How much do ITFC get from an iFollow payment? 08:09 - Oct 10 with 1491 views | jonnysuave | I wonder |  | | |  |
How much do ITFC get from an iFollow payment? on 09:30 - Oct 10 with 1435 views | Matt_Netherlands | The revenue split is explained a bit here. What this doesn’t do, is tell you how much from the £10 goes to the clubs themselves as it surely won’t be the full £10. My guess would be around half. EDIT: Further in the article he says Bolton will have made £14,600 for their share of 1,752 passes. That works out at about £8 going to the club for every pass. Seems like more then I would’ve expected! https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/efl-ifollow Colchester United chairman Robbie Cowling has now explained how the revenue brought in via supporters purchasing iFollow passes is distributed to clubs. Cowling said that at present, home teams keep all revenue from passes bought via their website, as well as the first 500 bought via the away team. In the case of Saturday's match against Bolton, Colchester sold 452 passes while Wanderers sold 2,252 - more than four times that of the U's. Cowling has explained that as a result, Bolton made more money from the streaming passes compared to Colchester, and also generated more revenue than had the away match for Wanderers taken place under normal circumstances with supporters in stadiums. The Colchester chairman has also speculated that if the streaming figures are replicated across 23 away games this season, Wanderers could be in line for receiving some £345,000. [Post edited 10 Oct 2020 9:34]
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How much do ITFC get from an iFollow payment? on 13:58 - Oct 10 with 1304 views | IpswichKnight | I think it’s calculated differently for league 1 sides, all league 1 sides share the revenue generated so we are probably propping up the likes of Accrington, Crewe and Northampton. |  | |  |
How much do ITFC get from an iFollow payment? on 14:16 - Oct 10 with 1263 views | carlisleaway |
How much do ITFC get from an iFollow payment? on 09:30 - Oct 10 by Matt_Netherlands | The revenue split is explained a bit here. What this doesn’t do, is tell you how much from the £10 goes to the clubs themselves as it surely won’t be the full £10. My guess would be around half. EDIT: Further in the article he says Bolton will have made £14,600 for their share of 1,752 passes. That works out at about £8 going to the club for every pass. Seems like more then I would’ve expected! https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/efl-ifollow Colchester United chairman Robbie Cowling has now explained how the revenue brought in via supporters purchasing iFollow passes is distributed to clubs. Cowling said that at present, home teams keep all revenue from passes bought via their website, as well as the first 500 bought via the away team. In the case of Saturday's match against Bolton, Colchester sold 452 passes while Wanderers sold 2,252 - more than four times that of the U's. Cowling has explained that as a result, Bolton made more money from the streaming passes compared to Colchester, and also generated more revenue than had the away match for Wanderers taken place under normal circumstances with supporters in stadiums. The Colchester chairman has also speculated that if the streaming figures are replicated across 23 away games this season, Wanderers could be in line for receiving some £345,000. [Post edited 10 Oct 2020 9:34]
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What is the average away following on ifollow for Ipswich |  | |  |
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