Portsmouth AGAIN
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I think as long as your assets cover your liabilities your still technically solvent. It's weird how clubs operate like they do tho.Bruce Rioja wrote:I wouldn't fight you in court on this, but my understanding is that if their assets are still worth more than their debts then they're still solvent, cashflow problems aside. Then you get into the whole area of player values being subjective. Then again, never mistake the economics of the madhouse on which football operates with the laws of the land to which the rest of us have to adhere.FaninOz wrote:I can't see how Portsmouth are staying out of administration as they continually pay their players late. There must be some very strange definitions in the Uk these days, I always thought that if you could not pay wages you were by definition bancrupt and hence had to go into administration.?
Anyone know the legal ruling on this??
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Interesting post bobo, cheers.
That said, IIRC most of the money for Johnson was actually just Liverpool writing off what Pompey still hadn't paid them for Peter Crouch, I'm not sure that changes anything though, I still think they made enough to pay Chelsea back.
Farcical situation. It is tantamount to cheating and so screw them.
That they were allowed to do this has bothered me for some time, and I've still no idea why the Premier League can't do something about it.The thing which stuns me is that they bought Glen Johnson from Chelsea on an HP basis, sold him for an enormous profit & they were allowed to do so without clearing what they owed Chelsea. Amazing.
That said, IIRC most of the money for Johnson was actually just Liverpool writing off what Pompey still hadn't paid them for Peter Crouch, I'm not sure that changes anything though, I still think they made enough to pay Chelsea back.
Farcical situation. It is tantamount to cheating and so screw them.
But West Ham got away with that didn't they.Tombwfc wrote:Interesting post bobo, cheers.
That they were allowed to do this has bothered me for some time, and I've still no idea why the Premier League can't do something about it.The thing which stuns me is that they bought Glen Johnson from Chelsea on an HP basis, sold him for an enormous profit & they were allowed to do so without clearing what they owed Chelsea. Amazing.
That said, IIRC most of the money for Johnson was actually just Liverpool writing off what Pompey still hadn't paid them for Peter Crouch, I'm not sure that changes anything though, I still think they made enough to pay Chelsea back.
Farcical situation. It is tantamount to cheating and so screw them.
Also in today's Daily Star http://www.dailystar.co.uk/football/vie ... -for-sale/
Depression is just a state of mind, supporting Bolton is also a state of mind hence supporting Bolton must be depressing QED
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This was on Danny Baker's most excellent Saturday morning radio show earlier.
It's Portsmouth player's names put to scat jazz.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8346DNPpbE
It's Portsmouth player's names put to scat jazz.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8346DNPpbE
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Yeh I heard that. I preferred the full 6 minute long version of Bohemian Rhapsody from the Baker and Kelly podcast I mentioned on the same thread!Bruce Rioja wrote:This was on Danny Baker's most excellent Saturday morning radio show earlier.
It's Portsmouth player's names put to scat jazz.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8346DNPpbE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGHrjBan3vA
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Gaydamak has held on to the rights to all the land around the stadium to guarantee the £25m he's still owed. It all sounds like the land grab that spectacularly backfired on Fayed down at Fulham.Prufrock wrote:Assuming they still own them, training ground and stadium will be worth a lot as assets, even if just as real estate.
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I understand what you're saying there, LK, but Craven Cottage is situated in a wonderfully affluent area of west London, and is on the banks of the Thames (this you already know, I know) whereas Fratton Park is situated within the arsehole of the south coast and is surrounded on three sides by terraced houses and industrial units. Good luck to him if he thinks it's worth that sort of brass.Lord Kangana wrote:Gaydamak has held on to the rights to all the land around the stadium to guarantee the £25m he's still owed. It all sounds like the land grab that spectacularly backfired on Fayed down at Fulham.Prufrock wrote:Assuming they still own them, training ground and stadium will be worth a lot as assets, even if just as real estate.
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I hear what you're saying Bruce, and whilst not wishing to pre-prejudice the good people of Pompey (as I've never been) its probably a sh*thole, neverthelss this is what Gaydamak has done. So at the moment, efectively, until they pay Gaydamak off, they're screwed. With,apparently, the first tranche owed in the next couple of months.
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It is in a shit-hole, but it's a sizable dock accessible shit-hole in Hampshire so it'll be worth in that order.Bruce Rioja wrote:I understand what you're saying there, LK, but Craven Cottage is situated in a wonderfully affluent area of west London, and is on the banks of the Thames (this you already know, I know) whereas Fratton Park is situated within the arsehole of the south coast and is surrounded on three sides by terraced houses and industrial units. Good luck to him if he thinks it's worth that sort of brass.Lord Kangana wrote:Gaydamak has held on to the rights to all the land around the stadium to guarantee the £25m he's still owed. It all sounds like the land grab that spectacularly backfired on Fayed down at Fulham.Prufrock wrote:Assuming they still own them, training ground and stadium will be worth a lot as assets, even if just as real estate.
I'd quite forgotten that Al Fayad's plan was to sell the ground & build another a little further away. Don't think he'd have easily got planning permission, but if he did then that land, albeit small, would be worth a fortune.
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
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Aye, it's a fair point. I seem to recall that the Egyptian Shopkeeper's troubles were more to do with getting permission to build a new ground rather than flogging the land on which CC stands, which, as you say must be worth a bloody fortune.bobo the clown wrote:It is in a shit-hole, but it's a sizable dock accessible shit-hole in Hampshire so it'll be worth in that order.
I'd quite forgotten that Al Fayad's plan was to sell the ground & build another a little further away. Don't think he'd have easily got planning permission, but if he did then that land, albeit small, would be worth a fortune.
I'd also imagine that they'd have to incorporate this into the design, too.

Last edited by Bruce Rioja on Sat Jan 09, 2010 2:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Aye ... you'd find pro-forma for that instruction in the file marked "Wembley: Twin Towers" I imagine.Bruce Rioja wrote:I'd also imagine that they'd have to incorporate this into the design, too.
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
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My understanding Bobo, is that he did have planning permission. I used to work just across the river at the time, and according to people who you would trust to be ITk (ie people in the construction industry, in this company and with ties to FFC) said it was going to happen just prior to them moving to Loftus Road. What I don't know is why it didn't happen. But this seems to have a few eerie parallels from what I have been reading.bobo the clown wrote:It is in a shit-hole, but it's a sizable dock accessible shit-hole in Hampshire so it'll be worth in that order.Bruce Rioja wrote:I understand what you're saying there, LK, but Craven Cottage is situated in a wonderfully affluent area of west London, and is on the banks of the Thames (this you already know, I know) whereas Fratton Park is situated within the arsehole of the south coast and is surrounded on three sides by terraced houses and industrial units. Good luck to him if he thinks it's worth that sort of brass.Lord Kangana wrote:Gaydamak has held on to the rights to all the land around the stadium to guarantee the £25m he's still owed. It all sounds like the land grab that spectacularly backfired on Fayed down at Fulham.Prufrock wrote:Assuming they still own them, training ground and stadium will be worth a lot as assets, even if just as real estate.
I'd quite forgotten that Al Fayad's plan was to sell the ground & build another a little further away. Don't think he'd have easily got planning permission, but if he did then that land, albeit small, would be worth a fortune.
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Wow. He must have greased some palms for that.Lord Kangana wrote:My understanding Bobo, is that he did have planning permission. I used to work just across the river at the time, and according to people who you would trust to be ITk (ie people in the construction industry, in this company and with ties to FFC) said it was going to happen just prior to them moving to Loftus Road. What I don't know is why it didn't happen. But this seems to have a few eerie parallels from what I have been reading.
I'd love to find out why it didn't happen.
I'm aware that Al Fayed cannot get himself UK Citizenship, no matter how hard he tries .... & he's tried, many times. There are some weird things go on in Harrod's Towers, by all accounts.
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
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I really would like to think that the guy currently working at making a club in North London go bust is getting well & truly worried right now.CAPSLOCK wrote:Now Mandaric charged!
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
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