Rosenborg Outside Europe – Fortunately, Rosenborg has money on the books



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  • Rosenborg 0-2 PSV Eindhoven (0-1)

YOU HAVE SEEN that all season, it’s not good enough. In the Eliteserien it is maintained in a way, where the level is not so sharp.

In Europe it is much more difficult.

Despite the team having grown stronger at all levels, Rosenborg are still not where they should be.

When Markus Henriksen lost the ball on the way forward after just over an hour, it was night (0-2).

The dream exploded - out of Europe

The dream broke out – out of Europe

ROSENBORG WAS REALLY no real chances against PSV Eindhoven, although it was never as painful as last year (1-4). A lot is about speed on the international stage. Rosenborg doesn’t have it. The chances you have of creating to win were also very far, and in the few RBKs produced, there was not enough quality in the end.

So that’s the difference between group play and motherhood.

When you lack a little of everything, the sum of inferiority becomes too great.

ON THE BASIS OF What we have seen in recent years, where Rosenborg has won just one match in three consecutive group matches, is not a direct surprise. 1-4-13 are in the Europa League.

For Rosenborg, whose ambitions are grounded in a historic heyday in Europe, it’s shameful.

OF LAST THREE For years, Rosenborg has balanced operating expenses with Europa League group games. That won’t be the case in 2020. After the loss to PSV, UEFA’s money runs out.

In the lowest season in the memory of a man, of course, there is a line on the bill.

COVID-19 HAS STOLEN football too much. The bigger the club, the more it will lose. The around 12 million that Rosenborg has earned in Norwegian kroner through the rating is not enough to not consume capital.

The club lives well with that.

- I have never doubted

– I have never doubted

ROSENBORG NEEDS EUROPE to be the club that Rosenborg wants to be. But they shouldn’t be there every year. It is not the case that Rosenborg is dependent on UEFA’s millions. The economy is still very strong.

This year the entry ticket was worth around 30 million crowns, where money from TV and match bonuses in group play (six million crowns for a win, two for a draw) would add to that. .

There are quantities that are always useful in the final result.

Save the club operations and turn the red numbers to black at the end of the year.

The King of Lerkendal

The King of Lerkendal

ROSENBORG IS Norway’s largest club. And therefore also the most expensive to operate. Most of the club’s players earn more than they would have earned anywhere else in the Elite Series. Administration, support apparatus, and man-years in general also cost money.

However, it is not critical in any way.

Not even in the crown year 2020.

THE VALUES OF IT what was created and developed under Nils Arne Eggen in the 1990s is well managed in Lerkendal. The club and the infrastructure are built according to the profits. Although there has been some bleeding on the road, the Rosenborg has a solid foundation.

When Ivar Koteng voted in a match to retain power in the club at the annual meeting in February, he was able to tell that Rosenborg had 92 million crowns on the books at the start of the 2020 season.

That’s more than half of the elite clubs they have on the budget.

This is how it is it may be your self-image that suffers the most this season. 18 points behind Bodø / Glimt is painful. Molde in the group stage of the Europa League also does not help the spirit. But it is not by chance, nor is it about bad luck or margins.

What we have seen since the start of the series in Norway, and what we have seen through qualifying in Europe, is the result of a series of poor decisions in the last three seasons.

This is what they have brought to Åge Hareide to clean.

When Rosenborg has to fight for the top three in the Elite Series, it says it all about the size of the job.

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