The Fishy - Grimsby Town FC



League Two Table

  PGDPts
1Bromley46+2587
2MK Dons46+4186
3Cambridge Utd46+3382

4Salford46+1081
5Notts County46+2280
6Chesterfield46+1579
7Grimsby46+2478

8Barnet46+1776
9Swindon46+1175
10Oldham46+1668
11Crewe46+667
12Colchester46+1366
13Walsall46065
14Bristol Rovers46-962
15Fleetwood Town46-161
16Accrington Stanley46-1153
17Gillingham46-1953
18Cheltenham46-2652
19Shrewsbury46-2749
20Newport County46-2943
21Tranmere46-2541
22Crawley Town46-2440

23Harrogate Town46-2939
24Barrow46-3336

Full League Two Table
Prem|Champ|L1|L2|NL|NLN|NLS
SPL|SC|S1|S2

Follow the Fishy on Twitter
NewsNow logo

Question of the Week

Continent 2026 World Cup winners?








A lot to answer for
A lot to answer for

The Unfair Window

By: Rob Sedgwick
Date: 05/08/2009

WHAT is the point of the transfer window in League Two? Under the window clubs are restricted from buying players except during the summer and in the month of January. The reality is it actually stops the smaller teams from cashing in on their better players.

I think the reasoning behind the window is to stop teams buying their way out of trouble midway through the season. But the reality is teams can get a large number of players in on loan (the exact number you are allowed seems to go up every year), which amounts to an even more blatant attempt to strengthen the team during periods of crisis.

Grimsby are a case in point. Town spent a huge amount of money last season buying their way out of trouble by getting loan players in in the spring. This was exactly the sort of thing which the transfer window was supposed to stop. Don't get me wrong I was overjoyed that Town did what they did, but it does show what a nonsense the rules of our game have become.

The authorities can't have it both ways. On one hand they stop you signing players to avoid teams buying their way out of trouble. On the other hand they allow loads of short term loanees to boost a team's chances of success.

Like most rulings in recent years the transfer window seems to favour the bigger clubs, and that's the real reason for this strange contradiction. It means big clubs can now get players when their contracts expire in the summer, having secretly negotiated deals in the prior months. No longer do they have to pay the selling club a transfer fee to avoid someone else signing him while he is available on the free market. The result is the smaller clubs lose out - yet again.

Now instead of buying players when they need them the big teams can afford to stockpile loads of extra players and let them some of them out on loan until they are required, or they suddenly improve and get in the first team.

I'd love someone to challenge this ruling like Bosman did. If my employer told me I could only move to another company during the month of August, and that I could not give in my notice at any other time other than a few weeks in January I would not be happy.

Another ruling which favours the bigger clubs is the fact that seven substitutes can be named this season. Gradually, with each of these rule changes, our game is creeping towards one which favours a small number of elite teams.

I wish they would stop interfering with football.

Add To Facebook


This site is by the fans, for the fans, and we will consider articles on any subject relating to the Mariners whether it be related to current news, a nostalgic look back in the past, a story about a player, a game or games in the past, something about Blundell Park or football in general. Click here to submit your article!


Related Stories


Forum Latest
Thread TitlePostsLatest Post
USA ban Somali referee 31Manchester Mariner09/06 14:38
Lukeos Seat Count35BirtlesHatTrick09/06 14:37
Summer Transfer Rumour thread808Mikey_34509/06 14:36
Slovenia29golfer09/06 14:31
List of GTFC international players43AussieMariner09/06 12:25
Thursday 45HerveJosse09/06 10:15
Evan Khouri79Son of Cod09/06 07:32
Turi/Kacurri5ska face08/06 20:27
Karl Robinson43hampshiremariner08/06 15:14
England v New Zealand43rancido08/06 14:27

This Season and previous Seasons