 Welcome to the footy show daily as we continue to try and keep you up to date with everything that's changing in this mad world at the moment and it does seem to change daily, new things getting said, new people coming out and saying things. We've had the likes of Rick Parry and Steve Parish having their say today in different environments. Rick Parry spoke to MPs, I think, in a select committee meeting. I think he's in charge of the football league, isn't he now? Essentially what he said is he basically guaranteed that there will be promotion to the Premier League and relegation from the Premier League this year, which is a massive comfort I imagine to the likes of Leeds and West Brom. God knows how they're going to start their season because there's no actual chat about their season starting yet, which is mad. All the talk is about the Premier League. But he believes that there's going to be a £200 million gaping hole by the time the next season starts because at the moment we're all fixated on finishing this season off but people aren't looking down that road at the moment, so interesting comments from him? Yeah, he's saying that the £200 million financial hole by September, he's targeted a proper reset as he gave evidence to digital culture, media and sports system. He admitted that it was difficult to answer whether clubs would go out of business or not. He says, we'd like to be made stronger and leaner with a proper set of resets post COVID. We are heading for a financial hole of £200 million by the end of September. Clubs are stacking up creditors and there's a great deal of uncertainties. I've asked for everybody to share the pain. We really are having an open book policy and we're going to show the players how deep the pain is. We're absolutely on board with the delight process, obviously the delight in coming in to have a look at everything there. That's the real issue. We keep talking about the Premier League because obviously that's the big news and we're part of the Premier League but the reality is the football league. I don't see any way it can come back because just going through, not just for this season, I mean I don't know from next season but going through the restrictions or the things that we're having to do to try to get these Premier League games done for 20 teams. How can you do that for 91 teams? And the most worrying thing about that is that they're going to be the ones affected most. The Premier League, if it didn't play the games, it would hit them but it wouldn't hit them as hard as it would hit. Obviously League One and League Two teams and obviously Championship it would hit them. I mean we've already spoken about the likes of Leeds that they've budgeted. I mean that's up to them but football is not an exact science. They've put all their eggs in one basket and it's going the way they expected it to go and if that's taken off them then that's going to leave a massive issue. So I find it strange that we're not talking about them enough. That plan isn't out there. I don't know whether it's almost like they're allowing the Premier League to take all the brunt. But when you listen to the neutral ground situation, that's coming from the police and that's coming from the bodies involved. Obviously I'm trying to make it so that these neutral venues are places that aren't smack bang in the middle of cities. You know maybe ones on the outskirts with newer stadiums that they can say the word protect and that's what it feels like what it is protecting in a medical sense isn't it? How would you do that in the lower leagues? Do you know what I mean? Because even if you said we're going to have neutral venues for them and we're going to use say Premier League grounds, how would you do that? I just find that very very strange. 45 matches every week to be able to do it. You can't. We have 45 stadiums with neutral grounds or you know even if you're splitting them over two days you're still having a lot of work to do to try to do it. To me, I don't know how they're going to come up with something that everybody can't. People are always going to be unhappy and rightly so. It's not going to be anybody that, well there might be three Premier League clubs that are quite happy with the relegations crap but in general nobody is going to be perfectly happy or sorry, not everybody is going to be perfectly happy with the outcomes. League one, league two. I don't know. I like a Sunderland. You watch that Sunderland till I die documentary. You see how much money they're losing a year because of the way things have gone. Now okay, the fellow manager reduced it down a bit but it's still 20, 30 million pounds a year or something that they're losing. If you're now saying there's no guarantee they get promoted but there's a point or they're on level points with three other teams in those play-offs spots so they've got an opportunity being in the play-offs. They budget and to get it back into the championship but there's a little bit more money. I just find the very strange that we are a couple of weeks away from having to put a decision out there and there doesn't seem to be any talk either way of what's happening in those divisions which is incredible. Are they just waiting for someone to say this is the trade-off? Will give you, you'll all get a certain amount of money. Do you think they'll be used as the merit system? Where does that money come from though? Because I know Rick Parry said today he's looking for solidarity from the Premier League and that's right because the Premier League is fixated on being finished and I can understand why. Especially if talks behind the scenes will help you out, you're going to have to take the brunt of not playing your games, whether you call it a brunt or not. We'll play the games and we'll pass that money on to you and we'll do what we need to do to make sure that promotion happens, relegation happens and you're all looked after. I just wonder whether that's the trade-off that they're going to play into. They're going to have to, aren't they? I suppose the clubs are just, those clubs will all be at the mercy of what the football league decides, whatever you want to decide. Some clubs might be happy to go and we're happy to finish or whatever. Other clubs will be wanting to get in play-offs and get promoted. But it actually sounds like they're at the mercy of the Premier League, not necessarily the football league, because it is a top-down system, isn't it, by the looks of it. And if the Premier League can't get their house and all, there's no point, isn't there? And that's the worry, I think. Yeah, and we've had, you know, we've had different comments today as well. Steve Parish has said, Jim and Christopher Parish, you know, clubs have got to get behind the neutral venues because that's the least-waste idea, essentially. He says, talking about the bottom three, I said in this meeting that I honestly believe that I will be saying the same thing. I do fear that people aren't looking far enough down the road and seeing the consequences of us not playing. And then the best way to resolve that is to do so competitively. So he's talking about you still got to have relegation. So he's kind of backing up what Rick Parish said. It's the least-waste option. That's the neutral ground thing. That's the territory we're in with life at the moment. Next season in all likelihood, we'll start with neutral grounds, which I think is mad. And I'm sure we'd all like to get back into our stadiums as soon as possible. There will be a distortion of the competition that way round anyway. All the pitches are pretty much the same size and empty stadiums and empty stadium. I think it'll be a level playing field from when we start. As with any season, there'll be bumps and idiosyncrasies. You can have injuries, blah, blah, blah. Luck plays a part and I'm sure most clubs will now have a fully fit squad on its swings and roundabouts. So he's just saying people don't fully understand the situation within. If we don't restart playing games, clubs will go to the ball. But the problem is though, right? When he says that, I don't know whether he's throwing my people within the game or people outside the game. But people don't both. But we said this a couple of times on this show is that we are clearly not getting the full picture on this as football fans. It feels like they're not telling us that financially we're not getting sold. I think financially this is a lot worse than we're being let to believe. And I think what actually happened is they never came out at the beginning and fully understood. I don't know whether they did or they didn't. When a lot of teams and everything did this, come out straight away and some of them were like, we're not fair low on anybody. I think they should have got together beforehand as football, as the Premier League, and come out and made decisions together. Because I think by a couple of them going out and fair low and everyone else going, we'd never do that and we were one of those clubs. I think they've backed themselves into a corner now where they can't do that. And as it goes on, some of them might be looking over their shoulder now going, do you think they should have done from a business perspective? Take your hat off, hang on, take your socialist hat off and all that, from a business perspective. Fair low actually is a socialist thing if you think about it, so that doesn't really matter. OK, so Everton are a business, same way as Liverpool are a business, the same way as the other Premier League clubs are a business. So if you're looking at a business, if we employed five staff here, and we were listening, the only way to get us through the next few months is that we're all going to be fair low. And we're going to this government scheme, then you would do it because that's dragging you through down the line. I've got no problem with fair lowing, it needs to be done, people would be on the dole otherwise and it would be a strain in another way, so it wouldn't really make a difference. So Everton come out and fair low the staff, you'd be OK with it? No, but I think the problem is, and this is what I'm saying, is the staff on the start, football clubs went their own way and they never got together and said, I think what should have happened may be now looking at it, is that football clubs should have... Do you think they all should have fell out? No, no, what I'm saying is, I think they've all jumped in, right, with two feet without talking to each other and grasping the larger situation of. So I think Steve Parash might have made a point today where he said, why should we be getting paid for a product that we're not putting out? And I think the talk, that's not now, that's August when you start again. People don't fully understand just how bad the situation we will be in if we at least don't try and get the game done, which is what we've said on me anyway. We've got to try and bring a lot of people with us to do that, not least the players. The players not only have to be safe, they have to feel safe and we need to explain to them how we will make that environment as safe as we possibly can and remove any unnecessary risks. A lot of work and planning needs to go into it, we will get there, the environment will almost decide if we can do it. If we can't, it's very likely this will look the same as it does now in August and September. Because what does no difference? All of the things we're talking about, neutral grounds, et cetera, will all still be present next year. It's going to be a very different product. Right, hang on, cos you get on to it. We already know that was seriously damaged. We've got no crowds. The sponsorship market is largely gone, which is scary. There is no food or hospitality revenue. The only thing we will have left for some time is the broadcast revenue. This product will look very different. Right now we have no visibility past August for any revenue. It's a serious situation for football. It cannot come in front of what's going on because the public health crisis is the absolute priority for this country, but this is going to be an incredibly significant week for the future of football. This is what I'm saying, is that I think that when they've come out at the beginning and some of them have failed out and some of them have pushed the chest out and said we're not going to fail out, I think really, in hindsight, they should have had that meeting where they should have got round the table, a Zoom table, and come to a group decision on things like fail-own and actually put them out at the beginning and said At the moment we're not going to be failing, we're going to look after our staff, but they might become a point where we might have to do this because as businesses, and this is why I'm saying as a league because barely situation is a lot worse, is a lot different worse than Man City situation, but by some teams, and we've seen this already, we've played our part in this, you're making some teams look like bad guys without fully understanding the situation, because we don't and we're still not being told the situation. It's dead easy for us to sit here and say, oh, just null and void and it doesn't matter. Steve Parish has given you a serious look into football and saying, there might not be any footy compact starters because we ain't got a product, so why would TV companies pay us? And he's absolutely right. What's that happens in June will be exactly the same what happens in September. Nothing will change. If there's no vaccine, which there won't be in September. But we'll have four months more education about it. But there's no vaccine. It doesn't matter about anything else. If there's no vaccine. I watched a professor yesterday saying this could add a flare up again or burn out like a fire. No, but they're not going to play games out. They're not going to play games out of vaccine now because Dean Smith's come out today. Well, that's the argument though, isn't it? They're not going to play games. They're not going to play games in front of the crowd. No, no. Sorry. Sorry. Don't you mind? No, no. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. What's dead interesting is Dean Smith come out today and he's spoken and he said, I'm not going to have two of my plays. He said, one's got asthma. And he said the other one has got a relative who I think he said in remission who lives with them. He said, I can't play those two plays. Now, this is what I'm saying. It's like these are the things that you don't get told as football clubs. No, like I don't know how many players I've got asthma. But we remember when we had Dele Feir. Dele Feir's got asthma. No one said the way. No one, but you could tell sometimes. But you could tell sometimes in his performances how he was struggling. I know, but that's the thing. This is the thing about football in general. If everyone would have come out then at that time and gone, do you have that Dele Feir who has asthma? I think some fans would have given a lesser of a rough ride. You look at someone going. It's not even fit. That's what I say. But isn't that almost exposing your play? Isn't that almost letting the opposition know you've got a weakness? But it doesn't matter. No, but that's got it. He's got it. That's football. He can't exasperate. When I was a kid and I was playing... I mean, when I was a teenager, I was playing in men's teams and you'd be like, oh, I'm knackered and you get... Don't let them know you've got a weakness. No, I know. But that's what I feel about football as a whole at the moment. It doesn't want to let down the hysteria of where the premier league is. What Steve Parish said today is really interesting because he's basically saying, some of us are on our ass here. And I just think they've backed themselves. A lot of them are on their ass. The champions are like they're on their ass. But I think we'll be on our ass. What they've done is they've backed themselves into a corner with the... By not the ass. At the beginning, getting over this situation and saying... Because again, it's that... Do you know what the problem is? If they'd have come out immediately at the meeting, come out and gone, we're going to be fair low unlike every other big business because we have to. As a league. Because our finances are dictated by playing games and by the television. Everyone, I think, would have gone, yeah, all right. This kicked off, this whole thing there, it kicked off with space. And it kicked off because it got out into the papers that they were going to be fair low. And also, they were asking every member of staff by Daniel Levy and the players to take a 20% pay cut. If Daniel Levy would have come out and gone, club wide, players, staff, me, the dinner lady, whatever. We're all having to take a 20% pay cut because that'll protect Tottenham Hotsware Football Club and it'll protect the members of the staff and everything. I think people would have been more understanding with it. Right? And with the whole thing, like you're saying, with the finances. You're right. Three teams, three or four teams come out and fail out. And everyone else was like, we're not doing it. And then people start going, hang on. So you don't need to fail out your staff. So you've got loads of money. You like to use your knob heads for a fail out one or whatever. Yeah, yeah. When really, if they come out and gone, our finances massively depend on playing football games to just do. We put this thing on. And this, hopefully at the other side, because everyone's talking and I'm a fan believer in it. Football will look totally different. This is going to change football massively. And I hope it changes the nonsense of transfer fees. Because when you've got people come and wages, when you've got people like Steve Parish, who I actually really like. I think he's a great fella. You've got him a chairman of a Premier League football club. Parish are a good Premier League club. They're always in the Premier League. Not really in things that are going down. He's been nosy. And they're a good community club as well. And a good community club. When you've got him coming out going, we might not have a product because I can't forecast next season. That tells you and tells me and tells everybody transfer fees I've got to go. You've got to be smaller, wages have got to be smaller and they have to be a little bit more realistic. I think also though, contract shouldn't be so cast iron in terms of what you're giving people. Because we've had this thing of performance related. What we've had this is we've had players, some people say don't take a wage cut. You don't know where it's going. Now I know, and whether you agree with or you don't agree with it, I think what you just said there, the performance related pay. Things like that need to be looked at. But I just think like we were just saying then, is that football came out and it just puffed at its chest and some of them were like, and you're right they were like, some of them were like, we're fair loan and others were like, we're not fair loan. We're better than you, we're better. They should have got themselves out of the table. And what they should have said is probably, this is probably what they should have said is, they should come out and say to them like, that's a Premier League, we're not going to fail anyone. But this might change depending on how long it goes on for. We want to get back playing, but if we can't get back playing and this season has to be called null and void, which they keep on saying, they keep on like, again, they keep on using the media rather than come out and saying things. I think in the last couple of days we started to hear, hear from Chairman now and that's what should have been getting done from the start or from the league, being realistic instead of like being out with a Premier League. It's not going, we're in a completely different world now. They were told they'd be back in three weeks when it got to that. That's what they thought. Well again. They thought they'd be playing in three weeks. But again though, maybe if they hadn't painted themselves into that corner. Because you've got to be realistic about it now and say at some point, if they can't get the season started logistically for the end of the season, then maybe they're going to have to start failing. But that's going to be like a heavy newtain. No, I know. But when faced with losing money or potentially going out of business. See, some clubs have gone. We never said we weren't going to fail out. We just didn't say anything. We just didn't say anything. But some clubs will be like, oh dear me we've said things that we shouldn't have said or whatever. And then those clubs that, well, you know, it just. It can't change. They can have a meeting again and they can come and get a statement. Of course they can, but I just think they're going to press it down to bloody, bloody, bloody. I just don't think they've been very transparent about this whole thing. I think, you know, this is, like you said, it's a big week in terms of at the end of the week we're all expecting this road map of how we're going to get out of the situation or as general public. So I just think it seems like the Premier League might just be waiting for that. There's a meeting again, isn't there? Friday. But they'll probably be told, I imagine, in that meeting by the government. And then they'll probably latch on to what the government will go. Well, there's going to be. I mean, I said this yesterday, I think. I disagree with lockdown being eased at the moment. Because I think we're starting to see the positive side of lockdown now in terms of the numbers coming through and what they're developing. And I think another period of lockdown would really help. I think personally I'd do six weeks. You might as well go over the top then, wouldn't it? Exactly. Because we've got so far. Why undo the good work? But there might be a couple of things within that which help them kind of get back, I suppose. Because if the tests then and this, that and the other, will enable the football clubs to train again. I think whatever the Prime Minister says or his government says on Thursday, I think they're having another. Is it Thursday? It's Thursday. They've got a meeting on Thursday. It's Thursday to renew it. But it's Sunday to put the strategy out, apparently. OK, so ideally he will say it's lockdown for three more weeks then. We love that every 21 days. Here's the 21 days. So hopefully he says another three weeks and then we can start to do this, this and this. Because if they give you that roadmap, people will look then and go right, OK, so we've got an idea of that and we've got an idea of that. And things are leaking out of the public transport to be masks and things like that to start with. So therefore that will probably allow the football clubs to go back kind of into training. We all know it's going to resume in the middle of June. That's June the 12th is the date. It was the 8th but they pushed it to the 12th because of what's happening. I think... And therefore... I think the problem is, though, is it's not necessarily... Listen, we've heard another thing today. It was a PFA saying 45 minutes and we don't want 45 minutes and a half. I think the problem is... That was one of the things they tried to discuss. I think the problem is is that they all won it back for June 12th, let's say. But they haven't agreed clearly on the... Certainly the neutral grants. That seems to be the biggest... There was neutral grants versus the threat of relegation. Now, Rick Parish is saying there's definitely going to be relegation. So that seems to blow that off the table. Now, you wonder what the Premier League have give up for that. So Parish has come out and said neutral grants is the best we can do. And the police are saying it's going to be neutral grants. And that's why it seems that St George's Park is off the table because they can't secure. Because it's a massive place and I've been very lucky I've been to St George's Park. It's a massive place. There's entry points all over the place. So it's not... It couldn't really be policed because you literally... It's huge. So they're going to have to come to... And I don't know whether that means saying to whoever the three teams are, we will give you extra money. I don't know. But maybe they shouldn't get any extra money. But I don't know. I don't know. There's going to have to be something sorted. But there's still a lot of things that needs ironing out, obviously. But I think if they've got to use the word road mapping their mind as well, and they go to him as well for... It comes up yesterday that 10 grams they want to use. So if they're right, so they've got the grants nailed down. They've got the date nailed down. Now it's about the relegation. It's about how we do it. The only thing which what Steve Parrish has said today, which I find difficult to understand is him saying we'll be in neutral grants for the start of next season, August or September. What happens with all your other fixes then? I'm talking about the football league, the championship. I don't think to him that matters. And I mean that, just for me. That's not his problem. And that's fine, right? Because Palace will be a Premier League club next season. So we'll probably be fair enough, he's not interested. Fine. But if you're a champion-shaped league on League 2, we're talking starting the season in September, then they're not going to play in neutral venues. And why are we playing in neutral venues? Just because it's... We can deep clean them. Or is it to stop fans gathering? To stop fans. And he's kind of saying well, fans aren't really going to gather in August and September because it's not the business end of the season. It's really don't... No, I don't think... I think they just have to put that consideration how you can police a grant. If that's a thing, right? Then the Premier League can come back in September. Because they can do that. Football league, eh? No, that's what I'm saying. No one's talking about the football league. Do you think that if the Premier League clubs came out and were a little bit more honest about how this can affect them and how this will affect them, do you think there'd be more sympathy to start the season from fans? If you would just come out and say, listen, we don't get ourselves sorted and you don't give us a chance to start this. Football for the next three or four years could be very, very different in terms of... No other way, every summer, you want us to buy players, we won't be able to. And the league, because we can't buy good players, will start to suffer because we won't be able to bring... So the product will suffer. And as a fan of a club, you're like, oh, we want this player now. Do you think that that sympathy will be there if they start to relate that to us rather than sort of keeping this Premier League exterior of where the biggest league in the world? Because I think that's where they're suffering at the moment. I still think there's a lot of resistance from people who are just like, no, I'll avoid it, no, I'll avoid it and you get in this conflict. Liverpool fans versus everyone else or whatever. You know, I do find it quite strange that they're still keeping up this pretense that everything will be all right when, quite frankly, it won't. I can't answer that. Would you rather than come out and say it is, 100 per cent? I don't know whether... While people are dying, numbers they aren't, and it's greatly fallen, I haven't seen today's numbers, so I don't know. But they're going to fall out. But that's good because it means that at last things and measures are actually working. So that makes you feel a little bit safer when you see them numbers dropping. We talked about the rate of infections right now. That's great. So that means that there'll be a little bit more of an appetite. Once they continue to drop, people will go, okay, it feels like we've got a handle on it now. Now I can start to think about other things as well. Of course, I've still got to be careful and social distance and all that. I went past the shop before and just stood right next to each other to what's going on. But then your appetite changes, then you start going, oh, football. If they come out and went, this is the clear and hard facts. If we lose £40 million as Everton, we lose £40 million, we can't buy a play this summer. Loads of Evertonians would go, I want us to play the games then because my football head on I want us to improve. We haven't been good enough this season with that squad. So you're telling me I've got to watch that squad again. They'll all be eating very different circumstances next season. So I think people would be... Not everyone. Loads of people have probably still said, I don't care about football. This is a worrying, scary time. Football's irrelevant to me. And I get that as well. I'm not telling people how to think. But football is a business. It's something we love. I think you said it yesterday that it's... or someone had said it. It's nonsense, but it's the best nonsense. And we buy into it. We love it. Of course, against people's lives, it doesn't mean anything, but we love football. And it affects so many people's lives because there's the amount of people. I've seen the facts yesterday about the top division. It brings in 2.9 billion of something and it goes down. Everything that's top flight does tax wise and employees directly football clubs in the Premier League employed 12,000 people. And then with you in Clube, Matt Stathaf and all that, it's 100,000 people. So that's 100,000 people with a job because of this product. It helps the employment figures. Well, there you go. So it's things like that. But then people are relying on to give their pup food on the table for the family and to feed themselves and so they're not homeless. So there is that, that we have to balance as well. Like, yeah, it feels sometimes a little bit like, oh, it's a game. It's only a game. But there is a real business underneath it. Are we prepared to let 100,000 people become unemployed and then have their own struggles with that? So I think you're right. I think if the football clubs come out and listen, this is how it is. We need to play the games. If we don't play the games, forget buying players. We'll have to sell some players if we can get money for them. Bladi, bladi, because we're reliant on that money. I think next week, if there's something being put out there where you agree with it or not, something is put out there by the government that says, this is how we are going to get back to. A sense of normal life. These are the stages. If, let's say, there's a stage in June, and I imagine this is what they'll be working with. On June the 12th, you as a new normal person over there, if you are in a certain kind of job, you can go back to that job. Oh, we're footballers. We can go back to that job. That's when the Premier League will have that statement out within 15 minutes going. We'll be back on the June 12th. We are covered by this thing. The government minister, one of the sports ministers of the government have already said they want it back. The Premier League clubs will know what the plan looks like. So they can go right. We can factor that into that date. And you're absolutely right on that date. It'll be, we can do this. That fits in with that box. There's the tick. And then football gets its out by saying, we're following what the government. We're not doing anything different than what the busch drive is doing or whatever that's doing. The only difference is, because people don't go lang on, what are the social differences? Well, we're having so many tests a week that we privately sourced. The NHS doesn't need as many of that thing anymore. Or we're not buying the same tests in. We're getting our own one from somewhere else. Templities are being taken. We're doing this. We're doing that. And I think that will be the solution. And realistically, that is different to us as human beings. If you've got something over here that is being, whether you agree with the test and if they're paying for it, so be it. But if they're being tested and monitored, all of them, all of football clubs and then they're coming together and they're being tested. Obviously there's going to be a little element of risk, but their element of risk will be a lot smaller than us going for the kids. And it'll be the first thing that will probably be in terms of the first part is the government say, which will be some workers can go back, but they must have staggered start times. So what the clubs will probably do is go, 60 is coming for training and then another 60 is coming for training and then another six and we're working different places at the same time and you'll all be tested before and then you'll all have heat and thermometers. I think that's the way they'll get round it, but we'll have to wait and see. I just thought it was very interesting today that what they said was what they were saying was actually this is, these businesses will go under and how do you think they, just very quickly, how do you think they get round a reduction from the television companies? Because they're not buying the same product, are they? Do you think they almost after have a trade-off and say you can have another year? Because I know that's been mentioned a few times. It's not the same product. Steve Parris has just said it's football. You mean for next season? Yeah. Because this season, well this season is this season, but for next season, it's a different product. I know, but it's, it's, there's no home training, there's no crowd. But it's already in the contract and I just wonder, that's up, I don't know. The premier might just go, the contract's on me. This is not our fault. And ultimately it isn't their fault. No, no, it's not. So they might just go to the TV companies. You might be getting less of a product, fans, home stadiums, but you're getting more people watching. That's the key. So you can sell out. And you're getting more games. So what you're losing, you're making up for, buy more people going to your YouTube channel. Oh, I didn't subscribe to the Sky Sports YouTube channel. Now I am. Now I start watching all those other videos. Now the ads come on. And they'll, what they'll start, they've got any brains. They'll start putting other shows on. What do you already do? They cut shows up and put them on YouTube. The bitch you missed and they'll put it on the football daily and all those other things that they've bought into. You get the ads from them. They'll have more games. You'll have ads from them. So there's other ways to see that. Don't forget ultimately, they have the Premier League for people to buy Sky and get eyes on the game. Sky does not care in a way or BT how many people watching individual game. They care about how many people buy the package. What they might do in September or August is go, Premier League football, the only place to see every game this year, every game, is by having a SkyQ box. This is the perfect time to update to SkyQ. We'll give you it for free in Stormont and, but it's £12 next of the month. And everyone goes, yeah, this probably is, because you know why? We've still got measures in place. The cinema's on open. The restaurant's on. Maybe not back open properly. Do you know what? I'll invest in a home entertainment system so I'll go and get SkyQ. These are the things that these people have got to think about. Every game is on Sky. You know what? I'll buy myself a new telly and I'll get SkyQ because I ain't leaving the house. I'm not going to pub. For the match. Yeah, so why wouldn't you? I've saved how much money have I saved with my season ticket? Do you know what I'll do? I'll buy myself a new telly and I'll get SkyQ and it's covered for the season and that's my season and that's the way they've probably got to think about it. You know, YouTube games and I want to watch them on the big telly. YouTube on SkyQ. Oh, I've got all the games on one place now. That's the way to do it, isn't it? That's the way to think about it. And then you can watch our channel on your SkyQ boss. SkyQ boss. On your boss's new telly. There you go. And that's the way you've got to do it. There you go. Let us know your thoughts in the comments. Do you think football clubs should be more honest and open about the finances and how this has affected them all? Bas is already on there. I'm trying to look into them. I'm sure. Now I can get SkyQ. Getting in there. A head of the game. Oh, you're just going to continue like Bas with your hockey box. There you go. Thanks for watching. Make sure you give this video a like. Subscribe if you haven't already. 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