Players and manager haven't been paid and reported to have walked out, pre-season friendlies cancelled. Ground share with the rugly league club now not happening, and club ownership yet to be decided.

by Svlad Cjelli » 29 Jul 2011 08:56
by T.R.O.L.I. » 29 Jul 2011 09:30
Svlad Cjelli Ground share with the rugly league club now not happening, and club ownership yet to be decided.
by Friday's Legacy » 24 Aug 2011 18:32
by Barry the bird boggler » 25 Aug 2011 09:12
Friday's Legacy interesting to note that west ham have a debt of £104m and "most" of that has to be cleared inside the next 3 years. this comes to light after tottenham and leyton orient have been granted a judicial review by the high court to challenge the decision to award the olympic stadium to west ham. spurs will now mount a legal challenge based on a £40m loan received from newham council to west ham to fund the club's move to stratford. "newham council's loan had given west ham unfair state aid" and "west ham was not and is not in a financial position to borrow £40m from a private lender or to make a bid for the stadium on its own, as newham itself recognised."
by Uke » 25 Aug 2011 10:21
by roadrunner » 01 Sep 2011 07:53
by Ferris » 01 Sep 2011 08:27
by T.R.O.L.I. » 01 Sep 2011 08:27
roadrunner Everton are in real trouble. The bank wont lend them any more money and they have a huge wage bill to manage on gate receipts, tv money and sponsorship alone. How long before they fall into administration?
by Svlad Cjelli » 01 Sep 2011 10:33
T.R.O.L.I.roadrunner Everton are in real trouble. The bank wont lend them any more money and they have a huge wage bill to manage on gate receipts, tv money and sponsorship alone. How long before they fall into administration?
Probably never but, as I (and others) have said before, it would be the wake up call that the PL needs. It's all well and good seeing Portsmouth go into administration but Portsmouth aren't exactly a long standing member of the top flight (certainly in the last 20 years).
Everton however have been in the top flight since 1954 and are the second oldest club in the top flight (after Aston Villa). For them to fall into administration should send serious amounts ofaround the footballing world - although the Premier League would probably just brush it under the carpet.
by T.R.O.L.I. » 01 Sep 2011 11:09
by Tony Le Mesmer » 02 Sep 2011 13:07
by Silver Fox » 02 Sep 2011 13:13
by T.R.O.L.I. » 02 Sep 2011 13:21
Silver Fox Seeing Karl Fletcher on SSN last night raised the question again of why players who don't get paid can't just leave. I was surprised to see the PFA telling them to stick with it
by roadrunner » 02 Sep 2011 13:24
Tony Le Mesmer Plymouth Players considering not turning out for tomorrow's game. Once you fail to fulfill a fixture on such grounds you've pretty much had it.
by Tony Le Mesmer » 02 Sep 2011 13:27
roadrunnerTony Le Mesmer Plymouth Players considering not turning out for tomorrow's game. Once you fail to fulfill a fixture on such grounds you've pretty much had it.
I hope they go through with it. Reid was also saying that he hasn't seen the administrators any where near the club for god knows how long and they're supposed to be running it. The situation is pretty disgusting to be honest and gone on for far too long. Though I have to admit I would like to see them drop out of the football league.
by Who Moved The Goalposts? » 02 Sep 2011 16:04
by Mr Angry » 06 Sep 2011 08:38
by Barry the bird boggler » 13 Sep 2011 09:14
by Svlad Cjelli » 16 Sep 2011 15:24
Ridsdale lambasts football finances
16th September 2011
By Mike Fahy - Assistant Editor
Peter Ridsdale at JMW's Insolvency Conference
FORMER Leeds United chairman Peter Ridsdale has predicted that there could be "an implosion" among Premier League clubs if TV revenues diminish or are restructured in favour of the top four or five teams.
Mr Ridsdale, currently interim chairman of Plymouth Argyle which is itself in administration, claimed there were only two current Premier League clubs with a sustainable model - Swansea and West Bromwich Albion.
"What I think is frightening about football is that everybody assumes that the Plymouth Argyles of this world who are languishing at the foot of League 2 are the problem, but actually we should be more worried about the Premier League and its future."
He also argued that Manchester United's business model works "without the Glazers" as the club throws off cash of around £100m per year, but was highly critical of the remainder and of the lack of governance in the game.
"Every other football club in the Premier League is held together by having an individual - or a small number of individuals - at the helm."
Mr Ridsdale, who was speaking at Manchester-based law firm JMW's inaugural insolvency conference on the finances of football, pointed to Manchester City's wage-to-turnover ratio of 170% as an example.
"While the Sheikh is there that's fine, but it is not the base of a sane business model."
He also pointed to Bolton Wanderers debts of £100m at the end of 2010 - a year in which it recorded losses of £32m.
"Were it not for Eddie Davies, I don't know how a club like Bolton could survive.
"Nobody says Aston Villa is badly run but Randy Lerner has pumped over £200m into Aston Villa Football Club. It lost over £79m last year. If that was a normal business you'd be asking questions of its management, but because its run by someone with a big chequebook nobody says anything."
He said the biggest danger was to relegated clubs without wealthy benefactors who have to contend with TV rights plummeting from £48m to just £4m in the championship and £1m in League One. He pointed to Leeds United, Southampton and Charlton Athletic as clubs which found themselves in administration after the drop.
"My concern about football is there is absolutely no governance at the top. The Football Association, which is deemed to be the governing body, has no real influence over the Premier League and clearly from what I saw when I was on the board of the FA, the Premier League drives football in this country.
"The Government doesn't regulate football and the Premier League - in my personal opinion - have no care or consideration about what happens below it.
"Take a club like Everton... You have a chairman who is clearly passionate about the club who has been a fan all of his life supported by - it is rumoured - two high net worth individuals and the acquiescence of his bank. Everton Football Club's debt levels and overhead structure would not in my opinion survive relegation.
"It is a strange industry. Every day of the week you see highly paid, talented individuals running around...but it is an industry that is teetering."
by PieEater » 16 Sep 2011 17:58
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