OT: Arby's closes more locations
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sikeston bulldog2
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Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
Yea great masterbate. I mean debate. The real question here is, how does McDonald’s reel them in , a trillion at a time.
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
If they want to make up their own definitions, fine. But when you do comparisons, look at the numbers for big market teams. Their "operating income" is after covering those big salaries already in place. With much higher revenues.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:17 amCranny, if I’m reading this correctly…..Forbes Operating Income is Calculated AFTER STADIUM DEBT SERVICE AND REVENUE SHARING.Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:03 amAgain, from an accounting standpoint, operating income and EBITDA are different. Operating income is after deducting depreciation and amortization, and before deducting interest and taxes. I'm not "defending the Cardinals", I'm just looking at it from an accounting standpoint. What is the total debt service, including principal and interest? The members of the LLC also share in the profits (and losses), pro rata. If the members have a tax liability, the LLC generally pays that. TakeGoldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:46 am“On Forbes' sports franchise lists, Operating Income means Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), representing a team's core profit before these non-cash expenses and financing costs, calculated after stadium debt service and revenue sharing, but including stadium-related revenues like concerts. “Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:12 amThere is no such thing as "operating income/profit". If you want to know what money is available for salary increases you need to deduct interest, principal, and money to cover members tax liabilities from operating income.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 04:56 amYou said, "...showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars." There is no "profit" of $350 million.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 18:27 pmAs I said.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:42 amIt's operating income. Operating income is, roughly, profits.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:25 am Operating costs do not equal profit. That's ridiculous. A while back I posted an article from Forbes that showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars. That profit, not operating expenses. With a payroll at the time that was about 175 million. Deduct the operating costs from the profit and still it looks pretty good. Now they've cut payroll to the bone. Will people come out to watch these guys? I won't. That being said, unless you have a 401k, this economy is killing you. Everything has gone up and continues to go up. I'd expect attendance to be down no matter what.
The Cardinals' operating revenue is about $350 million.
Operating income/profit = revenue - expenses
The Forbes data shows the Cardinals average operating income/profit over a decade at $27 million per year.
principal, interest, and paying the member's tax liability away from operating profit and you have a clearer picture.
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
So, the Cardinals don't make money and they are broke?Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:39 amIf they want to make up their own definitions, fine. But when you do comparisons, look at the numbers for big market teams. Their "operating income" is after covering those big salaries already in place. With much higher revenues.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:17 amCranny, if I’m reading this correctly…..Forbes Operating Income is Calculated AFTER STADIUM DEBT SERVICE AND REVENUE SHARING.Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:03 amAgain, from an accounting standpoint, operating income and EBITDA are different. Operating income is after deducting depreciation and amortization, and before deducting interest and taxes. I'm not "defending the Cardinals", I'm just looking at it from an accounting standpoint. What is the total debt service, including principal and interest? The members of the LLC also share in the profits (and losses), pro rata. If the members have a tax liability, the LLC generally pays that. TakeGoldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:46 am“On Forbes' sports franchise lists, Operating Income means Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), representing a team's core profit before these non-cash expenses and financing costs, calculated after stadium debt service and revenue sharing, but including stadium-related revenues like concerts. “Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:12 amThere is no such thing as "operating income/profit". If you want to know what money is available for salary increases you need to deduct interest, principal, and money to cover members tax liabilities from operating income.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 04:56 amYou said, "...showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars." There is no "profit" of $350 million.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 18:27 pmAs I said.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:42 amIt's operating income. Operating income is, roughly, profits.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:25 am Operating costs do not equal profit. That's ridiculous. A while back I posted an article from Forbes that showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars. That profit, not operating expenses. With a payroll at the time that was about 175 million. Deduct the operating costs from the profit and still it looks pretty good. Now they've cut payroll to the bone. Will people come out to watch these guys? I won't. That being said, unless you have a 401k, this economy is killing you. Everything has gone up and continues to go up. I'd expect attendance to be down no matter what.
The Cardinals' operating revenue is about $350 million.
Operating income/profit = revenue - expenses
The Forbes data shows the Cardinals average operating income/profit over a decade at $27 million per year.
principal, interest, and paying the member's tax liability away from operating profit and you have a clearer picture.
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
Well sure just like all the other teams…..Boston has a 120mil operating income #. The Yanks, Mets and Dodgers could also have much higher #’s….IF THEY WEREN’T PAYING SALARIES…..isn’t that the point of all this??Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:39 amIf they want to make up their own definitions, fine. But when you do comparisons, look at the numbers for big market teams. Their "operating income" is after covering those big salaries already in place. With much higher revenues.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:17 amCranny, if I’m reading this correctly…..Forbes Operating Income is Calculated AFTER STADIUM DEBT SERVICE AND REVENUE SHARING.Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:03 amAgain, from an accounting standpoint, operating income and EBITDA are different. Operating income is after deducting depreciation and amortization, and before deducting interest and taxes. I'm not "defending the Cardinals", I'm just looking at it from an accounting standpoint. What is the total debt service, including principal and interest? The members of the LLC also share in the profits (and losses), pro rata. If the members have a tax liability, the LLC generally pays that. TakeGoldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:46 am“On Forbes' sports franchise lists, Operating Income means Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), representing a team's core profit before these non-cash expenses and financing costs, calculated after stadium debt service and revenue sharing, but including stadium-related revenues like concerts. “Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:12 amThere is no such thing as "operating income/profit". If you want to know what money is available for salary increases you need to deduct interest, principal, and money to cover members tax liabilities from operating income.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 04:56 amYou said, "...showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars." There is no "profit" of $350 million.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 18:27 pmAs I said.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:42 amIt's operating income. Operating income is, roughly, profits.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:25 am Operating costs do not equal profit. That's ridiculous. A while back I posted an article from Forbes that showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars. That profit, not operating expenses. With a payroll at the time that was about 175 million. Deduct the operating costs from the profit and still it looks pretty good. Now they've cut payroll to the bone. Will people come out to watch these guys? I won't. That being said, unless you have a 401k, this economy is killing you. Everything has gone up and continues to go up. I'd expect attendance to be down no matter what.
The Cardinals' operating revenue is about $350 million.
Operating income/profit = revenue - expenses
The Forbes data shows the Cardinals average operating income/profit over a decade at $27 million per year.
principal, interest, and paying the member's tax liability away from operating profit and you have a clearer picture.
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
If attendance keeps dropping…..and we all know what needs to be done to restore it back to where it was for decades….OldRed wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:44 amSo, the Cardinals don't make money and they are broke?Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:39 amIf they want to make up their own definitions, fine. But when you do comparisons, look at the numbers for big market teams. Their "operating income" is after covering those big salaries already in place. With much higher revenues.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:17 amCranny, if I’m reading this correctly…..Forbes Operating Income is Calculated AFTER STADIUM DEBT SERVICE AND REVENUE SHARING.Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:03 amAgain, from an accounting standpoint, operating income and EBITDA are different. Operating income is after deducting depreciation and amortization, and before deducting interest and taxes. I'm not "defending the Cardinals", I'm just looking at it from an accounting standpoint. What is the total debt service, including principal and interest? The members of the LLC also share in the profits (and losses), pro rata. If the members have a tax liability, the LLC generally pays that. TakeGoldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:46 am“On Forbes' sports franchise lists, Operating Income means Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), representing a team's core profit before these non-cash expenses and financing costs, calculated after stadium debt service and revenue sharing, but including stadium-related revenues like concerts. “Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:12 amThere is no such thing as "operating income/profit". If you want to know what money is available for salary increases you need to deduct interest, principal, and money to cover members tax liabilities from operating income.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 04:56 amYou said, "...showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars." There is no "profit" of $350 million.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 18:27 pmAs I said.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:42 amIt's operating income. Operating income is, roughly, profits.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:25 am Operating costs do not equal profit. That's ridiculous. A while back I posted an article from Forbes that showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars. That profit, not operating expenses. With a payroll at the time that was about 175 million. Deduct the operating costs from the profit and still it looks pretty good. Now they've cut payroll to the bone. Will people come out to watch these guys? I won't. That being said, unless you have a 401k, this economy is killing you. Everything has gone up and continues to go up. I'd expect attendance to be down no matter what.
The Cardinals' operating revenue is about $350 million.
Operating income/profit = revenue - expenses
The Forbes data shows the Cardinals average operating income/profit over a decade at $27 million per year.
principal, interest, and paying the member's tax liability away from operating profit and you have a clearer picture.
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
Can't read the last poster's post, because he's on ignore, but I hope it's not about accounting because he's admitted in the past that it's not in his experience and thus not one of his strong suits.
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
Great idea, Goldfan. And just how do you do that?Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:49 amIf attendance keeps dropping…..and we all know what needs to be done to restore it back to where it was for decades….OldRed wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:44 amSo, the Cardinals don't make money and they are broke?Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:39 amIf they want to make up their own definitions, fine. But when you do comparisons, look at the numbers for big market teams. Their "operating income" is after covering those big salaries already in place. With much higher revenues.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:17 amCranny, if I’m reading this correctly…..Forbes Operating Income is Calculated AFTER STADIUM DEBT SERVICE AND REVENUE SHARING.Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:03 amAgain, from an accounting standpoint, operating income and EBITDA are different. Operating income is after deducting depreciation and amortization, and before deducting interest and taxes. I'm not "defending the Cardinals", I'm just looking at it from an accounting standpoint. What is the total debt service, including principal and interest? The members of the LLC also share in the profits (and losses), pro rata. If the members have a tax liability, the LLC generally pays that. TakeGoldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:46 am“On Forbes' sports franchise lists, Operating Income means Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), representing a team's core profit before these non-cash expenses and financing costs, calculated after stadium debt service and revenue sharing, but including stadium-related revenues like concerts. “Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:12 amThere is no such thing as "operating income/profit". If you want to know what money is available for salary increases you need to deduct interest, principal, and money to cover members tax liabilities from operating income.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 04:56 amYou said, "...showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars." There is no "profit" of $350 million.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 18:27 pmAs I said.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:42 amIt's operating income. Operating income is, roughly, profits.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:25 am Operating costs do not equal profit. That's ridiculous. A while back I posted an article from Forbes that showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars. That profit, not operating expenses. With a payroll at the time that was about 175 million. Deduct the operating costs from the profit and still it looks pretty good. Now they've cut payroll to the bone. Will people come out to watch these guys? I won't. That being said, unless you have a 401k, this economy is killing you. Everything has gone up and continues to go up. I'd expect attendance to be down no matter what.
The Cardinals' operating revenue is about $350 million.
Operating income/profit = revenue - expenses
The Forbes data shows the Cardinals average operating income/profit over a decade at $27 million per year.
principal, interest, and paying the member's tax liability away from operating profit and you have a clearer picture.
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
No, the point of it is how much a team can afford to increase it's payroll.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:48 amWell sure just like all the other teams…..Boston has a 120mil operating income #. The Yanks, Mets and Dodgers could also have much higher #’s….IF THEY WEREN’T PAYING SALARIES…..isn’t that the point of all this??Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:39 amIf they want to make up their own definitions, fine. But when you do comparisons, look at the numbers for big market teams. Their "operating income" is after covering those big salaries already in place. With much higher revenues.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:17 amCranny, if I’m reading this correctly…..Forbes Operating Income is Calculated AFTER STADIUM DEBT SERVICE AND REVENUE SHARING.Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:03 amAgain, from an accounting standpoint, operating income and EBITDA are different. Operating income is after deducting depreciation and amortization, and before deducting interest and taxes. I'm not "defending the Cardinals", I'm just looking at it from an accounting standpoint. What is the total debt service, including principal and interest? The members of the LLC also share in the profits (and losses), pro rata. If the members have a tax liability, the LLC generally pays that. TakeGoldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:46 am“On Forbes' sports franchise lists, Operating Income means Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), representing a team's core profit before these non-cash expenses and financing costs, calculated after stadium debt service and revenue sharing, but including stadium-related revenues like concerts. “Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:12 amThere is no such thing as "operating income/profit". If you want to know what money is available for salary increases you need to deduct interest, principal, and money to cover members tax liabilities from operating income.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 04:56 amYou said, "...showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars." There is no "profit" of $350 million.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 18:27 pmAs I said.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:42 amIt's operating income. Operating income is, roughly, profits.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:25 am Operating costs do not equal profit. That's ridiculous. A while back I posted an article from Forbes that showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars. That profit, not operating expenses. With a payroll at the time that was about 175 million. Deduct the operating costs from the profit and still it looks pretty good. Now they've cut payroll to the bone. Will people come out to watch these guys? I won't. That being said, unless you have a 401k, this economy is killing you. Everything has gone up and continues to go up. I'd expect attendance to be down no matter what.
The Cardinals' operating revenue is about $350 million.
Operating income/profit = revenue - expenses
The Forbes data shows the Cardinals average operating income/profit over a decade at $27 million per year.
principal, interest, and paying the member's tax liability away from operating profit and you have a clearer picture.
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
Game Day(Tics, Beer,…) is by far the largest revenue source>>>>Fans aren’t coming back til BDW puts some stars back on the field and win>>>>Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:52 amGreat idea, Goldfan. And just how do you do that?Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:49 amIf attendance keeps dropping…..and we all know what needs to be done to restore it back to where it was for decades….OldRed wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:44 amSo, the Cardinals don't make money and they are broke?Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:39 amIf they want to make up their own definitions, fine. But when you do comparisons, look at the numbers for big market teams. Their "operating income" is after covering those big salaries already in place. With much higher revenues.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:17 amCranny, if I’m reading this correctly…..Forbes Operating Income is Calculated AFTER STADIUM DEBT SERVICE AND REVENUE SHARING.Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:03 amAgain, from an accounting standpoint, operating income and EBITDA are different. Operating income is after deducting depreciation and amortization, and before deducting interest and taxes. I'm not "defending the Cardinals", I'm just looking at it from an accounting standpoint. What is the total debt service, including principal and interest? The members of the LLC also share in the profits (and losses), pro rata. If the members have a tax liability, the LLC generally pays that. TakeGoldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:46 am“On Forbes' sports franchise lists, Operating Income means Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), representing a team's core profit before these non-cash expenses and financing costs, calculated after stadium debt service and revenue sharing, but including stadium-related revenues like concerts. “Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:12 amThere is no such thing as "operating income/profit". If you want to know what money is available for salary increases you need to deduct interest, principal, and money to cover members tax liabilities from operating income.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 04:56 amYou said, "...showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars." There is no "profit" of $350 million.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 18:27 pmAs I said.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:42 amIt's operating income. Operating income is, roughly, profits.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:25 am Operating costs do not equal profit. That's ridiculous. A while back I posted an article from Forbes that showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars. That profit, not operating expenses. With a payroll at the time that was about 175 million. Deduct the operating costs from the profit and still it looks pretty good. Now they've cut payroll to the bone. Will people come out to watch these guys? I won't. That being said, unless you have a 401k, this economy is killing you. Everything has gone up and continues to go up. I'd expect attendance to be down no matter what.
The Cardinals' operating revenue is about $350 million.
Operating income/profit = revenue - expenses
The Forbes data shows the Cardinals average operating income/profit over a decade at $27 million per year.
principal, interest, and paying the member's tax liability away from operating profit and you have a clearer picture.
Spend money to make money
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
If you can't read their comment, why comment? I haven't posted one derogatory comment on this subject.
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
Whose money are you going to spend? Maybe there are members of the LLC who don't want to kick in more.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:56 amGame Day(Tics, Beer,…) is by far the largest revenue source>>>>Fans aren’t coming back til BDW puts some stars back on the field and win>>>>Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:52 amGreat idea, Goldfan. And just how do you do that?Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:49 amIf attendance keeps dropping…..and we all know what needs to be done to restore it back to where it was for decades….OldRed wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:44 amSo, the Cardinals don't make money and they are broke?Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:39 amIf they want to make up their own definitions, fine. But when you do comparisons, look at the numbers for big market teams. Their "operating income" is after covering those big salaries already in place. With much higher revenues.Goldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:17 amCranny, if I’m reading this correctly…..Forbes Operating Income is Calculated AFTER STADIUM DEBT SERVICE AND REVENUE SHARING.Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 09:03 amAgain, from an accounting standpoint, operating income and EBITDA are different. Operating income is after deducting depreciation and amortization, and before deducting interest and taxes. I'm not "defending the Cardinals", I'm just looking at it from an accounting standpoint. What is the total debt service, including principal and interest? The members of the LLC also share in the profits (and losses), pro rata. If the members have a tax liability, the LLC generally pays that. TakeGoldfan wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:46 am“On Forbes' sports franchise lists, Operating Income means Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), representing a team's core profit before these non-cash expenses and financing costs, calculated after stadium debt service and revenue sharing, but including stadium-related revenues like concerts. “Cranny wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 08:12 amThere is no such thing as "operating income/profit". If you want to know what money is available for salary increases you need to deduct interest, principal, and money to cover members tax liabilities from operating income.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 04:56 amYou said, "...showed the Cards profit of around 350 million dollars." There is no "profit" of $350 million.CCard wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 18:27 pmAs I said.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑02 Jan 2026 06:42 am
It's operating income. Operating income is, roughly, profits.
The Cardinals' operating revenue is about $350 million.
Operating income/profit = revenue - expenses
The Forbes data shows the Cardinals average operating income/profit over a decade at $27 million per year.
principal, interest, and paying the member's tax liability away from operating profit and you have a clearer picture.
Spend money to make money
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
JFC!..still responding to post that they claim that can't read...Methinks someone has trouble understanding what ignore means.. very sad and pathetic to watch...
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sikeston bulldog2
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- Joined: 11 Aug 2023 16:20 pm
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
Yeah! Here comes the Rooster. HE ain’t never gonna die.! Yeah!!!WLTFE wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 10:12 amJFC!..still responding to post that they claim that can't read...Methinks someone has trouble understanding what ignore means.. very sad and pathetic to watch...![]()
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
I just get frustrated when a person blatantly lies...I assume they are lying about other things as well..of course, fortunately, they are harmless...sikeston bulldog2 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 10:15 amYeah! Here comes the Rooster. HE ain’t never gonna die.! Yeah!!!WLTFE wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 10:12 amJFC!..still responding to post that they claim that can't read...Methinks someone has trouble understanding what ignore means.. very sad and pathetic to watch...![]()
Re: OT: Arby's closes more locations
And bless the late great Layne Staleysikeston bulldog2 wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 10:15 amYeah! Here comes the Rooster. HE ain’t never gonna die.! Yeah!!!WLTFE wrote: ↑03 Jan 2026 10:12 amJFC!..still responding to post that they claim that can't read...Methinks someone has trouble understanding what ignore means.. very sad and pathetic to watch...![]()