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You make a very compelling case for a complete upgrade. There is never a good time to do it, even if we did have the will, and the money. With perfect hindsight, the best time to do it was during the Covid shutdown.
Now we will have to close down the most iconic and memorable part of the ground, when we eventually get around to it.
What Levy did at Spurs was amazing, and he gave up the whole ground while club games were played at Wembley the best part of two seasons!
The Lane needs to give up the present Kop for only one season, based on the delays and planning requirements for the Tottenham Stadium. It is still a big move necessary for the most devout supporters to be inconvenienced for that time.
If it’s worth doing, it’s worth doing properly.
If the club gets a new owner, the real test of his honesty, would be the same approach to the Kop rebuild, as Levy had during the construction of a new stadium. Risk upsetting the most important and vociferous fans, to provide time and loss of revenue and support for the whole thing to be built properly! Do it once, and get it right. Just shifting the mound of rubble under the old Kop will probably take most of the close season, IMHO.
Sensible comment, but we both know the whole ground needs to be re-built. The biggest, most important and hardest job will be the Kop. I just think the rest of the ground can wait. I do see the reasoning behind your plan, I just think the hardest job should be tackled first. The rest will seem like a piece of cake after that.If true, then the sensible approach would be to almost do it last.
The South Stand should always be the priority, it would give us the higher ROI through corporate boxes and seats which could be added. Those additional seats would then reduce the impact of closing the Kop.
Personally I think it's third in line, behind the Bramall Lane stand, and I sit on Shoreham.
American Express ??
I'd rather live with it as it is then it be closed for a season.You make a very compelling case for a complete upgrade. There is never a good time to do it, even if we did have the will, and the money. With perfect hindsight, the best time to do it was during the Covid shutdown.
Now we will have to close down the most iconic and memorable part of the ground, when we eventually get around to it.
What Levy did at Spurs was amazing, and he gave up the whole ground while club games were played at Wembley the best part of two seasons!
The Lane needs to give up the present Kop for only one season, based on the delays and planning requirements for the Tottenham Stadium. It is still a big move necessary for the most devout supporters to be inconvenienced for that time.
If it’s worth doing, it’s worth doing properly.
If the club gets a new owner, the real test of his honesty, would be the same approach to the Kop rebuild, as Levy had during the construction of a new stadium. Risk upsetting the most important and vociferous fans, to provide time and loss of revenue and support for the whole thing to be built properly! Do it once, and get it right. Just shifting the mound of rubble under the old Kop will probably take most of the close season, IMHO.
Not sure that could be done given the amount of rubble under the Kop now. Why risk damage to a new expensive roof, just keep the Kop open for a season?I'd rather live with it as it is then it be closed for a season.
I'd suggest roof and pillars could be done closed season.
An improved concourse, linking to the new roof the next closed season.
The ground improvement debate will unfortunately always linger on because our ground isn't good enough anymore for the club grow and compete in the Premier League, as we would all hope. My take is this:
The Kop is obviously the biggest problem which needs addressing ASAP. Poor viewing angles, poles obstructing the view, insufficient legroom, outside concourse, poor toilets and food facilities, the majority of entrances/exits being at the back more or less forcing everybody in one direction - these are all major issues, some of which could even force the closure of the entire stand in time.
What it really needs is demolishing and a brand new stand building in its place. However, apart from the high cost of doing this there will be a lot of knock-on issues if we did go down this route. The stand would be closed for 18 months minimum - where are the 7000-8000 season ticket holders who currently sit on the Kop going to go? We just haven't got the spare capacity to place them all elsewhere.
The better solution would be to add an extra tier to the South Stand (using the current plans) which would enable an extra 6000 seats to be added to the capacity whilst not disrupting the existing match day experience. It would also provide space to place the current Kop season ticket holders when the Kop redevelopment finally takes place (as it must at sometime). There would be additional benefits such as increased hospitality revenue and, unlike the Kop, these plans look impressive.
Once this is completed then the demolition of the kop could commence. The current plans for the Kop though are a joke and do not address many of the problems we, as fans, or the safety officers currently face.
The perfect solution (in my opinion) would be to extend the South Stand lower tier all the way around to meet the John Street side, include rail seating plans (if possible) and use a cantilever design just like the South Stand currently has. this would allow for extending the South Stand upper tier around in the same way along Shoreham Street, should that be necessary in the future.
The final result looking similar to St. James Park for those confused by my description.
Will this happen......probably not....but it should be the plan. The new owner (whoever that will be) should do everything possible to gain control of those 2 pockets of land stolen by McCabe, so that United can submit plans which will be both impressive and address all safety and supporter issues.
The cost involved......tens of millions which can only be achieved by Premier League football, and even then we would have to try and survive on the cheap for a couple of seasons, which generally doesn't happen. I'm not surprised that the Prince wants out as he can see the problems ahead if we do go up.....and if we don't.
Yes, I agree.....however they could restrict the new area to general sale and existing season ticket holders to avoid this potential issue.Agree with everything. However the only way of using the proposed new seats in the SS to accommodate the Kop season ticket holders would be for the Kop work to start as soon as the SS is ready. Otherwise people will start buying season tickets in the new available second tier seats and if we sold 3000 more season tickets there (source: number plucked from thin air) then we suddenly don't have the room to accommodate the Kop ticket holders and are back to square one.
I think it's highly unlikely that we'd ever be able to afford to do one straight after the other.
Yeah but for how long? They'd want to maximise the ROI from the point the new seats are ready, why risk having some less attractive matches where 5000 of the new seats aren't sold when they could guarantee 3000 season ticket holders there every match?Yes, I agree.....however they could restrict the new area to general sale and existing season ticket holders to avoid this potential issue.
What it really needs is demolishing and a brand new stand building in its place. However, apart from the high cost of doing this there will be a lot of knock-on issues if we did go down this route. The stand would be closed for 18 months minimum - where are the 7000-8000 season ticket holders who currently sit on the Kop going to go? We just haven't got the spare capacity to place them all elsewhere.
The cost involved......tens of millions which can only be achieved by Premier League football, and even then we would have to try and survive on the cheap for a couple of seasons, which generally doesn't happen. I'm not surprised that the Prince wants out as he can see the problems ahead if we do go up.....and if we don't.
It depends what we are trying to achieve.Not sure that could be done given the amount of rubble under the Kop now. Why risk damage to a new expensive roof, just keep the Kop open for a season?
Yes, I do realise how important the current Kop season ticket holders are. The Kop needs dragging into this century facilities wise, even if they prefer to rough it. A season in BLUT will learn ‘em.![]()
I sit in the middle / backBecause it is not up to modern safety standards for a start if it came to it could it be evacuated in a few minutes? I don't think so sit in the middle behind the goal like I do and it can take 10mins to get out whether I go up and over or down and to the sides.
There are three ways to fund such a development
Have a wealthy benefactor owner who’s in it for the long term.
Have a sustained period in the PL.
Borrow the money and spend the next few years paying it off, meaning that our operating budget; our wage bill, would be one of the lowest in the championship (and then, in all likelihood, one of the mid range in L1) until it’s paid off.
It needs flattening, new modern stand built but we're skint so forget about it
You make a very compelling case for a complete upgrade. There is never a good time to do it, even if we did have the will, and the money. With perfect hindsight, the best time to do it was during the Covid shutdown.
Now we will have to close down the most iconic and memorable part of the ground, when we eventually get around to it.
What Levy did at Spurs was amazing, and he gave up the whole ground while club games were played at Wembley the best part of two seasons!
The Lane needs to give up the present Kop for only one season, based on the delays and planning requirements for the Tottenham Stadium. It is still a big move necessary for the most devout supporters to be inconvenienced for that time.
If it’s worth doing, it’s worth doing properly.
If the club gets a new owner, the real test of his honesty, would be the same approach to the Kop rebuild, as Levy had during the construction of a new stadium. Risk upsetting the most important and vociferous fans, to provide time and loss of revenue and support for the whole thing to be built properly! Do it once, and get it right. Just shifting the mound of rubble under the old Kop will probably take most of the close season, IMHO.
come on we put up with no john street stand for nearly 4 yearsThere is a big difference between the Spurs situation and the Sheff Utd situation.
Spurs fans were forced to move but they were all guaranteed to continue seeing their club during building works.
Where as the Sheff Utd home capacity would reduce from 29K down to less than 19K.
We have over 22K season ticket holders.
So how do we tell 3K season ticket holders they are basically banned from BL for 2 years, that is one hell of a sacrifice. The problem is once these season tickets holders have broke the habit and found other things to do on a Saturday, it's not a given they will return to paying for season tickets again.
One could suggest a rota so all season ticket holders take it in turns to miss mathces
but you know how contrary some people are....if you've not missed a home match for 30 years then you aren't going to accept taking your turn to miss games.
Some people will no doubt be so dissatisfied they'll call it a day and stop going.
I don’t think it’s an indictment of modern football. It’s always been the case that clubs with more money are more successful, tend to have better stadiums etc. It’s been that way since Herbert Chapman was called the chequebook manager, arguably even before when Arsenal built Highbury, and exacerbated after WW2 with the abolition of the maximum wage and the rise of televised football. The key is in the name; professional football. If it’s a sad indictment of anything, it’s of Sheffield and it’s consistent refusal to look beyond its borders and act progressively. This goes right back to when professional leagues were formed and Sheffielders considered professionalism to be in some way morally wrong. It’s that attitude of “we know better” that is responsible for the decline of the City.It's a sad indictment of modern football.
I don’t think it’s an indictment of modern football. It’s always been the case that clubs with more money are more successful, tend to have better stadiums etc. It’s been that way since Herbert Chapman was called the chequebook manager, arguably even before when Arsenal built Highbury, and exacerbated after WW2 with the abolition of the maximum wage and the rise of televised football. The key is in the name; professional football. If it’s a sad indictment of anything, it’s of Sheffield and it’s consistent refusal to look beyond its borders and act progressively. This goes right back to when professional leagues were formed and Sheffielders considered professionalism to be in some way morally wrong. It’s that attitude of “we know better” that is responsible for the decline of the City.
It’d mean no away fans though.If we have 21000 season ticket holders say and the kop is closed for a season for a total re build, all fans can still attend matches on the reduced capacity, obviously passive fans won’t be able to attend for a season but it’s a way forward
We need to be in the PL. We need to stay in there for long enough to develop some players and sell them for big money. That’s how other clubs make progress. And yes, we need someone who can invest, to get us there and keep us there. Not only do we need a benefactor but we need one with some common sense and a working understanding of football, because you’re quite right, there aren’t many businesses like football. Otherwise you just get a dickhead like Chansiri who piles money into a club and gets nowhere.I agree with all that. But it now realistically takes a billionaire to run a football club in the top two divisions. The scale of wealth required is totally different and doesn't look like changing. The reason is simple: the footballers are taking all the money, much more than the game is generating. Essentially the game isn't a business unless you are one of a handful of clubs. It's a money pit that doesn't work on normal business principles. You need obscene wealth to run a competitive United - even in the Championship. United realistically need a benefactor to progress now. We are wanting to keep up with the Jones's in the transfer market and expand off the pitch. A McCabe or Prince type has no chance of even doing the former without massive overachievement. At the minute we are inflated with parachute cash. These are the sort of losses Champ teams are making: https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/sport/football/how-bristol-citys-384m-losses-6921841
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