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Clubs in Crisis Day - Saturday 29 Jan



On the Left Wing

KIT NAPIER
Oct 9, 2003
7,094
Wolverhampton
I know most of us will be at Leeds on this day - but those who choose to attend the Racecourse will be made very very welcome.

If you wish to show solidarity in any other way details are listed below.

Wrexham only have 9 more home games before they are eveicted from the Racecourse and liquidation would then be likely for a club that has existed for 132 years.

Nic


PRESS RELEASE

18 January 2005

Football fans unite for Clubs in Crisis

THOUSANDS of football fans are putting aside tribal differences in a day of unity for clubs on the brink of financial ruin.

On Saturday 29 January fans from all over the country will descend on Wrexham’s Racecourse Ground - for their match against Doncaster Rovers - in a mass display of solidarity to tell the Football Association and Football League: “Act now or clubs across the land will go out of existence”.

Two months ago more than 10,000 fans gathered at the same ground in a Fans United day to draw attention to Wrexham’s FC’s own plight. The 132 year old club is in financial administration, has been docked 10 points by the Football League and faces eviction from its ground in just 183 days, on 21 July 2005.

Unless a buyer for the club is found Wrexham faces liquidation and will be the first football league club to go out of existence since Aldershot FC in 1992.

Many fans believe the club’s plight is due to its owner Alex Hamilton, who wants to sell the ground for over £6million to property developers and has served the club an eviction notice.

But Wrexham is not alone.

Clubs the length and breadth of the UK are in a similar plight: Brighton and Hove Albion, Burnley, Bury, Cambridge United, Dover Athletic, Hendon FC, East Stirlingshire, Gateshead, Grimsby Town, Rotherham and even former Premiership giants Leeds United are all currently facing uncertain futures.

Many more clubs have come close to collapse in the past year – Bradford City, York City and Notts County are high profile examples – while Telford United and Hornchurch FC actually folded.

Fans from all these clubs are now being invited to gather at the Racecourse Ground and stand in their team colours alongside Wrexham and Doncaster fans in what promises to be a festival of a day.

Supporters from other clubs are also urged to attend to show their solidarity in the biggest display of fan unity ever seen. Those that cannot get to the game are asked to send a scarf, banner or team shirt to show support.

A Fans United spokesman and Brighton supporter Nic Outterside said: “It is 12 years since Aldershot FC went bust and in that time many other football clubs have gone to the brink. In many cases these crises have been due to mismanagement or sheer greed by club owners or chairmen.

“When we lost our own ground – sold by our chairman Bill Archer to build a retail park – we came within inches of going out of existence. Even now our club is homeless and survives on a season by season basis.

“The danger of Wrexham folding after 132 years of league football is real, and others are close behind in what could be a domino effect which would see many towns lose their football clubs forever.

“I urge every football fan to take part in the Clubs in Crisis day and tell the Football Association and Football League that the time has come to step in and save the heart of British football.”

Simon Johnson of the Wrexham Supporters Trust added: “Football fans have had enough of being ignored. These are our teams and our stadiums and we won’t let the incompetence or greed of a few wealthy individuals take them away from us.

“Let us all stand together and show the powers-that-be that we are desperate to safeguard our clubs for future generations and we need their help.”

The game against Doncaster Rovers is particularly poignant as the South Yorkshire club were themselves on the brink of extinction in 1998 with spiralling debts, relegation to the Vauxhall Conference and their owner Ken Richardson jailed for conspiring to set fire the club’s grandstand.

Bob Gilbert, an organiser and veteran of Doncaster Rovers own fight for survival, said: “Like at so many other clubs, nothing more than personal gain lay behind the ruin of Donny Rovers.

“In seeking that gain one man trampled on the dreams of thousands. And neither he, nor the FA nor the Football League ever cared.

“So I urge you, passionately, to turn up at the Racecourse on 29 January to show all these people that millions and millions of us do care.”


Notes to Editors:

1. All 92 football league club press officers and their fans’ internet message boards have been contacted about the Clubs in Crisis day of action.

2. BBC Television Sport and BBC Radio 5 Live have given their support to the fight to save Wrexham FC.

3. Any club who wishes to donate a scarf, banner or shirt to the day of action are asked to send their item to: Wrexham Supporters’ Trust, PO Box 200, Wrexham LL12 9WG

4. Photograph and interview opportunities are available on request.

5. Further information:

Email: Nic Outterside seagullnic@aol.com
Bob Gilbert bob@doncaster-rovers.demon.co.uk
Simon Johnson simon.johnson@wst.org.uk

Telephone: 07891 397636 (Nic Outterside)
07981 151958 (Wrexham Supporters Trust)

website: www.clubsincrisis.com
 
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Marc

New member
Jul 6, 2003
25,267
On Saturday 29 January fans from all over the country will descend on Wrexham’s Racecourse Ground - for their match against Doncaster Rovers - in a mass display of solidarity to tell the Football Association and Football League: “Act now or clubs across the land will go out of existence”.

Have the FA or FL ever noticed in the past? It seems they dont care as they've sat by and watched Wrexham go down the shitter, if they were watching at all! Plus our ridiculous £10,000 fine when they "should" know full well that all our money is being pumped into the new inquiry and other Falmer related material.
Is the message really going to get across this time? I bloody hope so but I'm not holding my breath :(
 


Wardy

NSC's Benefits Guru
Oct 9, 2003
11,219
In front of the PC
CrabtreeBHA said:
Have the FA or FL ever noticed in the past? It seems they dont care as they've sat by and watched Wrexham go down the shitter, if they were watching at all! Plus our ridiculous £10,000 fine when they "should" know full well that all our money is being pumped into the new inquiry and other Falmer related material.
Is the message really going to get across this time? I bloody hope so but I'm not holding my breath :(

I tend to agree. Until a high profile club goes to the wall and out of business, the FA will not do anything.
 




Jul 5, 2003
3,245
Cardiff
Wardywonderland said:
I tend to agree. Until a high profile club goes to the wall and out of business, the FA will not do anything.

I agree with the sentiments, but the question is this: what do people expect the FA to actually do?
 


On the Left Wing

KIT NAPIER
Oct 9, 2003
7,094
Wolverhampton
In 1997, Graham Kelly, then Chief Exec of the FA agreed that it would seek to ensure that only "right and proper people" be allowed to run football clubs in the future.

But nothing has changed.

We must also seek a better redistribution of SKY TV money and that will involve hard bargaining with SKY, the Government and the Premiership .... I could go on ...


I append this piece written by Watford fan Ian Grant in 1997:

The FA's done f*** all
Beyond the immediate concerns of Brighton fans (and Brighton residents - it's my home town now, it's a town that I love and the football club is an important part of that), 'Fans United' was also about making a stand on the increasingly disturbing state of lower division football in this country.
Yesterday, Bournemouth survived a winding-up order in court - but they've only got a 21-day stay of execution. Millwall have found themselves in slightly less critical trouble and should survive after the appointment of administrators. Even at Watford, we have a re-built ground with high running costs and small(ish) attendances, meaning that we've been losing upwards of a million pounds every season.
It can't go on like this. The FA's fence-sitting over the Brighton crisis (the only decisive action has been to deduct two points for a peaceful pitch invasion during the home game against Lincoln - Brighton are to have an appeal heard on Thursday) has shown that we can't automatically expect the governing body to look after the interests of its members. If the authorities continue to stand back, to let 'survival of the fittest' run its course, there won't be many lower division clubs left in five or ten years' time - the only choices will be bankruptcy, part-time status or becoming a feeder club, none of which are particularly acceptable to supporters.

Over the summer, the FA used supporters to sell Euro '96. At the same time as ripping people off with outrageous ticket prices (nothing to do with UEFA - the same prices meant a paltry attendance for the FA Cup semi final at Old Trafford just a couple of months before), we were spoon-fed the idea that "football's coming home". You can't have it both ways. If the FA wants to gain prestige (and the 2006 World Cup) from convincing the world that English supporters are shiny, happy people then it must listen to those supporters.

On Saturday, nearly ten thousand people from all over Europe told Graham Kelly that he's got it WRONG. Time to look after your customers or lose them forever...
 


Jul 5, 2003
3,245
Cardiff
On the Left Wing said:
In 1997, Graham Kelly, then Chief Exec of the FA agreed that it would seek to ensure that only "right and proper people" be allowed to run football clubs in the future. But nothing has changed.

Fine, but how could the FA possibly hope to ensure that only "right and proper people" be allowed to run football clubs? It's all well and good to make such sweeping statements, but how could such an aim possibly be achieved? What practical measures could be introduced to stop dodgy businessmen buying football clubs?
 














Wardy

NSC's Benefits Guru
Oct 9, 2003
11,219
In front of the PC
StephenWrexhamFc said:
We had the "going bust" chants from Tranmere on saturday, I suppose it was to be expected.

Why is it? I find the idea of any club going bust worrys me. The same would be true if it was, Wrexham, Leeds, Manchester United or Dover Athletic.

Becasue when chairman and owners run these clubs in to the ground, and I am not saying that this is the case with all clubs that get in to this situation., it is the fans that lose out. Those people that go week in week out, do all they can to keep the club afloat, those people whos lives will never be quite the same again.

When a club goes out of business it is not like any other company. If a shop you like goes out of business, you might be upset for a bit, but in the end you just find another one. If your ISP goes bust, you might have the hassle of finding a new one, but you soon forget about it. However when your football club goes out of business, it is like losing part of your life. Most things I do, all the little things that make me me, can be traced back in someway to football. If you take away my club, you take away part of me.

To these fans that think it is big to mock the inflicted, I say, imagine it was your club about to go under, imagine you not having anything to do on saturdays anymore, apart from walking the dog and mowing the lawn.
 






On the Left Wing

KIT NAPIER
Oct 9, 2003
7,094
Wolverhampton
Braders7 said:
great question ?

Sounds like a great idea ... especially considering Leeds predicament ...

dunno what others think though (my hands are quite full as it is!)
 






Brighton Breezy

New member
Jul 5, 2003
19,439
Sussex
HAMPSHIRE DAVE said:
What can the F.A. do?
Stop people like Peter Risdale being allowed to take over at Barnsley after nearly putting Leeds out of business.

And Gutterman at Wrexham after being involved over at Shrewsbury (think it was them, may not have been).
 






Jul 5, 2003
3,245
Cardiff
If this is supposed to a Clubs in Crisis day, an event which is 'a day of unity for clubs on the brink of financial ruin,' then why would you want to wear red for Wrexham in particular?
 


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