Bolton Wanderers Football Club Fan Forum for all BWFC Supporters.


You are not connected. Please login or register

Wigan in Administration

+21
Growler
Sluffy
Ten Bobsworth
xmiles
okocha
Cajunboy
finlaymcdanger
Banks of the Croal
sunlight
gloswhite
MartinBWFC
luckyPeterpiper
BoltonTillIDie
wessy
boltonbonce
Norpig
wanderlust
observer
RangersDave
Boggersbelief
Bollotom2014
25 posters

Go to page : Previous  1 ... 9 ... 14, 15, 16 ... 28 ... 42  Next

Go down  Message [Page 15 of 42]

281Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Fri 11 Sep - 11:51

RangersDave

RangersDave
Mario Jardel
Mario Jardel

verbally? i think i'd have liked it in writing, especially taking into account how the EFL make up rules and change their mind at will!

I cannot figure out why the Championship allows such a crap organisation to continue to rule them!

Not sure the EFL are operating in the interests of Wigan or indeed, looking at the bigger picture, the league as a whole.

282Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Sun 13 Sep - 13:55

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin

Nixon's Sunday paper article -

Wigan takeover hope as American businessmen launch final £2m bid to buy cash-strapped Latics

AMERICAN businessmen Randy Frankel and Michael Kelt are making a final £2million bid for Wigan Athletic.
The pair and adviser Gauthier Ganaye have told the club administrators that they will buy the whole club for the sum to end the saga.
However the warning is that the group will walk away if it is not accepted as they are worried the squad has been badly damaged since they first bid three weeks ago.
Wigan have sold four top players and a training ground since the Americans first offered more than £5m.
Antonee Robinson was among the stars to leave, joining Premier League side Fulham on a £50,000-a-week, four-year deal after snubbing Everton.
And Frenchman Gauthier is also concerned that they will be unable to bring in new faces because of EFL salary cap restrictions.
The rescue job would become almost impossible this season if the deal was delayed until the transfer window shuts.
This offer falls short of the £4m demanded by the administrators who need money to pay creditors and cover their own fees and legal costs.

The American group looked into renting the ground off a rival bidder and also considered a move to Leigh’s rugby league stadium.
The change of address from Wigan's old DW Stadium ground would need approval by the EFL.
But it is already used by Manchester United in the WSL as well as Leigh in the rugby world. [Everybody KNOWS this isn't going to be happening - Sluffy]

However their final move is for the whole operation.

As the search for new ownership and an escape from administration continues, a Supporters’ Club Crowdfunder page has been set up to raise cash and save Wigan from going under.
Former Lactics favourites including Roberto Martinez, Reece James and James McClean have all stepped forward with donations.
And Victor Moses has given £20,000 to the fundraiser in a touching gesture.

https://www.thesun.co.uk/sport/football/12656434/wigan-takeover-hope-american-businessmen/?utm_medium=Social&utm_campaign=sunfootballtwitter&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1599988183




283Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Sun 13 Sep - 14:10

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin

Also a very 'grim' interview given by the 'third' Administrator pre match at Ipswich today only a couple of minutes long and worth a watch -

https://www.skysports.com/watch/video/sports/football/competitions/league-one/12070777/there-are-interested-parties

There is an interesting reaction though from the Wigan Supporters Club, who had been in talks with the Admin previously and were informed that none of the Admin would be in attendance for this match (why should they be really unless he's meeting a prospective buyer at the game?).

This is a tweet from the bloke who was one of the two having the talks with the Admin, which he posted earlier today -



He's not a happy bunny with them is he!

284Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Mon 14 Sep - 18:15

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin



Wigan a target for Middle East-based business group MBuzz as talks over £3m rescue deal continue with stricken club

CRISIS club Wigan Athletic are a target for a rescue bid from the Middle East-based business group MBuzz.
Representatives of the company have met the administrators and are set to offer around £3million for the whole package this week.
MBuzz Sport will be the team trying to close the deal. They are a branch of a global telecom firm, based in Saudi Arabia but with offices in Dublin, Dubai and around Europe.
Their past experience in football includes a one-off shirt sponsorship deal for Wigan when they played Manchester United in the FA Cup.
The company also took a stake in Spanish side Leganes and have been involved with Sheffield United on their commercial side.
The administrators will be glad of a rival bid as American pair Randy Frankel and Michael Kelt are only willing to pay around £2m which would leave them scrambling for their fees.

https://www.thesun.co.uk/sport/12666391/wigan-middle-east-group-rescue-deal/


All seems a bit contrived to me, someone turning up at the last minute to buy a club with no players for £3m and rack up a further £4/5m debt over the next two years - in the middle of a worldwide pandemic - for what reason really?

Surely the EFL's patience must be wearing a little thin with all this by now?

285Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Mon 14 Sep - 18:40

wanderlust

wanderlust
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

I keep checking this thread to see if they’ve gone tits up yet.

When is that likely to be? Just so I can set a reminder to check again then.

286Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Wed 16 Sep - 0:47

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin

Telephone Q&A With Gerald Krasner Pt 3

The third meeting with Gerald Krasner took place this evening, Tuesday 15/09/20.

Below is a report of what was said, on the record, from a telephone conversation that lasted 27 minutes.

Progress with bids – I’ve never met with any Saudis, just fake news, I am not down to one bidder by any means, I’ve got three, possibly four bids, all at nearly the same stage. These are actual bids and there are another four interested parties, one of which I spoke with in Spain, but that lasted around seven minutes as they didn’t even know what they were buying.

The bidders are people who have done a lot of due diligence know exactly what they’ve got to do, talking with their lawyers, we’re at that stage. But it’s slow progress, I don’t expect any announcements this week. If it changes we’ll put it on the website.

With regards to the new bidders, it’s the nature of the beast, people coming in at the last minute, we only had one bidder early, they went when we got relegated, then I had to sort out the Yeung debt, £25 million, nobody wanted to touch us with that. That was going to cost another £6 million @25p in the £. That delayed serious bidding, we got a lot of interest but that delayed serious bidding until August. None of this helps of course, just telling you the facts behind it.

You can’t generalise on what may hold up negotiations, they are all different , some are poker faced, whist other sit there with a big smile on their face, you know, you are dealing with human beings who will go at their own time, the worst thing to do is to pressurise them.

Debt – We have got enough money to settle the football debt of £6.4 million, a lot of that has been paid already, that’s why we don’t have a lot of money because we’ve used it to pay off the football debt, which we can’t sell the club with, when we sell the club we still have to pay £1.3 million to save 15 point deduction this season, if we don’t get enough money we won’t be able to pay that, in addition the loss in administration of £3 million+
We’re asking £3m for that stadium, which has got to be worth £10m of anybody’s money, we’re asking half a million for the training ground and half a million for Sharpey’s. None of that is expensive, none of it is overpriced, we’re asking a pound for the football club, that’s definitely cheap, but that £ is only if the rest of it gets sold first.
You can’t cherry pick, it’s a package deal, in fact we’d even let it go without Sharpey’s for £3.5m and we’d sell that separately. The important bit is the stadium with the football club.

Incentive to sell rather than liquidate - None of the legal or administrators cost are being charged to the football club, now when I say no legal costs, the cost of the appeal (EFL) will have to be charged to the football club, our costs and the others are being charged to the property sales.
We owe £1.3m to creditors and the football club owes about £3m in PAYE and VAT, we haven’t hit the end of the quarter yet, this debt is our responsibility. Whoever picks up the club as no liabilities whatsoever to football or creditors except for TUPE, which is taking over the employment rights of people employed at the club. So basically the new owners would be starting with a clean slate.

John Sheridan – The manager should stick with the football and we should stick with the administration and we shouldn’t try to do each others jobs. So if we need a manager we will appoint a manager.

Price for club - We’ve been negotiating for weeks and now we’re at £4m, if we get it wrong we are answerable to the high court.

Dean Watson – He went to the match because he wanted to go, he was asked on Friday if he was going then changed his mind, he drove there and back in the same day and put the petrol in out of his own money.

Transfer Fees - We will do a report, though we won’t break the transfer fees down individually, we will say what we’ve received for players sales and how we’ve spent it, so far we’ve spent quite a bit of it on keeping the players and paying their wages.

Time Scale - Can’t see anything happen this week, it’s Tuesday evening and unless someone moves over night, I don’t think it will be until next week that it moves.
The next step is we could have a signed contract by Friday morning, but the next step is a big one. That is singing that contract and dumping the money in their lawyers account. Then it has to go to the EFL and that takes three weeks, but once I’ve got a signed contract which is subject only to the EFL, we can then start putting pressure on them.
The transfer window shuts on 5th October and once it shuts it’s shut, the buyers know this. The consolidation of the club and making sure they don’t get relegated is what it’s about this season.

When I came in on the 1st July I had 28 days to find £1m or the players would have walked. I haven’t done everything I set out to do, I wanted it sold by the end of July, I’m upset that didn’t happen, but you can’t force someone to sign a contract but what we have done is paid all the wages up to the end of August, done the deal with Mr Yeung, in record time and we finished last season, thanks to the Supporters’ Club. That is remarkable given what I know that has managed to happen. Fans are just going to have to be patient, I’m not going to be forced into doing something we’ll all regret later on.

The figures have to balance.

https://progresswithunity.blogspot.com/2020/09/telephone-q-with-gerald-krasner-pt-3.html?m=1

287Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Wed 16 Sep - 11:40

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin

Macclesfield's gone bust!

Macclesfield Town FC wound up in High Court over debts exceeding £500,000

Macclesfield Town Football Club has been wound up in the High Court over debts totalling more than £500,000.

Judge Sebastian Prentis made a winding-up order during a hearing in the Insolvency and Companies Court after being told £190,000 was owed in tax.

In addition, a solicitor for John Askey said the former Macclesfield manager was owed £173,000 and a financial lender was also owed the same sum.

The club's owner Amar Alkadhi had asked for a further eight-week adjournment.

The petition, which had been adjourned for a 12th time last week, began in January 2019 and was scheduled to be heard again on Wednesday after Alkadhi claimed that a sale to Robert Benwell was at an advanced stage.

Benwell, who previously tried to buy Bury, was not mentioned in court on Wednesday by Alkadhi's lawyer, who asked for a further eight weeks to allow a sale to go through.

The court was told that Alkadhi had made a late offer to pay an initial £20,000 of the debt owed to HM Revenue & Customs and had made available a screenshot of a bank statement with £1.1m of funds to show that creditors could be paid.

However, Judge Prentis said he would grant a compulsory order having seen no evidence of the club's ability to pay its debts and said that Benwell had also not provided a business plan for the club should he take over.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/54177582

288Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Wed 16 Sep - 20:26

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin

Wigan in danger of being wound up like Macclesfield, administrators warn

Administrators outline difficulty of finding buyer amid Covid
Offers over £2m wanted for team, stadium and training ground

The administrators trying to find a buyer for Wigan Athletic fear the club could become the next Macclesfield, because of the difficulty of finding willing investors during the pandemic.

Covid-19 was cited by Wigan’s Hong Kong owners as the reason for pulling the plug in the first place, plunging the club into administration and triggering a 12-point deduction that saw them relegated into League One, and Paul Stanley of the corporate recovery specialists Begbies Traynor admits that selling an empty stadium is a much harder task than dealing with a football sale in normal circumstances.

His comments come on a bleak day for lower-league football as Macclesfield, relegated from League Two in August, were wound up after a judge was told the club owe more than £500,000.

“The pandemic certainly isn’t doing us any favours,” Stanley said. “Wigan are similar to Macclesfield in some ways, and Bury and Bolton for that matter. They are all just a bit too close to the big teams in Manchester, and were finding it hard-going financially when their grounds were still open to fans. Macclesfield have just been wound up but they could have been saved had an investor come along with as little as £150,000 or so. The club could have been bought for that price, but evidently no one wanted it.”

Begbies Traynor is asking about £3.3m for Wigan, priced as a package to include stadium, team and a training ground. In normal times that would seem an attractive price for a side that stayed in the Premier League for eight seasons a decade ago and won the FA Cup as recently as 2013, but these are far from normal times and Stanley and his colleagues have not been trampled in the rush.

“That is the lowest possible price to allow sufficient funds to pay the remaining creditors,” Stanley said. “If new buyers are unable to do that there will be a further 15-point deduction under EFL rules. Most buyers would obviously want to avoid that, but if anyone out there is willing to take a 15-point penalty we could probably do a deal for just north of £2m. That is definitely cheap when you consider the club still has a few players who might be worth that much.”

Many Wigan supporters might take issue with that, for despite Stanley’s initial promise that there would be no firesale at the club, more than 10 players have been sold at bargain prices. At least that is what a group calling itself the Wigan Athletic Grievance Society believe. Some 40 or 50 of its members demonstrated outside the Begbies Traynor office in Manchester last Friday, upset by a perceived lack of clarity on the part of the administrators and the suspicion that assets including quality players such as Antonee Robinson, Joe Gelhardt, Nathan Byrne and Sam Morsy had been offloaded on the cheap, in essence amounting to a firesale.

“You have to remember that Wigan have been relegated since I made that first statement,” Stanley said. “As a Championship side they would have had a much better chance of retaining their best players. As a Championship player Robinson alone would have been worth anything between £3m and £6m, but when Wigan went into League One they were powerless to keep him because he had a clause in his contract that said he could leave for £1.9m in the event of relegation.

“We actually got £2m for him from Fulham, which was good going, but what we feel was our major achievement in keeping the club alive was negotiating with the Hong Kong owners to get them to waive the 25% of their original investment that new buyers would have been obliged to fund. We are just pleased that we managed to finish last season and start this one.

“I’m sorry if supporters think the process is taking too long, but it is complicated and this is simply not the best of times to be selling a lower-league club in the Greater Manchester area. What people must not forget is that even when Dave Whelan was still in charge, he was putting in £800,000 a month to keep going.

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2020/sep/16/wigan-in-danger-of-being-wound-up-like-macclesfield-administrators-warn

289Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Thu 17 Sep - 19:05

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin

Today they've signed a player on loan until January - presumably agreed by the EFL?

Seems a tad optimistic from what the Admin bloke was saying yesterday!

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/54194682

290Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Thu 17 Sep - 19:22

boltonbonce

boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

Is there a female version of the TDF, or something similar. And what are the other races the big teams like to win. I think even non sporting people know the TDF, but what comes after it, prestige wise?

291Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Thu 17 Sep - 20:21

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin

boltonbonce wrote:Is there a female version of the TDF, or something similar. And what are the other races the big teams like to win. I think even non sporting people know the TDF, but what comes after it, prestige wise?

Are you in the right thread?

Very Happy

There is a woman's sort of equivalent but not really comparable in any way as such - the link will explain it better -

https://www.cyclingnews.com/races/la-course-by-le-tour-de-france-2020/preview/

As for professional elite cycling (in a nutshell) there are five separate one day races that are seen as the ones to win - so much so they are referred to as the 'monuments'!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycling_monument

I guess if I try and explain it in a horse racing analogy, the monuments are considered the blue ribbon events such as The Derby, The Oaks, The St Ledger and the one and two thousand Guineas and the Tours are sort of like the Grand National and Cheltenham.

The cycling teams (think the horses stables) are really aimed at monuments/The classic or the Tours/The Grand National.  It's not unheard of for GC Tour winners to win monuments but not really monument 'specialists' winning Tours (but Alaphilippe certainly gave it a good shot at last years TdF).

For instance Sky/Ineos who have dominated the Tours over the last 7 or 8 years or so have had two (? I think) monument wins out of what 5 per year x say 7 years = 35 attempts.

The monument riders are more the Alaphilippe/Peter Sagan types - gutsy one day riders who can go up small steep roads very rapidly and do so after 200km of racing that day, whereas the Tour GC's are more your marathon types who can grind out top performances day after day after day and think nothing of racing up huge mountains as well.

Horse for courses I guess (please excuse the deliberate pun).

I guess it is all about what you like, the continentals see (or used to anyway) as the day races being the pure sport and the Tour for the popularist rift raft like me I suppose!

Maybe in the way I view Test match cricket as the real thing and T20 and other hit and hope one day-ers as six or out cricket (although I do like it as well).

There are other competitions and events in cycling which are hugely popular (more so on the continent than here - although they gave it a try last year in the UK), the one I'm particularly thinking of being indoor cycling at velodromes over six days - I guess this is the roots of the cycling we've done so well at the Olympics in recent years -

The link below explains it but seems to suggest it is something retro that has just started up again - which isn't the case and to give that some balance I include a link to the event in Ghent (which is a very well known and established event as you will see).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six-day_racing
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six_Days_of_Ghent

I believe the events were sort of bringing down the curtain on the season and where all the top riders could top up their earnings through appearance money as they wound down until the following year.

Hope all of the above answers your questions.

Hopefully more interesting than reading about Wigan too!

292Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Thu 17 Sep - 20:23

boltonbonce

boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

Sorry Sluffy. Razz

293Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Thu 17 Sep - 20:30

Banks of the Croal

Banks of the Croal
Frank Worthington
Frank Worthington

Never mind bonce it's easy done  Embarassed

294Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Thu 17 Sep - 21:36

boltonbonce

boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

Banks of the Croal wrote:Never mind bonce it's easy done  Embarassed
Cheers Banksy. I'm one big mistake. I remember once thanking a family member for the lovely bottle of aftershave she'd bought me for Christmas. It wasn't that great, but you've got to lay it on a bit thick.
It was only a few weeks later that my brother pointed out it was a miniature bottle of Cointreau.

295Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Fri 18 Sep - 18:21

MartinBWFC

MartinBWFC
Ivan Campo
Ivan Campo

Not looking good for them  Very Happy

296Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Fri 18 Sep - 18:30

RangersDave

RangersDave
Mario Jardel
Mario Jardel

Makes the aresholes at the EFL look stupid too after giving them permission to start the season.

What utter utter tools the EFL are, self serving, no doubt in good wages......... pricks!

297Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Fri 18 Sep - 18:33

RangersDave

RangersDave
Mario Jardel
Mario Jardel

Apparently the current debt increases by £10,000 per Day.

I mean WTF?  who the hell is going to buy into £3m for a club, plus £5m for the next 2 seasons (show proof they have it available) plus £10k per day....... 

This club is now a limping cow, on its last legs, no milk available, blind in one, eye, and is in need of a cattle gun to the forehead!

298Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Fri 18 Sep - 18:38

MartinBWFC

MartinBWFC
Ivan Campo
Ivan Campo

RangersDave wrote:Makes the aresholes at the EFL look stupid too after giving them permission to start the season.

What utter utter tools the EFL are, self serving, no doubt in good wages......... pricks!
I do wonder whether the EFL allow them to play this weekend.

299Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Fri 18 Sep - 22:01

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin



Interesting...

I wonder if this is signalling liquidation?

The Admin had said the money from the sale was to pay next months wages and the sales of the property to cover their fees - so if they can't get what they require from a sale then liquidation would mean no need for wages next month and their fees covered from this sum they already have.

The assets would be liquidated for what they can get and the Admin had previously said that the initial £200k given to them by the supporters club (in order to complete last season) would be treated as a 'soft' loan and paid back to them.

All seems to tie up very neatly to my way of thinking.

300Wigan in Administration - Page 15 Empty Re: Wigan in Administration Sat 19 Sep - 14:07

Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin


Supporters Update 19/09/20
For the past four weeks Wigan Athletic Supporters Club have been working closely with some of the parties interested in purchasing Wigan Athletic Football Club.

On Friday 18th September the Supporters Club agreed to support a bid from one of those interested parties, with the aim of using the monies raised by the supporters via the crowdfunder as planned – in return for an equity stake in the football club and to secure a voice for the fans in the board room.

As has been reported via social media this bid, which we are unable to disclose in full, has been rejected by the administrators.

Despite this, we remain committed to finding a solution. We have returned to make immediate contact with the bidder to review their position. We are also continuing to speak with other remaining interested parties, and we are still confident that a credible way forward will be found.

Once again we ask supporters to understand that there are legal processes we have to abide by and we cannot share information as frequently as we would like. However we will continue to update you at every opportunity, and we will keep working tirelessly until the survival of our Football Club has been secured.

From all the team at Wigan Athletic Supporters Club.

https://www.wiganathleticsupportersclub.co.uk/update-for-supporters-19-09-2020/

Sponsored content



Back to top  Message [Page 15 of 42]

Go to page : Previous  1 ... 9 ... 14, 15, 16 ... 28 ... 42  Next

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum