The Scotsman

Dons reveal £5.29m loss but insist club recovering from impact of pandemic

- JOEL SKED

Aberdeen have revealed they are making a steady recovery following the Covid-19 pandemic, posting an operating loss of £5.29 million for the year ended June 30 2022, an increase of £100,000.

Thedonshav­ebroughttu­rnover up to £13.86m, a increase of £2.79m from the previous year, while they invested further in the playing squad, the women's team, continued to develop plans for a new stadium, engaged with fans and the local community through various initiative­s and also changed management team with Jim Goodwin replacing Stephen Glass.

A key investment has been on the playing squad. Nearly £1m was added to the wage bill to £10.23m, while around £2m was spent on transfer fees, including a six-figure sum on Vicente Besuijen who arrived in January. The majority of the other players signed for money arrived after the accounting period. It also means, the substantia­l fees received for the sales of Calvin Ramsay and Lewis Ferguson will make up next year’s accounts.

“The club’s wages to turnover ratio is still high at 74 per cent because we have continuedt­oinvestint­hefirsttea­m," chairman Dave Cormack said. “We are now spending around 80 per cent more on our guaranteed player wage bill, compared to five years ago. But this ensures we remain competitiv­e with other clubs, such as Hibs and Hearts, who are also making significan­t investment­s.

“To balance the books, we are developing and acquiring talent which, at the right time, we can monetise through player sales, as we did this summer with the sale of Lewis Ferguson to Bologna in August and Calvin Ramsay to Liverpool in July.

“Ending the season in a very disappoint­ing tenth place in the league, it was clear that a significan­t overhaul of the playing squad was needed. As a result, in this summer’s transfer window, ten first team players left the club with eleven coming in. This re-build was largely made possible by experience­d EPL scout, Darren Mowbray, who was appointed head of recruitmen­t in August 2021.”

Aberdeen view the academy as an area of growth. The new training park costs £800,000 a year to run but it has already reaped dividends. It is an avenue the club will continue to focus on with a number of homegrown players part of Goodwin’s first-team squad.

Cormack said: “Whilst there’s no getting away from a poor 2021/22 season, an important and critical part of our strategy is being one of the best developers of young talent in Scotland, underpinne­d by our Youth Academy.in2021/22allacade­myage groups travelled to and competed in elite European youth tournament­s. This massive logistical and financial commitment­is critical to ex posing young, developing players to elite level competitio­n with the likes of ajax, liverpool and Chelsea at an early age.

“The board believes we have the right football strategy and management team in place, and that we’ve made the right investment­s in young talent. While first team performanc­e is critical, there has been significan­t progress on the key pillars of our strategy, such as the youth academy, growing our commercial income, and fan engagement.”

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