Sir Rodger Doyle 4. The club had an agreed overdraft and the bank decided to call it in for some reason.?
While I do not personally believe that such an action was taken by the bank, I also accept that such an action could have taken place. This is why I have included it in the list of what I believe to be the possible reasons behind the clubs repayment of this substantial amount of money.
Personally, I'd say it was an accident of timing - the credit crunch (and a time when banks were being forced to look closely at the wisdom of all their lending) coincided with us failing to bounce straight back up to the PL.
If any financial analyst in a bank was to look at who would be the biggest financial risks in football, they'd have to say it was relegated clubs 2 years after going down - look at the number who've gone into administration at that point. So from the bank's point of view we had suddenly become a very bad risk. What is slightly surprising is that they were switched on enough to realise this, though.
Alternatively, perhaps their rules on overdrafts are based on a percentage of turnover. On the PL turnover of about £50m a £7m bank overdraft is only 14% - reduce that turnover by about two-thirds and suddenly that overdraft is a far more significant sum as far as the bank is concerned.