Portsmouth News

Youngsters are key in ‘insane’ Championsh­p

Eisner: Blues CAN be sustainabl­e in second tier

-

Eric Eisner has pledged Pompey will continue to operate ‘sustainabl­e football’ in the Championsh­ip.

The Blues may presently be debtfree, yet they will be challenged financiall­y to compete with recently-relegated Premier League clubs, rivals bolstered by parachute payments, and those spending significan­tly to achieve promotion ambition.

Since Tornante took over the Blues in August 2017, they have injected an additional £25m in equity, primarily funding Fratton Park and training ground redevelopm­ent.

Nonetheles­s, the owners consider Pompey a sustainabl­e business in footballin­g terms.

And board member Eric, left, son of chairman Michael, is adamant they can maintain that approach in the second tier.

He told The News: ‘It’s football but you also have to make it a business, which is why we preach sustainabl­e football.

‘There are teams which do it the right way, Brighton I know, Exeter I know, these are examples. It has worked out for Ipswich, but sustainabl­e football is something in the future people will look at because, if not, it just doesn’t make sense.

‘It’s about being sustainabl­e per division. The losses that people have chasing in the Championsh­ip are insane, so we’re going to apply our same strategy - young players.

‘That’s Rich Hughes picking young players which can develop into assets and develop on the pitch. We’ll use that nucleus, just like this season.

‘What is sustainabi­lity? Definitely not losing £1116m dollars a year, that’s unsustaina­ble because that doesn’t work out long-term.

‘You don’t want to end up like certain owners who have done that. Sustainabl­e is running a sustainabl­e business.

‘We are among the few that run sustainabl­e football and I think a lot of people are looking at us because nobody goes into this business wanting to lose money. At some point, the money in football will dry up.

‘The Premier League need to wake up and give their percentage to the Championsh­ip and flow down to League One and

League Two, that’s a bigger decision. But you can’t have a system where everybody in the second-highest division is losing money, every single year. Eventually the well will dry up.’

In March, Pompey posted losses of £3.09m in accounts filed at Companies House for the year ending June

30, 2023. That was slightly up from £2.9m in previous accounts, representi­ng losses over three consecutiv­e years. However, Tornante invested another £7m to finance club operations to ensure the Blues enter the

Championsh­ip remaining debt-free.eisner added: ‘I use the analogy where you must build the stage before you hire the actors. Now the stage is built - then it’s all about getting the right players.

‘We are on that path now, which is why you hire good management, a good team. John (Mousinho) develops players great and Rich (Hughes) picks players great, while you also have John’s staff. Marlon Pack tells me they almost go harder in training than the games, which shows it’s a very competitiv­e environmen­t.’

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Eric Eisner stands by the League One silverware
Eric Eisner stands by the League One silverware

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom