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8 votes
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Sheffield United's LGBT+ fan group helps fans feel connected during pandemic
6 votes -
Pernille Harder opens up on equality in football and the time the Danish women's team took on their own national federation
3 votes -
Denmark reached the world handball championship final with a thrilling 35-33 win over Spain – Sweden stunned France 32-26 on Friday
8 votes -
Magnificent India win epic series versus Australia in last hour of last day of last Test
5 votes -
Hege Riise will lead the England women's football team on a temporary basis after Phil Neville's early departure as manager
6 votes -
Australia apologises as India cricket players racially abused
6 votes -
Champions of the Swedish women's league, Kopparbergs/Göteborg FC, have dissolved their senior football side and all players have been released from their contracts
8 votes -
Australia romp to victory after India's lowest total in Tests
5 votes -
How the Faroe Islands became a footballing force – home to 52,000 people, they have long been the butt of footballing jokes
4 votes -
The rise and fall of Östersunds FK – fairytale or corruption?
6 votes -
Norway hires Ståle Solbakken to replace Lars Lagerbäck as coach of the national football team – Lagerbäck leaves after failing to qualify for next year's European Championship
4 votes -
Ada Hegerberg: ‘I'm coming back to reconquer my position in football’
4 votes -
The forgotten story of ... the France football captain who murdered for Adolf Hitler
7 votes -
The fan-controlled Green Bay Packers remain an antidote to the grimy world of NFL owners
11 votes -
Economic crisis of Turkish football clubs
An announcement shook Turkish football seriously. Turkish Football Federation (TFF) announced spending limits for clubs. That is very low because club debts. Everybody knew it would happen one...
An announcement shook Turkish football seriously. Turkish Football Federation (TFF) announced spending limits for clubs. That is very low because club debts. Everybody knew it would happen one day. But corona took early that crisis. All of big Turkish clubs near to bankrupt. Their total debts over 2 billion dollars. Clubs signed too heavy deals with goverment banks. Goverment and TFF try to keep up clubs alive.
This isnt about only coronavirus or only Turkish economy. Clubs loaned more and more each year since the early 2000s. Presidents of clubs spend money badly, they transfer useless football players. And now money ran out ! And of course, turkish lira in crisis. Clubs gains with turkish lira, but spend with euro. And Lira still unstable. Euro/Lira increased from 7.7 to 8.6 in just one month. Its ~%10 lost only one month. Broadcaster company BEIN SPORTS, pay less money to federation for corona and lira crisis. Debts, income loss, lira crisis, corona. Everythings
Yearly spending limits of some big FCs:
- Galatasaray: 58m €
- Besiktas: 35m €
- Fenerbahce: 20m € (too low)
- Basaksehir: 20m €
- Trabzonspor: 17.5m €
That values very low. For this budgeds, clubs cant transfers. Someones should make the team smaller like fenerbahce. Fenerbahce protest that limits but they have 600m $ unstructured debt and they can't show income ! I think if this year fenerbahce cant be champion and can't go to the Champions Leauge, their clubs will be mortgaged or to be sold in the near future. A very rich bussines man -Ali Koc- became president of this club and he transferred a significant amount of money to the club. But for two years he was not successful in terms of sports.
There is also Başakşehir. Our champion, Basaksehir played really bad footbal againts Copenhagen FC and eliminated from Champions Leage. But Basaksehir is a brand-new club, in fact they were established in 2014. They have profesional management team and every year become better since 2014. Today, they became champions for the first time and may be the brightest club in Turkey. Some arabs from Qatar want to buy this club. Fans do not react to this. Because this 6-year-old club has almost no supporters. They became champions, but they didn't celebrate. (Ironically, I am one of the very few fans of Başakşehir.)
Galatasaray is less worried about debts. Because they postponed their debts for 5 years (with insane interest rate) But still too many debt in 5 year. the 115 year old club has many lands. Club think they can pay off the debts by selling the land at in the good areas of İstanbul.
Source:
TFF Spending Limits: https://www.tff.org/default.aspx?pageID=687&ftxtID=33547 (Not in turkish)8 votes -
Release the Kraken: Seattle unveils long-awaited name of their new NHL franchise
10 votes -
The Football Association of Iceland released its new crest – to describe it as the most metal thing you've ever seen does it an injustice
8 votes -
Top-tier international cricket resumes after the COVID-19 hiatus with an England vs West Indies test at Southampton
6 votes -
Brian Laudrup looks back on how the Danes defied the odds to become the unlikely champions of Euro '92
4 votes -
My favourite football game – when Denmark beat Uruguay 6-1 at the 1986 World Cup (Michael Gibbons, co-author of "Danish Dynamite" with Rob Smyth and Lars Eriksen)
7 votes -
Sweden football coach Janne Andersson has signed a contract extension through to UEFA Euro 2024
6 votes -
A case for the revival of women's Test cricket
6 votes -
World Cap Of Hockey – What would Team Finland look like if it had to be cap compliant?
6 votes -
World Cap Of Hockey – What would Team Sweden look like if it had to be cap compliant?
5 votes -
Male players have 'more responsibility' than women, US Soccer says in court filings
6 votes -
Mikael Ymer's comeback clinched Sweden's 3-1 conquest of Chile in the Davis Cup Qualifier – sending the Swedes through to the finals in Madrid in November
4 votes -
England have been drawn to face Iceland, Denmark and Belgium in the 2020/21 UEFA Nations League
5 votes -
The lessons a buoyant Finland can take from Iceland's Euro 2016 success
3 votes -
Kim Vilfort – The tragic hero of Denmark's Euro '92 glory
3 votes -
Why Gazprom, a Russian oil company sponsors soccer teams
6 votes -
Markku Kanerva: ‘This has been a dream for generations of Finns’
3 votes -
Hedge fund billionaire Steve Cohen is buying the New York Mets
5 votes -
All you need to know about UEFA Euro 2020 Group B contenders Denmark, Finland, Belgium and Russia
6 votes -
What once seemed impossible is now undeniable: The Redskins have lost Washington
6 votes -
Finland beat Liechtenstein 3–0 in Helsinki to book a place at Euro 2020 and reach the finals of a tournament for the first time in the country's history
5 votes -
Chip Ganassi Racing expands to three cars with addition of Marcus Ericsson
3 votes -
How important was "Moneyball" to the success of the 2002 Oakland A's?
6 votes -
Australia retain the Ashes in England
4 votes -
The Finnish FA announced it will begin paying its men's and women's national teams equally
3 votes -
Ben Stokes' century keeps England in the Ashes with historic third-Test win
7 votes -
USA's World Cup stars return to big crowds – but will it last?
4 votes -
Tears of joy as South Korea's water polo team score – but concede ninety-four
7 votes -
Microsoft Teams is now officially bigger than Slack
21 votes -
Kosovare Asllani: ‘30,000 people came to celebrate our medal’
5 votes -
Swedish football association reported to equality watchdog for suspected wage discrimination
4 votes -
Megan Rapinoe on the spot as USA beat Netherlands to win Women’s World Cup 2019
13 votes -
Why stars won’t come to the Knicks
8 votes -
Sweden beat Canada 1-0 in a hard-fought game at the Women's World Cup 2019
4 votes -
England fans escorted from stadium amid Cameroon World Cup tensions
5 votes