Interesting piece from the BBC a couple of days ago. However I note that we 
don't appear anywhere in the 
16t clubs listed who've spent the most on staff

http://www.bbc.com/sport/football/41564471

English Football League clubs risk bankruptcy by chasing promotion to the 
Premier League, 
financial experts say.
Between the 2008-09 and 2015-16 seasons, 19 clubs entered the top flight, and 
only one - Crystal 
Palace - avoided making a loss.
Average losses in their promotion seasons were more than £300,000 per week, 
financial data firm 
Vysyble said.
But the English Football League (EFL) said such reports "confuse the reality of 
the situation for 
supporters".
Most of the promoted clubs made money in their first Premier League season, but 
after four years 
just one in four was still in the black, according to Vysyble's report.
One in three was immediately relegated and two in three were down again within 
three years.
The report describes the "economic exhaustion" of trying to compete with the 
more established 
Premier League clubs.
Report co-author Roger Bell said many fans and owners of EFL clubs see 
promotion to the top 
flight as a "golden ticket to untold riches" but in reality trying to stay in 
the Premier League is 
"ultimately loss-making".
This "financial over-exertion" can lead to long-term problems, Bell continued, 
which cannot be 
solved by parachute payments to relegated sides, even though they can now total 
more than £90m.
*   'Closed shop' Premier League clubs £100m richer than EFL before bumper TV 
rights
"EFL clubs who spend beyond their means are, in fact, risking their futures by 
chasing a dream that 
is just that, a dream, and one that is actually more likely to end up as a 
financial nightmare," Bell 
added.
An EFL spokesman said it is "one of the most competitive competitions in world 
football" and is in 
a "strong financial position".
{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT=TV cameraman"}
Promotion to the Premier League can be "financially exhausting" for some clubs, 
according to the 
report 
"Reports of this nature inflame the position and confuse the reality of the 
situation for supporters," 
he said.
Citing financial fair play rules introduced in 2012, the league's improved 
revenues, and solidarity 
payments from the Premier League, the EFL spokesman said no club had been 
through an 
insolvency process for several years.
He added football is a "competitive industry", where progress up the league 
pyramid is the main 
goal, but said the EFL's rules are under regular review as its clubs "clearly 
face different financial 
challenges to those in the Premier League".
The Premier League declined to comment on the report.
It is understood that some of the 19 promoted clubs would have broken even but 
for player bonuses 
triggered by those successes.
Bell believes his report has highlighted the risks associated with pushing too 
hard for promotion, 
particularly when the Premier League is split on how future broadcasting 
revenue is shared.
"Owners who accept the risk of relegation but also preserve the balance sheet 
face much better 
prospects if the club is indeed relegated, with Burnley, Norwich and Newcastle 
proving to be 
excellent examples," he said.

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