Jump to content

Gingeletiss

Subscribed Users
  • Posts

    6,323
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Gingeletiss

  1. Just glad I'm going....north stand 140-144, no pillars;) so happy;)
  2. Poor poor fools:D:D Ash1987 #7 22 Feb 2010 15:03 Complain | Signed: May 2009 re: re: re: re: re: It's not going to be done today, is it?.... ... Posts: 2,761 Hall of Fame 'londonfan' wrote at 15:01 on 22 Feb: Don't underestimate the huge difficulty of any deal getting done, especially today when there's still a week to go to the crucial hearing. I just don't see what the sellers can do to make the club an attractive acquisition - even with a purchase price of zero. But I am ready to be amazed. London, parachute payments, Pompey is a well known club, catchment area, fans. If they steady the ship right PFC could be very profitable. The south africans etc wouldn't have got this far if they werent serious and didnt see the potential of the club. Why did the danish consortium buy chester? Fact is, there are some sincere businessman, and theres huge potential at Pompey.
  3. Does he have to hand back his shirt and baseball cap????
  4. If, and it's a big if, they apply to the courts for administration, I'd thought that a memo to judge Judy, about the fact that this is their second time. Have it point out, that Poor smouth seems to use this as a regular way of racking up massive debts, then using a 'get out of jail' free card. I would think that any application would be denied, as the business is insolvent. They are gone, finished IMO.
  5. Lol at facebook, a few more then it will be official;)... can this toilet get more fans then portsmouth fc 8,090 fans another great milestone
  6. Storrie tells all............ Peter Storrie has blown wide open to the inside story of where the money has gone at Portsmouth, with Soccernet able to reveal that £131 million has been paid to the players in wages over the past three years. The under siege Pompey chief executive is angry that insinuations are flying around that the club's cash has been misappropriated in some way. Soccernet can now reveal hat the players have taken the biggest chunk of the money, the banks have recalled £40 million of loans and the rest has gone in transfer fees. All the figures have been declared to the courts and to the potential South African buyers with a deal anticipated in the next 48 hours to try to save the club from oblivion. Storrie gave a frank and revealing interview in the light of veiled allegations that something untoward has occurred at Fratton Park, as the fans have been demanding to know there the money has gone. And TV coverage over the weekend raised questions of what has happened to the money generated by a club that won the FA Cup two years ago. Storrie said: "If you want to know where the money has gone, look at the accounts. It's no secret, we've had the report submitted to the courts, and we have presented these accountants to prospective new owners. It's there for all to see. "The bulk of the money has gone to the players in wages. The cost of the players' wages this year is £37 million, last season, when it was running at its height, it was £52 million, and the year before it was £42 million. The vast majority of the money overt the last two to three years has gone on players' wages, and also on their transfer fees. "It's all very well for Gary Lineker, Alan Hansen and Mark Lawrenson to look perplexed about where the money has gone by showing a chart of the players we've bought and looking at that £75 million and adding that to £70 million of debt and asking 'where the £150 million gone?' "In that period we bought £50 million-plus worth of players and paid out their salaries. The list showed one player sold for £18 million, but they never took off the £4 million sell-on fee to Arsenal or the fact that we paid £4 million for him, so in reality we were paid £10 million not the £18 million shown, and that is just one example. "It is all so misleading and it leads to one thing, animosity from the supporters who keep asking us where the money has gone. So, it's time they were told. It's gone on the players' wages, on their transfer fees and the bank recalling their loans. "That is why we have been forced to keep on selling players over the last 15 months - to keep this club alive." Portsmouth's highest earner is David James, who is paid £50,000-a-week. Apart from the England goalkeeper few players earn a similar salary as so many of the big earners have now been sold off. John Utaka has been widely reported as earning £80,000-a-week, but Storrie made a point of telling Soccernet last week that the real figure is about a third of that. He does, however, boost his earnings with bonus payments. Storrie poses an interesting question, also, for all those clubs currently running on much larger debts that Portsmouth, with his club having been declared insolvent by their own accountants' report to the courts. Storrie says: "Yes, we have enormous debts. But don't some other Premier League clubs? Aren't their debts much bigger, in some cases, than ours? The biggest debts are to owners, and they are not calling in their loans. "When you look at Chelsea, for example, their owner Roman Abramovich wrote off all their massive debts, wrote it all off, and that says it all." The TV analysts over the weekend also posed the question of why South Africans or anyone else, for that matter, would want to take over a club in such financial turmoil. Storrie has a simple answer to that: "I am fed up with everyone highlighting the debts without every bothering to look at the assets of this football club. "The assets of this club are its players, their value in the transfer market, and there are some players whom we would value very highly. "There is then the potential for 100,000 square foot of supermarket. You can imagine what that would be worth." It has long been suspected that Portsmouth has attracted so many investors because of the lucrative real estate. For now the big battle is over the survival of the very club itself, rather than the potential further down the line to build a new stadium, cash in on the supermarket and realise the huge profits. For now it's a tightening of belts, as Storrie added: "We are continuing to cut our overheads dramatically and that means the wage bill. There will be a lot more players out of contract at the end of the season and that will be our opportunity to cut the wage bill to make it more realistic to operate within a 20,000 stadium, until such time that we can move on. "In the past the owners have funded the difference between the income from our limited stadium and the huge wage bill, but once that stopped, when Sasha sold, is when the trouble started." Storrie as no knowledge that three leading firms have been approached to administer the club's affairs, a move that will see Pompey docked nine points and rubber-stamp their relegation from top-flight football. Current owner Balram Chainrai, who reluctantly became the club's fourth owner of the season, has been reported to have instructed his legal advisers to look at administration as a serious option. "Not to my knowledge," stressed Storrie, which means it might be possible, but he doesn't know about it. Chainrai, through his spokesman Phil Hall, has pledged the club won't die, but has not ruled out administration as the final option if a takeover fails to go through in the next 48 hours. Chainrai, who stands to lose most of the £17 million he advanced in loans guaranteed against the club's shares and freehold of the land, is unwilling to provide further funding to bail the club out, so the only route to salvation in the short term is some kind of help from the Premier League, or failing that a takeover that might help persuade the courts to give more time to pay a £12.1 million Inland Revenue debt. D-day is March 1 and time is running out as Storrie said: "It's going to be a hectic few days. I am heavily in discussions and not been off the phone all day today again. The next couple of days could prove crucial, its going to be a very busy next 48 hours." As a detailed accountants' report has been lodged with the courts, due diligence for a new owner can be shortened, and the lawyers are trying to fast track the fifth takeover of their unbelievable season. The South African consortium, spearheaded by a sports orientated investor, has lodged proof of finances with the lawyers and will, on Monday, lodge those proof of funds with the banks. Storrie concluded: "Yes, I am hopeful. the club has no price, but the new owners will take over the debts and will be going into this aware of all the financial facts. They will have to come to some kind of arrangement with the Revenue, it will be up to them to reach agreement with the Revenue." If that fails on Monday, March 1, then Portsmouth's best option to stay alive would be administration and the faintest of hope Avram Grant has of staying the Premier League will disappear. The argument is growing that with the chances of survival on the pitch almost over, administration is the sensible solution. The Premier League will want to avoid that scenario, but are rapidly running out of options to save them.
  7. in here in here in here
  8. Some of them are questioning this latest Storrie line!!!! #11 21 Feb 2010 21:17 Complain | Signed: December 2009 re: re: re: re: re: re: Storrie live on SSN now n/t ... Posts: 161 Academy Just to add to my earlier post that this does not make sense. Nobody allows some bloke who says he has money to buy your company to look through the books and do due diligence before proof of funds. NOBODY! He could be a journalist for all we know...what a bloody good story that would be, eh? In fact I think we'd all like to be able to see the books going back the last few years. No this just isn't right.
  9. I loved History at school, seems to be a forgotten subject now, either that, or people just don't care. My point, they have been in administration already in recent history, and as such, shafted all and sunder, that they owed money to, here we are ten years later, and Saints fans, are hoping they survive. Well if they do, then it will once again, be at the cost of those that can least afford it. They should go, not blaming the fans (even though they have buried their heads in the sand once again), but there comes a time to pay the piper, and this is theirs. They lauged at our troubles, they laughed at Leeds, at Luton, even Bournmouth, more recent, they have really had a dig at Crystal Palace. This my friends, is their comeupance.!!!
  10. ....and this, says it all about the way they think down the road... oxy30 Posted 21/2/2010 11:48 #95728 - in reply to #95684 Subject: Re: Lets see what Monday brings... Alan 'The Legend' Knight Posts: 1017 Location: emsworth i think the new owner will put us straight into admin. clean sheet and all that
  11. Or...the PL might still let three go down, but only two up. Thus they have reduced the PL to 18 teams, along the lines of UAFA want!!!!.
  12. Money spent on single match-day tickets, such as those purchased for the FA Cup quarter-final match against Birmingham City, would be lost. Anyone who bought a ticket for that match, under the current circumstances, deserves to have lost their dosh...madness!!.
  13. This is such a laugh!!. Who, and I repeat WHO, is going to buy a club, that:- 1) Has that amount of debt. 2) Doesn't own it's own stadium. 3) Doesn't have a training ground. 4) Is a certainty for relegation. 5) Is a certainty for more points reductions for financial irregularities. 6) Has a small fanbase. 7) Has to satisfy HMRC, now, and for the future. Owes other clubs transfer fees still, for players they have resold. The list is endless, I can't for the life of me, see any honest business being interested.
  14. Bloody hell, the PL must be working OT, they haven't done a FPPT on their last owner yet ( or not that I have seen!!).
  15. Classic......so Mods, where is the thread/sticky for all these classic strips/cartoons etc. A must IMHO.
  16. Lol..............love it!!.
  17. I guess it's 'the c*nt with the bell'..that's my guess;)
  18. Again, I stand to be corrected, but the WO was presented to the court before Chairai came on the scene, my take is, that it is at that point the clock stops, not when they go to court. Again, I stand to be corrected.
  19. Can somebody please post, as to how many minutes of stoppage time there is!!!
  20. Very VERY quiet from Jock the troll!!!!! Ooops and there he is!!!
  21. 2-0.......
  22. ....and again!!!
  23. Yep!!!!!!!!
  24. Lol....I said that, and was poo pood by the masses on here. Still, it's nice to have it said again;)
×
×
  • Create New...