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Words in the News
Wednesday 06 November 2002
Vocabulary from the news. Listen to and read the report then find explanations of difficult words below.

  David Beckham
Football wages
Summary: Eighteen of Europe's biggest football clubs have agreed to restrict the cost of wages which are threatening the future of the world's most popular sport. This report from Hugh Pym.
   
The News Listen  
  For years money kept rolling in to Europe's football clubs. The growth in transfer payments and player salaries seemed limitless. But the climate's changed. TV rights deals in some countries have collapsed. The days of big money transfers are numbered. So now the G14 clubs, as they call themselves, have decided to tighten their collective belts. At their meeting in Brussels today, members -- including clubs like Bayern Munich and Barcelona, as well as the British representatives -- agreed to impose a ceiling for player wage bills. The aim is to keep them to seventy percent or less of total turnover.

But can it be enforced? The answer technically is no - it's a voluntary agreement and there are no penalties for those who don't control wages. However, the G14 group also announced a commitment to link pay more closely to performance on the field. The veiled warning to players was clear - if there's no action, more clubs will struggle or even go bust.

Hugh Pym, BBC

 
   
The Words Listen
 
  rolling in
if something such as money is rolling in, a lot of it comes

 
   
  transfer payments
money which is paid by one football club to another for a player who moves

 
   
  the climate's changed
the situation has changed

 
   
  TV rights deals
Financial agreements which allow television companies to broadcast public events e.g. football matches

 
   
  to tighten their belts
if you tighten your belt you try to spend less money

 
   
  to impose a ceiling
to put a maximum limit on spending

 
   
  penalties
a punishment in the form of a disadvantage for breaking the rules

 
   
  to link
to make a connection between two things (here between pay and winning matches)

 
   
  The veiled warning
a warning that is given in an indirect way.

 
   
  go bust
if a business or a football club goes bust, it loses so much money it must close

 
   
  Read more about this story  
 

Other Words in the News archives

 

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