75,000? Yeah Right
Course we need it. Here's proof.? Season 1927/28. Home v Arsenal. Everton have been crowned champions. In the last game of the season, the club?s local centre-forward, Dixie-someone, needs to score three goals to break the record for the most league goals scored in a season - a staggering 60. Goodison Park, by far and away the most majestic stadium in English football at the time and able to accommodate at least 65,729 fans (as shown by the fixture versus Liverpool the previous October), is heaving with an attendance of...48,715. And its average attendance that season was...37,440.
Probable mitigating factors: Fans skint. Global financial panic. Looming depression.
Re-adjusted average attendance, taking into account circumstances, using special ?Wyness? re-jigging computer software: 75,000 minimum.
? Season 1931/32. On course for the club?s fourth championship, an Everton side with Dixie Dean still at the peak of his powers treated the club?s followers to some of the most thrilling home games ever witnessed in a single season at Goodison Park - 5.1 v Sheff Utd, 9.3 v Sheff Weds, 8.1 v Newcastle United, 7.2 v Chelsea, 9.2 v Leicester City, 5.1 v Boro, 6.1 v West Ham Utd - was cheered to the rafters by an average attendance of...36,438.
Probable mitigating factors: Fans still skint. Global finances still haven?t settled. Fans unsure about Everton after having only been promoted a season earlier. Mutterings about some muzzied beaut making political headway in Germany.
Re-adjusted average attendance using the Wyness application: 75,000 minimum.
? Season 1938/39. Fearing this could be the last full season for a while, Evertonians sensed that the club - now with Tommy Lawton having assumed Dixie?s mantle - were on course for a 5th league title. And so it proved and aside from a bumper attendance of 64,977 at home versus Liverpool (natch) - in a stadium that could hold more than 75,000 but very rarely did - Everton record a thumping average attendance of...36,598.
Probable mitigating factors: ?That Lawton?s crap - never as good as Dixie?. Muzzied beaut in Germany has really gone and done it now. Fans still skint. Everyone wants to concentrate on potential armageddon instead of watching the Blues win the league as a welcome distraction.
Re-adjusted ?Wyness-App? average attendance: 75,000 and more. Bloody Hitler!
? Season 1962-63. Home v Fulham. It?s the last game of the season and not only are the Blues looking to clinch the club?s sixth title but it?s the first in 24 years. After a season witnessing arguably the most stylish football in Everton?s history, Goodison Park, which accommodated 72,488 the previous September against (guess who) is bursting at the seams with...60,578. However jubilant Blues record the club?s best ever average attendance of...50,950.
Probable mitigating factors: Fans still as skint as they were in the 20s. Looming nuclear threat as Kruschev and the new pretty boy in the White House really start to crank-up the stakes. Tories have been in charge for 12 years.
Re-adjusted ?Whine-ess? average attendance: At least 80,000. No sweat.
? Season 1969/70. It?s April Fools? Day (eh, Keith?) and the Blues need to clinch the League against WBA at home. Not only that but it?s a night game and we all know what a magical place Goodison is ?under the lights?. Not only that, the silkiest footy that Evertonians have ever seen means the team is on course to break the League points record. Bring it all on. And bring on...58,523 giving us an average attendance of...49,150.
Probable mitigating factors: Beatles have split. Gutted.
Re-adjusted ?Why, why, why Keith Wyness?? average attendance: At least 85,000 (and the Walrus was Whittle).
? Season 1984-85. It?s the club?s greatest ever season. The Blues are on course for a thrilling treble with a first title in 15 years and European glory beckoning too. 50,514 packed Goodison two days earlier to see the Blues clinch the league v QPR on a glorious Bank Holiday Monday (but it would have been over 100,000 had we been playing in Kirkby) and now everyone flocks back to the ground for an evening game v West Ham ?under the lights? again to see us lift the trophy; and as Rats went-up to get the golden cup so did the roar from a huge crowd of...32,657, which actually beat the average of...31,691.
Mitigating factors: That gold Canon League trophy was crap. Thatcher. Everyone saving for Rotterdam and Wembley. Fans felt fenced in.
Re-adjusted ?Bye, bye, bye Keith Wyness? average: a best ever 90,000.
? Season 1986-87
It?s May 2nd and a win at home would take the Blues to within a point of the club?s ninth championship. A scintillating ?out of the Blue? run of 10 wins in the last 12 games has taken the club to the brink of the title. A home fixture against a desperate Manchester City side who bring a full Park End with them in the hope of witnessing an unlikely win to help them avoid relegation bumps-up a mega Goodison attendance to...37,541. However, a week later, with the title then in the bag, Evertonians flock back to Goodison to see the Silver Lady title lifted aloft for the first time in 17 years before an even mega-rer crowd of...44,092. On the up-side, though, this gate smashed the average attendance of...30,581.
Mitigating factors: Heysel. What else?
Re-adjusted ?So, before you go to walk out the door? Wyness attendance: 89,000 (a thousand less then the best ever 90,000 - concession to the Heysel factor).
Upshot: We?ll need Dixie, Lawton, Young, Vernon, Ball, Harvey, Kendall, the whole of the 84-85 side, titles every season, Liverpool in every home game, global political stability, the Beatles to reform and much, much more if we?re ever to need a 75,000 stadium in Liverpool. We?ll need all the above, plus clones of Maradona, Pele, Cruyff and Platini if we?re ever to need it in Kirkby.
Note to Keith Wyness: don?t release a club stats site the week before you tell us that suddenly we need a 75,000 seater stadium either at Goodison, the Loop, Kirkby or the moon (now there?s a thought...is there an enabling partner?)
?...forgive me Keith Wyness I can?t stand your fat lies no more.?
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On one hand, I actually for once feel something for the idea of Wyness. Now don’t start shooting! It’s not a bad idea to plan for the future, to have some space to grow even further, how unrealistic it may seem right now. I do not see us fill a 75000-seater stadium week in week out right now, but I actually do see us fill it if all the factors are right. If we’re winning trophies again, and the stadium is state-of-the-art at a good location and you’re not waiting three hours in your car just to leave the ground after the game etc etc. In my honest opinion, the current Kirkby plans doesn’t fit that bill, but let’s not get into that discussion for the 1001st time. I do like the vision forward, the planning so we can act relatively swiftly if succes would come our way.
On the other hand, it’s suspicious that Wyness is only mentioning this possible expansion now, with the growing support for the Loop-site. He gives the impression he’s only re-acting without really having this plan for expansion in the far future. And the room for expansion may be available now, but what if in a few years the whole Kirkby-site is filled with retail? Wouldn’t the same logic that applies to the Loop-site now apply to the Kirkby-site at that time? And why is it that the club never ever gives the impression they are giving any alternative to Kirkby a chance?
If only I had £300 million lying around...
The only reason the Arse got average attendaces of 36,668 was that was the capacity of Highbury.
It was sold out every game, as for Man Utd. They are global and always have been. Face reality we will never be as big a brand as them or the red s**** for that matter, it may hurt some to accept that fact but accept it you must.
We have been mismanaged for decades and have missed the boat in that respect.
Anyone thinking a lego stadium in Kirkby will change that needs to take a huge reality check.
We have to stay in the city, it’s part of our identity and history and to surrender that will not only alienate a lot of current blues, but also future ones as well.
Yes Attendances grow with continued success but this has nothing to do with the real argument.
Wyness has never mentioned any expansion plans before. He has discredited the Loop as being too small all along . However now that HOK have confirmed it isnt (for 55-60,000 capacity).
He then moves the goal posts by saying "Well actually we may need room for 75,000 seats".
How would this fit in a supermarket car park? Do you think Crowd and traffic congestion have been accounted for 75,000 people? No they certainly haven?t. He?s just said it to pull the wool over your eyes AGAIN!
How do you believe this guy? He says whatever he needs to - to get support for his easy option. Kirkby is his big fat bonus and when EFC becomes Retail Park FC he?ll be off with a shit load of money. While we pick up the pieces of a fragmented club sharing a car Park with Tesco.
How would we even fit 75,000 into that Kirkby site? I cant really see the Tesco store reducing in size to allow our stadium to increase.
In summary: Dont believe a word this guy says. He has ulterior motives and to his credit he knows just what to say to manipulate the minds of some fans
The club, headed by Wyness are not prepared to even countenance the thought of going anywhere else than Kirkby and they will feed us any old bollocks to scare us into accepting the inevitable. Those of you still nodding with Keith need to consider why the club is developing a policy on the hoof.
but dont let that get in the way of a good witch hunt , sharpen those pitch forks and light those torches
Filling in the corners was to take the capacity from 55k to 60k, not from 55k to 75k.
Source: Keith Wyness.
We can’t even flog the season ticket availability we have (hence half season tickets advertising on Radio City every half hour) - to realistically expect us to move up to 75k is just fanciful nonsense.
C?mon fella use your head. As Steve says. How does filling in the corners increase the overall capacity by 50% of the current stadium?s capacity. If we filled in the two remaining corners (removing the church hypothetically) at Goodison would we have a 60,000 capacity?
if the corners were filled in to 60k, then the stadium could be built upwards (think st james park)
it seems to me that the club cant win, build a tricky smaller stadium on the loop and everyone would be happy in the short term,
Build a staduim for the potential for expansion elswhere and bullys dreaming, pocket lining etc,
If all along this was the case (and we need to expansion capacity to be a potential 75,000). Why did he not say this at the beginning when trying to sell the Kirkby ground move? Because if he did then it wouldve blown a big hole in the whoe Loop argument right from the start.
Going back to what you said about filliing in the corners. You cant just add another tier on top of another and not build the Ground outwards. Unless we demolish and recontruct the original stand. Either way this causes problems in itself.
As for the Loop, HOk have stated roads can be tunnelled and bridged to expand the exisiting footprint to a larger area. This has all been said before
you dont have to be a brain surgeon to realise that the loop couldnt support any expansion after building, unless we want to call it the salvador dali stadium,
talk of tunnels, walk ways, bridges is rediculous, why not change that tower in the HOK sketch into a big helter skelter
Your mam & dad lied about Father Christmas and there isn’t a tooth fairy. Sorry.
And did you know they’ve taken the word gullible out of the dictionary?
We’re all beleiving somebody else aren’t we? Either the Club, or the alliance of KEIOC/LCC/Bestway.
It’s a question of where you place your faith isn’t it? And on the subject of faith, weren’t we formed from a church?
Other clubs like Utd/LFC have existing grounds or will have grounds capable of holding these higher amounts and I believe the Emirates is capable of 70,000 within its design structure. It’s good the club is thinkin’ BIG thinkin’ BOLD and thinkin’ of the children and grandchildren. :)
I’ve just picked up a Leeds vs Everton programme from 1975 and the top average home attendances were as follows:
1. Liverpool 46,576
2. Everton 38,717
3. Newcastle 38,717
4. Leeds 34,044
5. man City 33,939
6. Birmingham 30,651
West Ham 29,606
Arsenal 29,328
Middlesborough 28,297
Chelsea 27,479
Man Utd were in the First Division at the time before anyone asks.
The point is would Arsenal have had a case for the Emirates, would Newcastle have expanded St. James, would City have moved to Eastlands, would Liverpool have contemplated their new ground?
I agree 75,000 is far-fetched but surely the last thing that we want now is a land-locked site that can never be expanded?
Doesn’t that rule out the Loop despite its great central location?
contingency plans to expand in the future are sensible. that’s why Liverpool have just re-designed their own project.
thanks for offering absoulutly nothing to the debate, your definatley on santas naughty list now,
Ray,
glad to see someone else gets it great post,
But it’s hardly a "clever numbers game". All’s I did was pick some of the biggest games, episodes, periods in the club’s history to see whether a century’s worth of empirical evidence supports the belief that at any stage in the future we’ll need 75,000 either in Liverpool or Kirkby.
We’ve had a stadium in the past that could accommodate 75,000 and we rarely filled it. There’s a reason why we hear so much about our record gate of 78,000 (v Liverpool again, yawn) because it stood out like a beacon.
My underlying point is that if the success that I’ve outlined above didn’t attract 75,000 then what will?
Yep, you and I can massage stats however we want - I mean Charlton used to get 60,000-odd for some games - but when those figures play out over a century you really have to start to think that a reliable pattern is emerging.
And anyway, if I’m right, the programme you have there is from 15th March 1975 (yes?) when Everton were closing in on the title (as eventually proved by the fact that we would actually have won it had we not have stupidly lost home and away to the eventually relegated Carlisle). Yeah?
And as you say, we were averaging 38,000 in a stadium that could fit 57,000-plus (shown by the gate v Liverpool - yawn - earlier that season).
So where were the other 19,000 fans as we chased the title in 1975?
And where will the other 37,000 fans come from if we’re in with a shout of the title at Kirkby, the Loop, the moon etc?
C’mon Ray, you know as well as I do that there’s only one reason why we’re talking about 75,000 as a putative capacity for Everton...and it all stems from Keith Wyness’ transparent politicking.
He’s dressing it up as ambition (I seem to recall Leeds Utd having that) when it’s nothing but gerrymandering.
A 50-55k stadium now with the ability to expand at that site makes the most sense, doesn’t it - regardless of whether that site is in Kirkby or not? Isn’t the inability to expand the main reason why we are seeking to move now?
Football is so mcuh more popular now than in 1975 generally, as the introduction of the PL, the reduction in crowd trouble etc have made it a much more trendy game to watch.
People go on about Liverpool having glory hunting supporters hence the need for a bigger stadium. Well, the point is, that if we ever become succesful again, then we get glory hunters as well. You don?t think that if Man Utd or Liverpool were in the 2nd division they?d still get as many supporters do you - of course not. But on the other hand, if we were PL contenders and playing regular CL football, then we would get a substantial increase in supporters as a result.
I also think that previously recorded attendances were also in some way massaged to deceive the VAT and Tax man but that’s worthy of a completely different thread!
No the point I was making is that football has changed. Who would have anticipated the Geordies getting 50,000 for each home match when their average gate was once sub 20,000? We should not commit to a 50,000 stadium that is not expandable.
Given some success, a fair economy, good marketing, a fan-friendly stadium and good public transport, I could see us filling a 50,000 stadium regularly. Whether that’s at Kirkby or not is another question!
And by the way, you were right about the programme. 0-0 and I was there.
1.Goodison is falling down and we will soon be unable to get a safety certicate to continue its use
2.We will get up to £10m extra a year to spend on the team via increased corporate business
3. We will only have to pay for fittings in a new stadium to which we suffer no outlay for its build
Mind you, as I often am, I could be wrong; or we may not have been told the whole truth
Are you saying that this has nothing to do with the statement that a stadium for 50-60,000 fans would be feasible on the loop site?
As for the VAT fiddles, we and Liverpool were investigated weren’t we?
The game that makes me laugh is the 4-1 versus Sunderland in the 84-85 season when Andy Gray scored twice with brilliant headers at the Gwladys St. End. Have a look at the packed crowd and convince me that there was only 36,000 in attendance!
Which sort of brings me back to the unreliability of crowd comparisons from bygone eras. Not only are the figures unreliable but also the audience at matches has changed. More season ticketholders, better grounds, improved transport (well motorways, anyway!), more disposable income (thank God for credit cards), less hooliganism and generally better standard of football.
With success, we could fill a 50,000 stadium every home match. Even if we could never get to 75,000 let’s have a contingency that would allow us to do it if it ever did become feasible. Surely not another ground move instead?
And yes, I do suspect Wyness’s motives for only coming up with the figure now. He IS trying to discredit the Loop but perhaps the Loop isn’t the answer anyway.
They?ve become bigger only over the last 20 years while we stagnated.
If we built a stadium with 60,000 seats in the first place (in the now HOK endorsed Loop) for example we wouldnt need to expand.
Have you seen the German Stadiums with small areas of standing sections? Schalke 04?s stadium is amazing! They?re perfectly safe (well maintained and closely monitored) and allow the capacity of a stadium to increase without any building work. Maybe in 10 years or so we may get them over here. Because Health and Safey is so much better now than in the 80s. Please dont say it will never happen because i believe it?s inevitable at some point.
Wishful thinking but lets say in 10 years time (hypotheically) we have a City centre stadium (in the Loop or not) and we are filling its 60,000 seats and we need to expand. If these small standing areas are introduced we could easily push the capacity towards the 65-70,000 mark. That would be more than big enough.
There?s a lot of ifs and buts. However Arsenal?s Emirates stadium is 60,000 and its expansion policy is based on replacing the exisitng seats with smaller ones. Thats a fact!
They proved you dont need a large footprint to accomodate a very big superb ground
Unfortunately Cheslki, Arsenal and Man U gain so such from the corporate and big city sports fans. Can?t see too many of them tramping out to Kirkby to swell our attendances. Potentially 75,000 fans for our home games? You?re shittin? me.
Aside from fact that I find it hard to beleive that a 50-55k stadium could fit on that site, and I may be wrong on that, who knows?, but hasn’t anybody thought of the safety concerns of having 50,000 people bottle-neck over a few bridges, or worse just legging it over Scotland Road to sit in the middle of a roundabout? What happens if there’s a fire? or a riot?
Given the new alternative proposals for regenerating Kirkby that have just come out today, it woul be sensible if EFC at least started to look at alternatives in case Kirkby falls through. I have a feeling however, that if that happens, all will go quiet from LCC, KEIOC and Bestway, and we’ll still be playing at a crumbling GP in 15 years. I hope i’m wrong.
Having said that, United and Liverpool have played to full houses for 40 years whereas Everton haven’t. 60,000 would be ample for Everton.
Given, 1) that the population of Liverpool has been on the decline for years.
BUT, 2) the ease of transport from the surrounds has improved and that.
3) someone will come up with the average of averages since WW2 for attendences.
4)This 75K is pie in the sky.
5)Those who think NO don’t need telling.
6)Those who think YES, CAN’T, WON’T LISTEN
Mike Kay - Do I assume from your attitude that you would choose a move to Kirkby even if a cheaper better option was offered in the city. I know some of the "no" voters can be a bit dismissive of the Kirkby project but comments like yours just give them ammunition to criticise the "yes" voters.
Everton probably will never again reach attendances of 75,000 because we are not attractive to the southern fan base. Man Utd have the worldwide appeal going back for over 40 years and have a massive number of season ticket holders in the south east, Chelsea went from small club to massive club because they are in London and have immediate access to a huge fan base of glory hunters. Everton are a true North Western team with a largely North Western fan base which will not grow, especially if we move to a ground with traffic problems. Work made me move to Norfolk - a 6 hour drive to Goodison, move to Kirkby and add 2 hours to get out of the carpark and I wont be getting home until 1am. How many southern glory hunters will choose that?
All that said there is absolutely no reason why the potential to expand any new stadium cannot be planned for several phases in advance. The Loop site can comfortably accommodate the emirates. The cut and cover process will release further footprint to enable practically any capacity to be achieved, similarly at GP, expansion is possible with high 50’s attainable within the existing footprint, and only moderate landtake to increase this substantially. Meanwhile, he seems to have conveniently forgotten, that his own transport studies have shown that 50,000 at Kirkby requires massive additional public transport already.
Let?s put it pure and simply....it was put to the vote - the majority voted "Yes". End of.
If you don?t like it and you?d consider boycotting the Kirkby site in protest - you?re not a true blue and should be ashamed of yourself.
Bottom line - we need a new stadium. We need Tesco?s money to get it. Tesco want to build in Kirkby. Forget Bestway and the loop - Bestway are small fry and simply cannot give as much financial support. The site is too small and if you think the Kirkby site would lead to traffic chaos - the Loop would be even worse on a Saturday afternoon.
The claim seems to me to be a change of stance as his original claims about the Loop might not stand up. Its like he realising there may be a chance of fitting a stadium on the Loop but not for 75000 so he?s come up with this. He seems very reluctant to consider anything other than Kirkby and this smacks of Kirkby being a big money spinner for him. Further to this, Kenwright seems to be displaying similar signals... Are his motives for Kirkby solely for the good of EFC?
How can you possibly say Everton will "never" get 75000 supporters in a week? That’s just a ridiculous statement, unless you happen to have one of those fancy crystal balls, or you’re the new Nostradamus.
It’s impossible to predict the future, and using the line; "oh well, we’ll just buy a new ground if we’re that successful" is just plain stupid. Just because we’d have the cash to do so, doesn’t mean we should be backward-thinking! Having to fork out ANOTHER £3m would seriously impinge upon: transfer funds; wage structure; club facilities etc; as it has done at Arsenal, which would only be to the detriment of the club.
And I thought Wyness’s business acumen was questionable - thank Christ you’re not in charge of the club!
The club should be (as far as possible) planning for every eventuality. Why not dare to dream? Why not be bold and brazen? When all’s said and done, planning for the possibility of 75k fans a week isn’t going to destroy the club. It may, however, be of vast financial benefit.
"Bottom line - we need a new stadium. We need Tesco?s money to get it. Tesco want to build in Kirkby. Forget Bestway and the loop - Bestway are small fry and simply cannot give as much financial support. The site is too small and if you think the Kirkby site would lead to traffic chaos - the Loop would be even worse on a Saturday afternoon"
Apparently we need £50-80m of our own money for Kirkby too, and for that much we could either redevelop GP, or contribute to the Loop.
As Far as Bestway being small fry, they are a privately owned company whose owner is worth several hundred million alone. They also own their own bank and a large concrete company..... they can contribute as much as they wish unlike Tesco, who are PLC and therefore need the consent of shareholders. they have delivered some major projects too. The city centre copes with far bigger crowds and influxes than those proposed for a stadium every working day. In the rush hr alone over 100,000 people arrive in the city, and similar on some evenings. Everyone can get a bus/ train/ ferry to the city centre. There are several thousand parking places with more planned. People movement in this area dwarfs anything in the outskirts, so please stop talking about the logistics when Kirkby would so clearly be a nightmare in this respect..... hence the damning transport study.
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I love watching Everton now because of Aussie Tim Cahill but if you asked me for a ’ known global player’ outside of this, I would struggle. What I am trying to get at is, yes, planning for the future is excellent and in Everton’s case paramount, but silverware - Carling and FA Cups, even UEFA, 1 or 2 more marquee players like Tim and then challenging top four will bring you your crowds and 60,000 should be expected. 75,000 + week in, week out, wow, that is global in a big way and you need to winning the league and the big cups mentioned to fill the coffers there. Go the ’ Toffees’, keep your success going!
To establish my credentials, my first match at Goodison Park was for the visit of Newcastle in 1948. I was very young!
Please explain to me what the attraction of Kirkby is, knowing it?s going to cost the club £50 to 80 million when we also know we could redevelop Goodison for the same amount?
As for the 'needing 75,000 seats' comment from Wyness to try to put off any potential other options, this confirms that this man is on a mission to line his own pockets. This man is the enemy of Everton FC.
If Kenwright is the Evertonian he keeps on telling us he is, he needs to step in and put a stop to this madman.
The real worry is there are Evertonians who fall for every bit of bullshit coming out of his mouth.
I assume you’re trying to say that Wyness is using the lack of additional expansion possibilities of the Loop site - as another reason why Kirkby is the better option?
In which case he’s right - 75,000 maybe unrealsitic in 2007, but the new stadium will be the home of EFC for probably the next 75-100 years - so who knows what’ll happen in that time?
Anyway, the Loop site is shyte IMO - a gloryfied roundabout is not my idea of the way forward for EFC.
When we last had a vote on the Kings Dock project some 6-7 years back options 2 and 3 was to redevelop Goodison Park.( I still have the brochure).
What has changed since?
"The revelopement of Goodison debate has been done to death. Move on FFS!"
Done to death you say, you should have no problem then in telling us precisely how much this will cost the club in comparison to the Kirkby option currently sitting at £50-80m. You should also be able to tell us about the images of a redeveloped GP that the club have produced so that we can make a valid comparison...... Fact is only the Kirkby option was done to death, and even that hasn’t held up to much scrutiny!
It was not so long ago when we struggling to attract 25000 to the old lady with more or less the same capacity as today.
And as for attendances, lets not forget that we still have, and will for sometime, the honour of participating in the lowest top flight attendance of all time. (Wimbledon 1993)
On a more serious note, so sad to hear of Mr Hicksons ill health. A everton great and although too young to have seen him play, archive footage and older generations tell me what a player he was.
Get well soon Dave.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.......funniest thing I?ve read all week. Thank you.
They have turned around a club £25m in debt into a club £70m in debt whilst selling off all the things we owned and making a £10m loss for the last 2 years in a row.
They?ve taken the word "gullible" out the dictionary by the way.....


1 Posted 23/11/2007 at 07:48:36
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Locating to a site where future expansion is not limited is good planning,
moving to a land locked site is bad planning in my oppinion.