
I’ve got a positive and a negative for you this week.
Last week, I talked about the changes in Magalluf that I’ve seen over my 35 years here, and that the council were going to be holding a special opening last Saturday.
My wife and I decided to go along and do something completely different.
If you’d said 10 years ago that the Balearic Symphony Orchestra would be playing live on Magalluf Beach, you would have been laughed out of town.
Such is the change in the resort over time that this was possible, along with a spectacular drone show.
We booked ourselves into Blackbeard’s Beach Bar & Grill, and as luck would have it, we had a perfect view of the stage from where we were sitting. There were thousands of people there, both tourists and residents from lots of different countries. Police estimates were around the 10,000 mark, and everyone seemed to be enjoying the evening.
The orchestra played music from shows and films, with a huge screen behind them showing videos that linked the two together. This was perfectly accompanied by 400 drones, which lit up the night sky with some amazing images.
Chapeau! to Mayor Juan Antonio Amengual and his team for putting on such a great evening. I hope it isn’t a one-off, as this proved that, with the right planning and organisation, anything can be done.
My good mood was tempered on Monday morning when Real Mallorca released their season ticket prices for the new league campaign. Since we got relegated on the 23rd of May, it has been nothing but bad news.
The coach, Martin Demichelis, signed a new contract and then, two weeks later, reneged on the deal and left for RB Leipzig in Germany.
From the team, we’ve lost Muriqi, Larin, Maffeo, Mascarell and Asano, who have either been sold or left on free transfers. Joseph and Kumbulla have gone back to their parent clubs, and I think we’re going to lose Costa, Mojica, Virgili, Torre, Román and Lato too.
As I write this, not one player has been signed.
So, with all that great news, the club decided to reduce my season ticket price by just 20%. We’re no longer watching Barcelona and Real Madrid; we’re watching Almería and Las Palmas! No offence to those two clubs—they were simply the first that came to mind.
Contrast that with the other relegated teams. Girona have reduced their prices by 50%, and Real Oviedo by 40%, which I think is fair in both cases.
Mallorca wrote into all the players’ contracts that relegation would mean a 50% cut in wages, so what happened to the 50% cut in the cost of season tickets? It’s a joke!
My seat last season cost me €500, and this year it will cost €415. If you’d like to sit in the same area as me but you’re buying a seat for the very first time, that will set you back €700! More than half of the Premier League clubs are cheaper than that.
With the relegation parachute payment, the transfer money from players sold, and the wages saved on those players—plus the 50% wage cut for the rest of the squad—Mallorca will have the biggest budget in the Second Division. So why not pass some of that on to the long-suffering fans?
You might say, “Well, you don’t have to buy one if you don’t want to.” But football fans are a different breed. We support our teams through thick and thin, and I can’t turn my back on them.
Whoever is in charge of this debacle obviously hasn’t read the room.