Jump to content
British Speedway Forum

Team Manager's Job


Recommended Posts

The official procedure is for the captain of the team to sign the official sheet that says the riders are being paid. If that sheet was not signed because of non payment, that should trigger off the need for explanations why they are not being paid.

The Team Manager is the link between the riders and the promotion, and is there to run the team to produce a satisfactory performance on the track.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The official procedure is for the captain of the team to sign the official sheet that says the riders are being paid. If that sheet was not signed because of non payment, that should trigger off the need for explanations why they are not being paid.

The Team Manager is the link between the riders and the promotion, and is there to run the team to produce a satisfactory performance on the track.

You are quite right regards the procedure which has been in place for many years.

 

Even so , there are examples throughout the last few decades where the form has been signed in the knowledge that monies were owed.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

You are quite right regards the procedure which has been in place for many years.

 

Even so , there are examples throughout the last few decades where the form has been signed in the knowledge that monies were owed.

Quite agree. Often there is an agreement when there is a problem so the sheet is signed. Just think if you are having home meetings rained off, but still riding the away meetings. You have no income but large outgoings. You can make an agreement to say catch up paying one meeting extra each week until you catch up. It just needs a bit of trust. In another case, if you have a foreign rider in say U19 or U21 and doing well. In the agreement with the DMU you have to pay the rider a fixed sum for each round, even though they may have already returned home for a home meeting, very unfair. If that rider is very successful he has many rounds and the amount builds up. In that case you can continue to pay him his usual wages, but come to an agreement to catch up by or at the end of the season. In this case the rider has often not paid out anything like the fixed payment he is entitled to, so there is no real hardship. Of course for all the deals you can do, there has to be complete trust between rider and promoter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Quite agree. Often there is an agreement when there is a problem so the sheet is signed. Just think if you are having home meetings rained off, but still riding the away meetings. You have no income but large outgoings. You can make an agreement to say catch up paying one meeting extra each week until you catch up. It just needs a bit of trust. In another case, if you have a foreign rider in say U19 or U21 and doing well. In the agreement with the DMU you have to pay the rider a fixed sum for each round, even though they may have already returned home for a home meeting, very unfair. If that rider is very successful he has many rounds and the amount builds up. In that case you can continue to pay him his usual wages, but come to an agreement to catch up by or at the end of the season. In this case the rider has often not paid out anything like the fixed payment he is entitled to, so there is no real hardship. Of course for all the deals you can do, there has to be complete trust between rider and promoter.

There was me thinking the Manager was a guy who turned up, arsed around for a couple of hours looking important, then got pissed in the bar afterwards. :drink::drink::drink::drink:

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Quite agree. Often there is an agreement when there is a problem so the sheet is signed. Just think if you are having home meetings rained off, but still riding the away meetings. You have no income but large outgoings. You can make an agreement to say catch up paying one meeting extra each week until you catch up. It just needs a bit of trust. In another case, if you have a foreign rider in say U19 or U21 and doing well. In the agreement with the DMU you have to pay the rider a fixed sum for each round, even though they may have already returned home for a home meeting, very unfair. If that rider is very successful he has many rounds and the amount builds up. In that case you can continue to pay him his usual wages, but come to an agreement to catch up by or at the end of the season. In this case the rider has often not paid out anything like the fixed payment he is entitled to, so there is no real hardship. Of course for all the deals you can do, there has to be complete trust between rider and promoter.

I'm not sure I understand this fully. Are you saying a British team has to pay a Danish rider for his performance in (presumably World U21s or is it just the National Championships?) I shall probably have further questions depending on your answer to this, so be prepared. :P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure I understand this fully. Are you saying a British team has to pay a Danish rider for his performance in (presumably World U21s or is it just the National Championships?) I shall probably have further questions depending on your answer to this, so be prepared. :P

 

I too would be interested in this answer,and would want further information, depending on the answer...

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure I understand this fully. Are you saying a British team has to pay a Danish rider for his performance in (presumably World U21s or is it just the National Championships?) I shall probably have further questions depending on your answer to this, so be prepared. :P

Yes. The DMU agreement allows for trip to home championships and rounds of the U21 an U19 Championships. It is for the travel and obviously the host club or organisation says for the point scoring. it was about £330 per trip a few years ago. The SVEMO agreement insists on their riders getting flights to a certain financial figure, say £5k. The DMA doesn't, but you have to pay for their returns home and World Championships rounds.

I'm not sure I understand this fully. Are you saying a British team has to pay a Danish rider for his performance in (presumably World U21s or is it just the National Championships?) I shall probably have further questions depending on your answer to this, so be prepared. :P

Yes. The DMU agreement allows for trip to home championships and rounds of the U21 an U19 Championships. It is for the travel and obviously the host club or organisation says for the point scoring. it was about £330 per trip a few years ago. The SVEMO agreement insists on their riders getting flights to a certain financial figure, say £5k. The DMA doesn't, but you have to pay for their returns home and World Championships rounds.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes. The DMU agreement allows for trip to home championships and rounds of the U21 an U19 Championships. It is for the travel and obviously the host club or organisation says for the point scoring. it was about £330 per trip a few years ago. The SVEMO agreement insists on their riders getting flights to a certain financial figure, say £5k. The DMA doesn't, but you have to pay for their returns home and World Championships rounds.

Yes. The DMU agreement allows for trip to home championships and rounds of the U21 an U19 Championships. It is for the travel and obviously the host club or organisation says for the point scoring. it was about £330 per trip a few years ago. The SVEMO agreement insists on their riders getting flights to a certain financial figure, say £5k. The DMA doesn't, but you have to pay for their returns home and World Championships rounds.

Thanks for that, Tsunami. I knew about the SVEMO agreement, but not the DMU one. So what's in it for us? What do British riders get in return for these agreements?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Interesting question!!!

Nowt

Would be my answer

 

This financial agreement certainly shows up where British Speedway shoots itself in the foot

Many young Danes and Swedes may show potential but if they don't perform PDQ they should be out on there ear, even though the rules seem to make this hard IE RyeHouse with Peter Karger

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for that, Tsunami. I knew about the SVEMO agreement, but not the DMU one. So what's in it for us? What do British riders get in return for these agreements?

The flight allowances that I mention are mandatory to get the riders services, and for the foreign authorities to issue an 'Permission to race's in our country.

Presumably British riders riding abroad would get similar allowances to ride in other countries. I obviously had a lot of experience of many Danes and 1 Swede riding for us, but never had a British rider who then rode in other countries. Hope that helps.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue. Privacy Policy