Ninja
15 years ago
7 years ago
5,341
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BnH6mXoIQAACnwp.jpg

I really don't think the B League is anywhere near as offensive an idea as people are trying to make out.
Sam
18 years ago
2 years ago
5,092
Destroying lower league football, it'll kill a lot of clubs, ruining the best football pyramid in the world, the death of football tradition and grassroots football. It's not going to help us win the World Cup in the future, it's a pathetic idea.
Ninja
15 years ago
7 years ago
5,341
Destroying lower league football, it'll kill a lot of clubs, ruining the best football pyramid in the world, the death of football tradition and grassroots football. It's not going to help us win the World Cup in the future, it's a pathetic idea.


Yeah but you've made all of those up.
Sam
18 years ago
2 years ago
5,092
Seriously, how can anybody think this B League is a good idea?

Mr Wenger spot on here:

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BnJLAz2CcAAsp99.jpg
TheClassicK
12 years ago
9 years ago
179
Correct me if I'm wrong but if that is initiated, it means the B teams will start off in the 2nd lowest league in England, consisting of those 10 B teams and the rest with the top teams in the Conference Premier, right? So at the start, I'm assuming it'll only be the teams left over in the Conference Premier that won't benefit. Is that the problem people are having?

I'm also not familiar with the level of competition in League 1 and League 2, so does anyone know if those B teams would compete and promote within those leagues?
Ninja
15 years ago
7 years ago
5,341
Correct me if I'm wrong but if that is initiated, it means the B teams will start off in the 2nd lowest league in England, consisting of those 10 B teams and the rest with the top teams in the Conference Premier, right? So at the start, I'm assuming it'll only be the teams left over in the Conference Premier that won't benefit. Is that the problem people are having?

I'm also not familiar with the level of competition in League 1 and League 2, so does anyone know if those B teams would compete and promote within those leagues?


Only if you define the conference as the lowest league in England, but if you adopt the definition we've been using since time immemorial the league 3 would be the lowest football league and, as a result of its creation, 10 non-league teams would become football league clubs.
Shola
16 years ago
6 years ago
2,708
What's the difference between football and music hipsters?


Their views on B-sides.
stolen from twitter



The B-side league seems to me the most inoffensive suggestion?

Surely for Nuneaton etc. the idea of playing against Man Utd-B would be the biggest game of the year, playing against the likes of Pogba and Januzaj? Certainly different from playing Hyde or Solihull Moors.

That said would Man Utd be too happy about exposing their players into a horrible league, with less protection?
Jason
18 years ago
2 weeks ago
4,641
I'd rather them, and i think it'd help them more if they were to create a "European B League" which consisted of all the major leagues B teams and have 3 tiers with promotion and relegation. Playing against the next generation of stars of other countries week in week out.
Ninja
15 years ago
7 years ago
5,341
I'd rather them, and i think it'd help them more if they were to create a "European B League" which consisted of all the major leagues B teams and have 3 tiers with promotion and relegation. Playing against the next generation of stars of other countries week in week out.

Isn't this what the Next Gen thing already is?
Telegram Sam
16 years ago
4 months ago
5,082
Premium
Surely for Nuneaton etc. the idea of playing against Man Utd-B would be the biggest game of the year, playing against the likes of Pogba and Januzaj? Certainly different from playing Hyde or Solihull Moors.

That said would Man Utd be too happy about exposing their players into a horrible league, with less protection?

If I was a Nuneaton fan I'd rather see my side play every league match against a proper club, with proper fans and a history, than some reserve side from one of the big clubs. It ruins the integrity of the league.

There's a reason why an overwhelmingly huge majority of fans of the lower leagues do not want this to happen - it's bad for them and it's bad for the league. It should not happen, and the only way you can justify it is if you really believe it will benefit the national team and furthermore, that improving the national side is worth butchering the lower divisions.
Franck
18 years ago
6 days ago
4,255
I'm sure fans of Rochdale, Wycombe or Plymouth will revel in the opportunity to play in front of 30 paid spectators at Carrington.
Telegram Sam
16 years ago
4 months ago
5,082
Premium
I'm sure fans of Rochdale, Wycombe or Plymouth will revel in the opportunity to play in front of 30 paid spectators at Carrington.

There's such an arrogance to this notion that football-deprived fans of the likes of Barnet and Torquay would eagerly circle the date on their calendars where they get to face off against the Aston Villa reserves, as if the Premier League is somehow doing them a favour by gracing their league with some sort of presence. This whole proposal is rotten to the core, and the fact that the FA - guardians of the national game, supposedly - are going to try and convince the Premier League clubs to bribe the lower league teams is disgusting. They know that they need the money and are effectively exploiting them.

If they want to make a difference to the national side this is such a bad way to do it.
Deano
18 years ago
9 hours ago
1,380
I'm all for the idea of B-Teams.
Slashman X
18 years ago
1 year ago
6,000
"No clubs will be displaced". Except those in the Conference now have yet another barrier between them and the leagues.

If the B teams are actually good, that means they should fill the top spots in League 1 in no time.
The idea the 8th and 9th spot being promotion spots and 10th-14th being play-offs is just stupid
bmg033
10 years ago
1 week ago
2,268
There's such an arrogance to this notion that football-deprived fans of the likes of Barnet and Torquay would eagerly circle the date on their calendars where they get to face off against the Aston Villa reserves, as if the Premier League is somehow doing them a favour by gracing their league with some sort of presence. This whole proposal is rotten to the core, and the fact that the FA - guardians of the national game, supposedly - are going to try and convince the Premier League clubs to bribe the lower league teams is disgusting. They know that they need the money and are effectively exploiting them.

If they want to make a difference to the national side this is such a bad way to do it.

Agreed. The whole bribery thing is a joke and is just another example of the FA showing a lack of respect to lower league teams. It sums up the way football in this country has gone, just throw money at everything and hope it works.

Dyke mentions that their research goes back 20 years to 1994 when there was 69% English starters in the Premier League. He seems to think that just by having more players, that the England team will get better. Well, if he'd researched properly, he'd notice that 20 years ago England failed to qualify for the 1994 World Cup. Surely its not about having more players, but having better players and better coaches?

I still feel that this would help the bigger teams a bit, but only the bigger teams, which is wrong. There are ways of improving the English game and this certainly isn't it.
Slashman X
18 years ago
1 year ago
6,000
Most of the "top" Germans atm didn't even play for B teams, went straight from U19's to "A" team. And Germany are even thinking about scrapping their B teams. Leverkusen and Frankfurt already have
Ninja
15 years ago
7 years ago
5,341
Most of the "top" Germans atm didn't even play for B teams, went straight from U19's to "A" team. And Germany are even thinking about scrapping their B teams. Leverkusen and Frankfurt already have


Because of cost, rather than because of ineffective results.
bmg033
10 years ago
1 week ago
2,268
What a surprise, all the Premier League managers are backing this idea whereas the lower league managers are against it.
bluemoon.
17 years ago
2 months ago
2,411
Premium
Isn't this what the Next Gen thing already is?

Unfortunately UEFA basically forced NextGen to end so that they could start their own inferior version.
Number 1
17 years ago
1 year ago
3,650
The plan as a whole feels half-baked, and it also feels quite dumb that they didn't bother to consult the Conference when they and everyone below are the ones being shafted.

I don't see it being implemented because its just unworkable and encourages player hoarding. At the moment, Chelsea have 30 players of a variety of nationalities out on loan and they're never going to use all of them in the first team squad as they have the money to buy the best players which begs the question "what is the fucking point?"

This arrangement as well where "a new strategic loan partnership system that would allow clubs to loan up to eight players to a single Football League side and retain more control over them" is also bizarre, as it means Premier League teams can have B and essentially a C team.
bmg033
10 years ago
1 week ago
2,268
This arrangement as well where "a new strategic loan partnership system that would allow clubs to loan up to eight players to a single Football League side and retain more control over them" is also bizarre, as it means Premier League teams can have B and essentially a C team.

About 6 or 7 players went from Spurs to Swindon this season, half of them on loan. The others i'd imagine have some sort of buy back clause. There is the proof that these "new strategic loan partnerships" aren't new at all. The FA showing once again that they know sweet FA.
Number 1
17 years ago
1 year ago
3,650
About 6 or 7 players went from Spurs to Swindon this season, half of them on loan. The others i'd imagine have some sort of buy back clause. There is the proof that these "new strategic loan partnerships" aren't new at all. The FA showing once again that they know sweet FA.

The article I red said that the deal between Spurs and Swindon is the nearest to a so called "footballing nursery", so its more of a unique arrangement in English clubs.

Not so much with the Chelsea-Vitesse arrangement, though I'm pretty sure part of that is primarily set up to dodge work permit regulations.
Ninja
15 years ago
7 years ago
5,341
The Spurs Swindon thing is only about half way to what the FA have proposed in regards to that.

Tbf, I would imagine that the 'new strategic loan partnerships' are actually the most offensive thing to individual fans, but I guess that would involve most fans reading more in depth to find out whats being suggested rather than being outraged by a hashtagable headline.
Jason
18 years ago
2 weeks ago
4,641
Make all Premier League/Championship clubs have 1/2 Lower League feeder clubs and no foreign Feeder/Parent clubs.

Helps both the Premier League Youngsters and the Lower League Clubs, sounds a better idea than this rubbish they've mustered up.
One Night In Grimsby
18 years ago
7 years ago
334
Telegraph Sam has summed it up perfectly. I think its extremely disrespectful to assume that somehow us conference clubs are being done a "favour". Id pick Nuneaton away every day of the week over Stoke B. The majority of Premier League fans will never and have never experienced the highs and lows of being a lower league club.

If we think that somehow Mansfield v Liverpool B is going to make England win the world cup then we have truly lost the plot.

Making the rich richer and the poor poorer. Fuckin premier league. Sign the petition if you haven't already, 26000 signatures so far. Link on the first page.
terriersmad
17 years ago
4 years ago
744
English players don't break through because there's always going to be a player in front of them. Teams don't dare pick an untried youngster. Instead, they go out and buy the 'finished article', because it's guaranteed results. The youngster then goes out on loan, but doesn't get top-level experience. A year later, he's still behind the other lad because he doesn't have that top level experience. He sits on the bench at best, stagnates, and finds himself destined for a career of ifs, buts, and maybes in the lower leagues.

How is a B-team league going to solve this at all? All it will do is ruin the pyramid.

It is worth pointing out that the panel has made other, much more sensible suggestions. But those are being overshadowed by this ridiculous proposal. It says it all when the Premier League, Football League, and Football Conference are all dead set against it. Even Scudamore has spoken out against it!
Ninja
15 years ago
7 years ago
5,341
Telegraph Sam has summed it up perfectly. I think its extremely disrespectful to assume that somehow us conference clubs are being done a "favour". Id pick Nuneaton away every day of the week over Stoke B. The majority of Premier League fans will never and have never experienced the highs and lows of being a lower league club.

If we think that somehow Mansfield v Liverpool B is going to make England win the world cup then we have truly lost the plot.

Making the rich richer and the poor poorer. Fuckin premier league. Sign the petition if you haven't already, 26000 signatures so far. Link on the first page.


Literally no one thinks that or is saying that.
Jason
18 years ago
2 weeks ago
4,641
Literally no one thinks that or is saying that.


So after a few seasons agains Mansfield, that player is gonna be good enough for Liverpools first team, how? It makes no sense, the player would still be untested at Premier League level and much older.
Ninja
15 years ago
7 years ago
5,341
So after a few seasons agains Mansfield, that player is gonna be good enough for Liverpools first team, how? It makes no sense, the player would still be untested at Premier League level and much older.


Maybe not, but the point is that League 1 football is a damn sight more competitive than U21 football, which clubs frequently bemoan their players have out grown far before they're ready to play first team football.
Shola
16 years ago
6 years ago
2,708
I get the impression that U21 and reserve football seems to be not very competitive. B-teams would certainly mean young player get a competitive game and gain experience.

Issue with the PL is that there is so much money involved, it seems to be getting very hard for young players (who aren't exceptional) to break through. For example it would be easy for a PL club to sign back up players for a couple of £M rather than risk fielding an inexperienced young player.

This system will also allow big clubs to have more control over the development of young players, ie forge chemistry between young players, and set a club playing style, where as with loans there is always a risk of a young player wasting 6 months with an unsuccessful loan spell.

Not saying I agree with the proposals or think it will necessarily be a success, but resisting on the grounds of tradition seems absolutely idiotic.

All the traditionalists shed tears whenever a small club goes out of business, I'm sure.

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