Eye-watering losses: It is almost two weeks since leading leagues across Europe stopped. No matches mean no money from gate receipts and before long payments from broadcasters may stop too. The sums set to be lost everywhere are eye-watering. In England, according to reports, the Premier League faces losing 762 million pounds from domestic broadcast deals with Sky Sports and BT Sport. Analysis by accounting firm KPMG suggests cancelling the rest of the season would cost the ‘Big Five’ leagues of England, Spain, Germany, Italy and France a combined total of over four billion euros. It is therefore not difficult to see why leagues will consider restarting behind closed doors, to at least guarantee revenue from broadcasters.
After all, clubs must continue during the pandemic to pay hefty player salaries. In France, several clubs, including Marseille and Lyon, have put their players on partial unemployment to save money. It means clubs pay staff 70 per cent of their salaries. The state pays the rest, albeit limited to 4,850 euros per employee, a drop in the ocean for most footballers. In Germany, players at Borussia Moenchengladbach were the first in the Bundesliga to propose pay cuts, followed by others at Werder Bremen, Schalke and Borussia Dortmund. Bild reported that Bayern players accepted a 20 per cent pay cut.
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