this has goota stop and one way would be for the FA to bring in a max on wages and a sliding scale for footballers Maybe then theyd start playing for their dinner and not just pick their noses
1 thing I do blame Wenger on is the
wage structure, that doesn't help anyone to sell a player who sees a move as too much
of a financial loss...
It's clear that Gunners wanted to capture this player just that little bit more than their rivals and, when you have a
wage structure which can't always compete with the very biggest clubs, it's all about working that extra bit hard to sign these sort
of players.
Both players are reportedly hoping for weekly wages
of around # 200,000 per week, which in the state that football currently is in, is about the right price for players
of their quality, but for Arsenal's
wage structure it could be challenging.
We can afford it but I am not sure if we can afford to lose our two superstars, so is this the end
of Arsenal's current
wage structure?
They have a
wage structure in place, and Lewa, who's one
of their top earners, makes 16mil per year.
It isn't the club, it's isn't the supporters (who will in the end bear the brunt
of the sky rocketing
wage structure in the game), it is a 24 year old man who felt he was bigger than the club, and to all intents and purposes he proved that he was.
Seaman clearly feels that the boss needs to get this sorted and if that means paying over the odds or breaking the club's
wage structure he has to do it or face the prospect
of losing our ability to challenge for the EPL crown.
This comment is NOT a criticism
of our club, in fact the opposite, for having for once, the determination to compete in what is, though, a ludicrously obscene market place and players
wage structure.
If we got shot
of about 21 players brought in the 4 players we really need and reassess the
wage structure accordingly, I would be more than happy with that.
There were talks
of a Director
of Football and we could use a person who would address our diabolical
wage structure which sees players like Debuchy on 60k a week virtually impossible to get rid
of, as well as cashing in on average players after one good season like Ramsey, and injury prone players like Wilshere.
But Falcao does nt make sense as he could easily be out for long periods
of time because
of his past injuries and we would have to break our
wage structure for him.
I had followed Arsenal long enough that we have pretty strict
wage structure (the belief
of football as a team sport and squad harmony is important) and we never pay over the odd for player or greedy agent — which in turn can help us to get the best value for our money All in all, whether it is a smart move, we should patiently wait until end
of the transfer window.
«People talk about breaking the
wage structure and upsetting the applecart, but in the dressing room nobody will complain if the club accommodates a couple
of higher earners who are in that «special» bracket and they deliver the title.
I very much doubt that Real would pursue Sanchez unless they were contemplating moving Bale, planning to play Ronaldo centrally this season and willing to upset their delicate
wage structure...
of course anything is possible, but this appears to be unlikely... the bigger question is the fact that Wenger was willing to risk losing the first few games
of the season because he hasn't settled the Sanchez dilemma in a timely fashion... no one believes he was too injured to play so this is not too dissimilar from the Liverpool game last season, except for the fact that Sanchez was in street clothes and not in his warm - ups (much like Coutinho for Liverpool today)... we're existing in such a fragile environment because
of Wenger and Kroenke... in the game yesterday, when Leicester scored to make it 3 - 2, you could cut the tension with a knife... can you imagine just for a second what the reaction might have been if we had failed to score in the last 10 minutes
It is that damned
wage structure that sees the likes
of Mertesacker and Ramsey earning big money yet the never produce big performances.
A lot is being made
of the rumored # 250,000 salary offered to Alexis, but Arsene Wenger has said publicly many times he would not break the club's
wage structure for either Ozil or Sanchez, which means that salary number is a lie.
We're retaining the majority
of our players, fixed our socialist
wage structure, added absolute quality and finally broke the silverware curse with consecutive F.A. Cups.
Despite making steady progress over the last two years, their continued disappointment in terms
of winning trophies and their limited
wage structure could put pressure on them this summer to fend off interest along with the fact that they'll be moving into an expensive new stadium the season after next.
Whatever your beliefs are regarding the intentions
of this club moving forward, don't think for a second that it has to do with appeasing the fans, winning the highest honours and / or changing the stagnant culture that permeates this club... every decision is made for one sole purpose and that is to maintain the delicate balance between Kroenke's unyielding need to acquire more wealth and Wenger's fragile psyche, which is why we have this ridiculous
wage structure that pays deadwood too much and makes it incredibly difficult to attract special players... personally I believe that Wenger's greatest fear isn't that he won't win a big trophy again but exposing himself to the overwhelming criticism he will face when people discover the totally dysfunctional state
of affairs that exist at Arsenal due to his antiquated practices which have gone relatively unchecked and unchallenged since the departure
of Dein
Who club who deems debuchy worth 80k a week must surely deem sanchez worthy
of 400k a week atleast lol Entire
structure is flawed, wenger has a useless
wage structure that does not work in the modern football.
If there is one thing I admire about Spurs is the very
wage structure other people are making fun
of.
this complaining about wenger gets nausiating, i know these type
of fans will want the next manager out, then the next... everyone is a Klopp fan but no one want to mention his 16 th place in the relagation zone, our team is competitive, yr after yr, our
wage structure, set by the board is lower than the oil rich rivals who can buy who ever they want, we do alot with less, and yet find a way, I do nt agree w every move
of wenger, but i do nt want to support a classless dildo like jose either
This means that socialist
wage structure Wenger employs that sees the likes
of Mertesacker earning 80k per week to sit on the bench all season is what is preventing us from paying deserving players what they are worth.
All the financial figures (that you took the time to research) which proves that Arsenal had money to spend, the socialist
wage structure, the tactical ineptness
of the manager, the signing
of rubbish players at high salaries and panic - buys, not strengthening key positions etc etc etc all became false to you.
Whilst Ozil was initially holding out for wages in the range
of # 350,000 - a-week which would see the German on par with the Premier League's highest - earners, the report from the Sun claims that a lack
of leverage in terms
of lucrative offers from other clubs has resulted in the player having to settle for Arsenal's offer
of # 280,000 - a-week, with the Gunners clearly breaking the club's
wage structure to keep the World Cup winner in North London.
Benzema to earn around 7.3 m pounds p.a on a 5 year deal keeping him at arsenal until 2020 similar
wage structure to that
of mesut ozil.
The Spanish giants are already looking to offload James Rodriguez, who is believed to be the subject
of interest from big - spending duo Chelsea and Manchester United, and his wages would likely be beyond our current
wage structure.
I do not believe it was money that held us back however, but a combination
of ineptitude, a strict
wage structure and most importantly a manager who is slightly blinded by our own failings.
we now have to show big ambition and hugely outbid and agree on players personal terms which will blow our
wage structure right out
of the universe to be able get the signings
of the top players from clubs like City, Man - U, Chelsea, real, barca, ect ect are after,
Arsenal are one
of the most followed and 4th Richest Football club in the world, just behind the likes
of Manchester United and two Spanish power houses Real Madrid and Barcelona, and thats according to Forbes most valueable football clubs in the world, they have a strict
wage policy in place, where players are divided into different categories and they are paid the same amount
of money as other players in that category, well thats what it seems if we look at the official
wage structure of Arsenal.