Profligate Hull City envy Burnley’s buffers against relegation | Louise Taylor

The spendthrift Tigers have bet everything on staying up, a risk their prudent rivals refused to take

Adam Pearson’s voice turned wistful. “Burnley are a very well run club,” said Hull City’s chairman. “They’ve managed their budget very cleverly and very sensibly.”

It was mid-March and Pearson, who had just put his manager, Phil Brown, on gardening leave, replacing him with Iain Dowie, was playing down grim warnings from Deloitte, Hull’s auditors. The accountancy firm was predicting relegation would create a £21m shortfall but Hull’s chairman, charged with re-balancing the books after his predecessor Paul Duffen’s abrupt winter departure, denied his club faced financial calamity.

One win, one draw, four defeats and several long nights spent poring over assorted sets of complex accounts later, Pearson has changed his tune and spent much of this week issuing scary prophecies of impending austerity at the KC Stadium. “Whether we survive in the Premier League or not the stark reality is that some very difficult days like ahead due to the financial situation,” he said today. It certainly does not help that Hull’s seven recognised strikers have, as Dowie keeps reminding everyone, managed to score nine goals between them all season. Or that those forwards collectively command £200,000 a week.

Pearson will not care to reflect that, across the Pennines in Burnley, no player earns more than £15,000 a week and the past few days have seen architects busily finalising plans for a £15m redevelopment of Turf Moor. To be completed in time for the 2011-12 season it will incorporate an upmarket hotel and is forecast to generate a minimum £1m annual profit.

Like Hull, Burnley are in severe peril of relegation and if Pearson privately wonders whether he was right to opt for Dowie, Barry Kilby, his east Lancashire counterpart, arguably has cause to regret appointing Brian Laws as the replacement for the Bolton-bound Owen Coyle in January. Should West Ham beat Wigan at Upton Park tomorrow a home defeat against Liverpool on Sunday will relegate Burnley. Similarly, a West Ham victory combined with Sunderland winning at the KC today would leave Hull, whose goal difference is far inferior to Gianfranco Zola’s team, effectively consigned to the Championship.

After that the similarities end. “We won’t bet the ranch on staying up,” said Kilby last year. “I don’t want a disaster on my watch.” True to his word, Burnley’s chairman fixed the club’s weekly individual wage ceiling at £15,000 – by far the Premier League’s lowest. Over at the KC Stadium Pearson was absorbing the ramifications of Duffen’s decision to spend almost £40m of the club’s near £50m turnover on player remuneration.

Jimmy Bullard commands £45,000 per week and, under the terms of the three-and-a-half years remaining on his contract, is entitled to continue receiving that sum whichever division Hull play in. While Pearson may succeed in selling other higher earners such as Stephen Hunton this summer, Bullard’s appalling injury record dictates he will almost certainly be staying put.

Although at first glance Hull’s last published set of accounts looked reasonably healthy with £4.6m of bank debt, the club’s loan arrangements mean it has effectively mortgaged itself to the hilt, borrowing heavily against advanced Premier League income. Sources indicate the full extent of Hull’s liabilities is at least £25m.

While Pearson denied suggestions yesterday that the club had already received £10m of next season’s £16m parachute payment to be awarded by the Premier League in the event of relegation, it is not impossible that Russell Bartlett, the owner, might try to avoid the growing likelihood of Hull being placed in administration next season by asking for the advance of such parachute payments. Alternatively, he may attempt to renegotiate repayment arrangements with creditors.

“Of course the future’s very tricky, this club desperately needs to stay in the Premier League,” said Pearson, whose attack on Duffen’s regime in the match programme for last Wednesday’s 2-0 defeat against Aston Villa is understood to have severely strained his bond with Bartlett.

Another relationship at the KC, between Dowie and Amr Zaki, the temperamental Egypt striker Brown borrowed from Zamalek in January but who has failed to score a single goal, ended in acrimony today. Dowie told the recently injured Zaki he lacked acceptable fitness levels, his contract was terminated and the club would happily book him on the next available flight home to Cairo. Under the terms of the loan Hull had been paying the Egyptian’s wages in full.

It was the sort of arrangement Burnley would never have even contemplated. As Laws said last week: “If we go down, we won’t look back in anger.” If only Pearson could say the same.

Premier LeagueHull CityBurnleyLouise Taylorguardian.co.uk

Hull City 1-4 Burnley | Premier League match report

The theme tune of The Great Escape rang out around the KC Stadium before kick-off this afternoon, but come full-time it was Burnley who were celebrating. Not that either side are likely to escape the relegation zone now, the blow of West Ham’s home win effectively putting the kibosh on any lingering hopes of salvation.

Still Burnley will have felt the exhilaration of a win – their first away victory of the season – in a game that Hull, with the slightly better form of the two sides, had been expected to swing. But the pendulum took an unexpected and very decided turn in Burnley’s favour, and after two penalties, Iain Dowie’s team left the pitch looking dazed and confused.

Hull had started the game so confident and bright. Little more than two minutes in and Jozy Altidore chipped a lovely floating ball across goal to meet Kevin Kilbane’s head, the Ireland international putting the ball away to score his first goal in 26 months. What a wait, but what sweet timing.

Burnley’s defence clearly had not learned much since their 6-1 drubbing at home to Manchester City last week. Altidore had a chance to score a second for Hull as he turned the head-bandaged Michael Duff, only for his shot to be parried away by the keeper, Brian Jensen. Jimmy Bullard caught the rebound, but volleyed the ball over the crossbar.

With Hull driving one-way traffic, any chance of a Burnley comeback looked unlikely. But Brian Laws’s side kept chipping away, and all of a sudden the visitors struck gold. Tyrone Mears’s cross came for Martin Paterson who slid the ball under the arm of Boaz Myhill.

In the second half Burnley grew in confidence, Duff just missing a perfect chance to give his side the lead as he failed to convert with Paterson’s cross despite being completely unmarked. On the sidelines Laws drove his head into his hands, doubled over in disbelief, but as the game wore on it became apparent that it was Hull who were falling apart.

Minutes later Dowie could hardly believe his eyes as Ibrahima Sonko brought down Duff, gifting Burnley a penalty. The captain, Graham Alexander, stepped up and slotted the ball home to put Burnley into the lead. Five minutes later and David Nugent raced through, Bernard Mendy panicked and tugged him down. The referee, Martin Atkinson, once again pointed to the spot, and Alexander booted home his second of the day.

Hull attempted a late revival, but deep into injury time it was Burnley who were the strongest, Wade Elliott curling home his side’s fourth goal of the day.

Premier LeagueHull CityBurnleyAnna Kesselguardian.co.uk

Football Weekly: Chelsea lead, while Arsenal look for a Barcelona weakness

James Richardson is joined by James Dart, Barry Glendenning and John Ashdown on your Easter Monday edition of Football Weekly.

We begin by looking back on the weekend’s action, as Chelsea returned to the top of the Premier League against a tired-looking Manchester United. Will the Red Devils’ game with Bayern Munich in the Champions League also end in defeat?

In the fight for fourth, Manchester City obliterated hopeless Burnley, while Tottenham Hotspur came unstuck at Sunderland, and Liverpool blew two points away to Birmingham City (did you see the look Steven Gerrard shot at Rafael Benítez when Fernando Torres was substituted? Ouch). Can the Reds save their season against Benfica in the Europa League on Thursday? Probably not.

In the relegation fight, West Ham United ended their run of six consecutive defeats with a point at Everton. Who’s got more stomach for the scrap – the Hammers (yes, we’re looking at you, Mido) or Hull City?

Finally, Sid Lowe looks ahead to Barcelona’s big week, which involves the visit of Arsenal and then, in all likelihood, the title-deciding derby with Real Madrid, while there are also honourable mentions in the pod for Stevenage Borough, Scunthorpe, and our Italian friend, the Calciopoli scandal, which has reared its head once again.

We’re back as usual on Thursday, but in the meantime, share your Easter spirit on the blog below. We’re also on Facebook, Twitter, and iTunes, and there’s more occasional hilarity with our tea-timely email, The Fiver.

James RichardsonBen GreenBarry GlendenningJames DartJohn Ashdown