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Man Utd to win the Premier League according to economic league table

13 August 2011 No Comment

F.C. Business Magazine has made a bold attempt to predict how the league will finish using economics. According to pure economics, Manchester United will reclaim the Premiership championship this season to land a record 20th league title. But does science completely rule or does romance remain in the beautiful game?

If economics alone were to decide this season’s Premiership campaign, then Manchester United would reclaim their Premiership crown and the three recently promoted teams, QPR, Swansea and Norwich, will all be relegated.

The same ‘Big Four’ (Manchester United, Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester City) will again qualify for the Champions League, with Liverpool regaining European football, albeit in the less lucrative Europa League. Tottenham will again be thwarted in their attempts to qualify for the Champions League, finishing in a disappointing seventh spot a year after finishing fifth.

The F.C. Business league table uses a combination of each club’s ground size, average attendance, revenues and wage bill from the latest Deloitte Annual Review of Football Finance and it also includes the name and approximate value of each club’s star player, to predict a final league standing.

From previous in-depth economic research carried out between Alex Miller and Professor Chris Brady of the BPP Business School, for use on the UEFA Pro Licence training course, it is very unusual – but certainly not unheard of – for clubs to finish more than three places either side of their economic status.

In recent seasons, Newcastle and West Ham have both seriously underperformed and found themselves 10+ places below their economic status and relegated from the Premiership.

At a time when statistics are increasingly used in the game, it is clubs such as Swansea that remind us that football can still be the beautiful game with a fluid and unpredictable nature, capable of producing romance and genuine surprise.

Top clubs such as Manchester City and Liverpool are increasingly using statistics in all aspects of club life, from training and fitness activities through to making major decisions such as who to buy in the transfer market.

Nonetheless, economics and stats cannot 100% calculate team spirit, outside influences, form, injuries, nerves, emotion, a mis-hit penalty, a lapse of concentration or a major refereeing decision. It also cannot measure the togetherness and camaraderie a top manager can generate within a group of players.

Professor Brady said: “It is argued by many that, given the massive significance of the economic and financial factors on the results of league competitions, football managers only provide 3% to 4% of the added value. For me, that’s the bit that makes the difference, that’s the art.”

While on Arsenal’s pre-season tour of Asia recently, Arsene Wenger appeared before 100 business leaders and was asked by a delegate where he thought the balance between football being art and great business was.

He revealingly replied: “I like a famous line from a great philosopher who said ‘the only way to deal with death is to transform everything that precedes it into art’. We have to make sure we try to make every day as beautiful as we can.”

So while the use of statistics and scientific theories is on the increase in the game, there remain a raft of “unknowns” in football to enable an element of unpredictability and art will remain, especially in cup football. The game consists of a combination of the two elements, with exact ratios a matter of opinion

Premiership predictor for 2011/12 season

Club Ground Av’g gate Wages Revenue Star player
1. Man Utd 75,769 74,864 £132m £286m Rooney (£60m)
2. Arsenal 60,361 59,930 £111m £224m Fabregas (£50m)
3. Chelsea 42,449 41,427 £174m £213m Torres (£50m)
4. Man City 47,405 45,513 £133m £125m Tevez (£40m)
5. Liverpool 45,362 43,949 £121m £185m Suarez (£40m)
6. Aston Villa 42,788 38,577 £80m £91m Bent (£20m)
7. Tottenham 36,230 35,794 £67m £120m Bale (£50m)
8. Sunderland 48,707 40,355 £54m £65m Cattermole (£12m)
9. Everton 40,157 36,729 £54m £79m Rodwell (£20m)
10. Newcastle 52,387 43,387 £47m £52m Ben Arfa (£15m)
11. Blackburn 31,367 25,427 £47m £58m Samba (£12m)
12. Stoke City 28,383 27,152 £45m £59m Shawcross (£12m)
13. Bolton 27,879 22,076 £46m £62m Cahill (£15m)
14. Fulham 26,600 23,909 £49m £77m Zamora (£10m)
15. Wolves 29,303 28,366 £30m £61m Jarvis (£10m)
16. Wigan Athletic 25,133 18,096 £39m £44m McCarthy (£12m)
17. WBA 28,003 22,199 £23m £28m Brunt (£6m)
18. Norwich 26,034 24,755 £8m £17m Holt (£5m)
19. QPR 18,682 13,348 £17m £14m Taarabt (£12m)
20. Swansea City 20,520 15,407 £8m £10m Dyer (£3m)


Source: fcbusiness.co.uk

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