Jump to content
I will no longer be developing resources for Invision Community Suite ×
By fans, for fans. By fans, for fans. By fans, for fans.

Recommended Posts

Posted

Cue dozens of 'McNulty is a know-nothing c***' comments

 

Liverpool set to change hands?

Premiership | Liverpool

by Phil McNulty - BBC Sport 29 November 2006

 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Liverpool's recent visit to the Emirates Stadium was a sobering experience for players, fans and the hierarchy of a club on the brink of a massive transformation.

 

Arsenal's crushing 3-0 win was further confirmation that Liverpool can again forget about a championship they once regarded as a birthright.

 

And, with almost as much significance, it was played in front of a 60,000-plus crowd in a magnificent new arena.

 

Liverpool had hoped to be playing in similar surroundings themselves by 2006, a shining new symbol of their status as one of the world's biggest clubs.

 

The plans are still effectively on the drawing board.

 

A search for new investment that goes back to the appointment of financial advisors Hawkpoint in March 2004 still awaits a successful conclusion.

 

As for the new stadium, there is still an air of uncertainty surrounding Liverpool's next move.

 

Earlier in November, Merseyside's biggest government agency, the North West Development Agency, revealed it was refusing to hand over £9m it had earmarked for Liverpool.

 

NWDA chief executive Steven Broomhead said: "The agency has yet to see any clear evidence of the club's ability to commence with the stadium project, that is to raise the necessary funds."

 

So, against this backdrop, it would be easy to imagine Liverpool's fans filing out of The Emirates asking: "When will this be us? And just who was it who won the Champions League 18 months ago?"

 

The word is, though, that the waiting could soon be at an end...even within days.

 

Sources on Merseyside suggest a takeover is now imminent - and it will not come a day too soon.

 

Liverpool may have enjoyed Champions League and FA Cup triumphs under Rafael Benitez, but new investment is needed to halt a domestic slide which has seen them fall dangerously off the pace of the Premiership pace-setters.

 

A simple but painful fact for you to consider - Manchester United attract a guaranteed 32,000 more fans at every home game than Liverpool do at Anfield.

 

Throw in Roman Abramovich's chequebook plus Arsenal's gleaming new super-sized home, and the sums make painful reading as Liverpool seek greater financial firepower.

 

Liverpool chairman David Moores deserves huge credit for his constant support of managers during his reign.

 

They have never gone short of cash.

 

But he now appears to accept it is time for new money and the old guard's departure.

 

The search, when it ends, concludes a journey far and wide by chief executive Rick Parry.

 

He has been criticised for being too slow off the mark and failing to cash in on Liverpool's great moment in Milan in 2005.

 

But this fails to take in Moores' ties to a club that, despite its size and worldwide reach, remains an almost uniquely parochial football club given its status.

 

And the sale of Liverpool Football Club is not a deal that should be done lightly.

 

If Parry had recommended a sale too soon, what might have happened had the club been delivered into the wrong hands?

 

Local businessman Steve Morgan, a lifelong Liverpool fan with big plans for the club, came and went.

 

He was, in many ways, the perfect choice but his bid failed partly because of a notoriously uneasy personal relationship with Moores.

 

Morgan was certainly not the wrong hands, but perhaps the wrong man given his strident public criticism of Moores.

 

It was Morgan who revealed at Liverpool's AGM in February that the club was £73m in debt - a figure which is now understood to be more than £80m.

 

A flirtation with then Thai PM Thaksin Shiniwatra came to nothing - luckily given he was later overthrown by a military junta.

 

Add the US billionaire Robert Kraft and we come full circle to what looks like the conclusion of this lengthy saga.

 

The list of contenders has narrowed.

 

Dubai International Capital, whose head Samari Ansari is a Liverpool fan, are interested along with George Gillet Junior, owner of Montreal Canadiens ice hockey team.

 

The Dubai option appears favourite, with rumours of a deal being close to completion, but others are still stalking Anfield and there may yet be a twist.

 

They are believed to include Belfast property millionaire John Miskelly, a Norwegian group led by Oystein Stray Spetalen and Petter Stordalen, and a consortium based in Switzerland put together by Robert Herd, the former chairman of Oxford United.

 

Will Morgan return to the table? Unlikely but many still hope he will.

 

Moores' asking price of £300m for his 51% stake has been a sticking point, but he may now consider reducing that price to finally close a deal.

 

He has more than 17,000 shares and values them at £6,000 each.

 

Sources say the price has dropped. He would receive the money from a sale, but is understood to want a guarantee that a purchaser would take out 15,000 unissued shares.

 

Complex indeed, but Liverpool need big money to close a very big gap. And they need it quickly.

 

It is a choice he and Parry must make carefully - but equally an investment that must also be made with caution.

 

An £80m debt, a bill for £200m for a new stadium, a buy-out of Moores and investment in new players?

 

Liverpool will not come cheap...and nor should it with a fan base spread worldwide and with a huge (apologies for use of this horrible word in a football context) "brand".

 

Supporters will be as interested in money for players as much as the proposed new stadium.

 

It is suggested Gillet's package is around £450m, with around £50m for players and other costs once a takeover is completed and a stadium built.

 

Substantial, but the sort of cash Abramovich might find down the back of his yacht's sofa.

 

The Dubai group are regarded as serious business investors rather than lavish benefactors, so hopes of a transfer kitty on an Abramovich scale may be misplaced.

 

One thing is certain, Liverpool have now reach a crucial point in their history.

 

If they hesitate any further, the chase to catch Manchester United, Chelsea and even Arsenal could be lost.

 

The signs are they finally ready to make the move and place Liverpool's future in new hands.

Posted

that £80m debt figure again. FFS, idiot lazy reporting.

 

Its just a rehash of whats been going round the newspapers for months.

 

who wrote this version ?

Posted

Moores' asking price of £300m for his 51% stake has been a sticking point, but he may now consider reducing that price to finally close a deal.

 

He has more than 17,000 shares and values them at £6,000 each.

 

How can any serious journalist put those two lines in succession when they directly contradict each other?

Posted

How can any serious journalist put those two lines in succession when they directly contradict each other?

What, as 17,000 X 6,000 is around £100M not £300M?

 

:D

Posted

What, as 17,000 X 6,000 is around £100M not £300M?

 

:D

 

be realistic. you cannot expect simple maths to stand in the way of shoddy journalism?

 

what are we coming to? we expect intelligence to go with the ethics of a journalist!

Posted

Bose, he is really a a know-nothing cvnt, has took over as head of BBC sports dept. Got his claws all over this article.

Surprised "Prof" Tom Cannon hasn't been mentioned in the article.

Posted

I can't wait til we get all this investment so we too can spend 20 million quid a time on players who will arrive, play below their ability and who we can then ship off at a loss when they finally afdmit they are here for the money and want to go back to where they came from, where they like to be and play their football.

 

That's real football for you.

Posted (edited)

So Gillett's deal at £450m wouldn't be enough, however Steve Morgan is 'the ideal investor' when (aside from the fact that he's a total c*nt), his personal wealth isn't even near to that much and he wouldn't be able to even invest 10p on players after buying the club.

 

That article is the biggest load of sh*t I've ever seen in my life.

Edited by Leo No.8
Posted

So to summarise: McNulty is a know-nothing c***.

Aye but we all knew that anyway. Same s**** from him but different place of work.

Posted

http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/investing-and...mp;in_page_id=3

 

Liverpool is set to be the latest major football club to fall to a foreign takeover after it emerged that the controlling Moores family is ready to sell up in a deal which could top £290m.

 

Heading the race for the Reds is colourful American businessman George Gillett, a sometime bankrupt and former owner of the iconic Harlem Globetrotters basketball team.

 

But the ambitions of Gillett are being pitched against the petrodollar firepower of Dubai International Capital, an investment arm of the Arab emirate headed by its horseracing-mad Crown Prince, Sheikh Mohammed.

 

David Moores, who controls the Littlewoods family pools fortune, is understood to be ready to sell part or all of his 51% shareholding in Liverpool. Although the club is £80m in debt and needs £180m to finance a move from the constricted Anfield to a new home in Stanley Park, Moores is believed to want an offer that will value the club's total share capital at £210m.

 

'The deal is just days away and though it's been neck and neck, Gillett may be pulling ahead,' said a City source.

 

Gillett, 67, the owner of Montreal Canadiens ice hockey team, appears to be aiming to ape the £800m takeover of Manchester United by Malcolm Glazer who, like Gillett, runs his businesses through his sons and is also a US sports franchise owner.

 

Based in Colorado with interests in car dealerships, meat-packing and grain, Gillett has made, lost and made again fortunes from the US skiing boom as owner of theVail resort.

 

As well as running the Harlem Globetrotters in the 1970s, he has been an owner of the Miami Dolphins gridiron franchise

Posted

Your title of copy and paste king is safe after that Carralegend :)

 

It still seems to be a re-hash of older articles apart from this "City source"

 

No one seems to know what is going on.

Guest kaiserkevin
Posted

So to summarise: McNulty is a know-nothing c***.

 

We will see on that one.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...