by Hampshire Royal » 22 Feb 2014 12:26
by SPARTA » 22 Feb 2014 12:28
by Ian Royal » 22 Feb 2014 12:51
paddy20JembaHampshire Royal Since 2003 we have been in the Prem for 3 seasons, we have been promoted as Champions in the Championship twice, we have been in the Championship Play Offs three times, have finished seventh in the Championship once and ninth twice.
I could cope with bumbling along like that.
+ 1
I would rather we invested in the team when we were in premiership and were an established premiership side. Yes things could be worse but they could also have been a lot better. We missed two golden chances to do that. I doubt we will have those again for quite a while
by Royal Rother » 22 Feb 2014 13:24
by multisync1830 » 22 Feb 2014 14:07
SPARTA I don't know if it's been mentioned yet or not, but there were two US bidders, not one. One had nothing behind them and were sent packing, the other sounded like they had money but for whatever reason weren't SJM's cup of tea, or perhaps had a different vision for the club that he shares.
by JIM » 22 Feb 2014 14:18
by SpaghettiHoop » 22 Feb 2014 18:08
by SPARTA » 22 Feb 2014 18:43
multisync1830SPARTA I don't know if it's been mentioned yet or not, but there were two US bidders, not one. One had nothing behind them and were sent packing, the other sounded like they had money but for whatever reason weren't SJM's cup of tea, or perhaps had a different vision for the club that he shares.
my understanding is none of the 3 bidders were offering enough. As mentioned the term 'derisory' was pinned against all 3. The only card Chairman holds is to say he won't sell his share. The three were for 100% therefore he can veto the sale on that aspect but if AZ gets desperate or bored to sell his 51% then he could find a buyer for that and leave the club with a new majority shareholder who may or may not have any vision past asset striping.
A shark could vote the club to spend a lot of money and force the other shareholder to pay 49%. SJM could easily be squeezed or forced out at little or no expense by a clever majority shareholder...
To some it's a passion about football. to others is business pure and simple.
by FridaysGhost » 22 Feb 2014 20:51
by Royal Rother » 22 Feb 2014 22:19
by MmmMonsterMunch » 22 Feb 2014 23:11
Royal Rother
by From Despair To Where? » 23 Feb 2014 13:15
by Sutekh » 23 Feb 2014 13:28
by Royal Rother » 23 Feb 2014 13:50
From Despair To Where? I was confused as how owning 2% could be a power broker when the other 2 major shareholders both want out. Add to that, the supporters are unable to find a consensus on a website, I'd hate to see them in the boardroom.
What we really need is a manager with a track record of getting a team to perform above expecatations and/or bringing on academy players and making them regular first teamers. What about that bloke who used to be at Scunthorpe. Got them playing decent football at a level above their norm. If not him, how about that bloke who took Southampton from League 1 to the Premiership with a team built around academy graduates.
by Wimb » 23 Feb 2014 15:11
by Royal Rother » 23 Feb 2014 15:55
by Wimb » 23 Feb 2014 16:15
by winchester_royal » 23 Feb 2014 16:23
by Wimb » 23 Feb 2014 17:13
winchester_royal As far as I can tell the financial fair play rules are there to make sure clubs remain self sufficient, which is absolutely right imo. For sure it will mean that the smaller clubs will get penalised if they try to compete financially with the bigger clubs, but they shouldn't be trying to. Oxford will never be able to compete with a club/brand the size of Arsenal, that's just the way of the world, and if FPP stops over ambitious chairmen putting their clubs in danger of potential insolvency through the pursuit of an impossible dream then good.
by winchester_royal » 23 Feb 2014 17:20
Wimbwinchester_royal As far as I can tell the financial fair play rules are there to make sure clubs remain self sufficient, which is absolutely right imo. For sure it will mean that the smaller clubs will get penalised if they try to compete financially with the bigger clubs, but they shouldn't be trying to. Oxford will never be able to compete with a club/brand the size of Arsenal, that's just the way of the world, and if FPP stops over ambitious chairmen putting their clubs in danger of potential insolvency through the pursuit of an impossible dream then good.
I agree they're a step in the right direction to keep clubs afloat but it's a shame that's coming at the expense of totally shutting the door on any club daring to dream they'll compete with the very best.
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