Maguire says “the number draws a hard image” in terms of revenue and power of spending when comparing ‘have’ and ‘they don’t’.
“Back in 2014-15, the Champions Clubs that received the Parachute payment received an average of 31.8 million pounds in revenue-closer of the 16.1 million pounds brought by their non-parachute counterparts,” he explained.
“Quick forward until 2023-24 and the gap has exploded. Parachute clubs increased by 62.9 million in revenue, while others received only $ 26.7m.
“Despite the high income comes a great deal of energy.
“In 2014-15, the wage gap between parachute and non-parachute clubs stood for 10.4 million pounds. By 2023-24, it was organized up to 43.3 million pounds.
“The difference is reflected in squad investment, as well, with parachute clubs forces worth an average of 157 million pounds last season, compared to just 19 million for breaks.
“This financial edge creates a circuit to strengthen themselves. The upgraded clubs often have no resources to compete, resulting in a quick release. At the same time, the parachute -funded sides dominate the championship, making it difficult for others to break.
“As a result? The Premier League ecosystem that is increasingly appealing to one group of clubs – less reputable, more than trampoline for fallen scholars.”