Collar Feeler
No longer feeling collars
- Jul 26, 2003
- 1,322
Evidence? - great positive thread Bozza will really help the cause..
The people who wrote the original article look like nutters to me. They believe the entire premiership is fixed and even come up with an altenative table without the fixed results. Obviously the Chelsea Barca game was fixed as well.
http://footballisfixed.blogspot.com/
Mr Bloom has never been convicted so the thread is factually incorrect and libellous. What's more the whole Cyprus thing just reads like a bunch of barmy sour grapes to me and cannot be taken seriously.
I think this is exciting as it is certainly news; but thinking about it during the day I doubt it is the cut and dried great deal everyone seems to long for;
The fact is that that Albion have had a tough time in the past and despite this second coming the smart money would be on a potentially rocky road ahead.
If Mr Bloom is a good business man and he is committed to the Albion then, all things being equal, that's a great start.
It appears that Mr Bloom is providing a cashflow guarantee. Now, a guarantor is often described as "a fool with a pen in his hand"...but...Mr Bloom is no fool; he is, from what I can gather (and, as I don't know him personally, is from media and news...and you should NEVER believe anything you read in the papers or on message boards and websites) a very smart man, as well as a gambler who not only plays the odds but also takes a chance as well as being business savvy.
The obvious first question behind all the hype and misdirection is what level guarantee does the club have to maintain cashflow commitements...e.g. if Mr Bloom deafults on his personal guarantee? This may occur for any number of reasons if the odds turn against Mr Bloom in either this deal or in others. I doubt sincerely that the Directors will have been able to insist on/secure the club any liens on Mr Bloom's assets to really secure the future of the club, given that the terms of the "loan" are "interest free".
Anyway - as the Albion know from bitter experience, nothing in life is free.
I suspect Mr Bloom, who almost certainly doesn't have anything like £93m of his own to spare in either cash or assets, has thought all this through and that he will continue to trade in his other businesses and will make payments and even raise personal debt if necessary, as and when the time comes, to find the cash for the Club to pay the bills as and when they fall due.
Essentially he is a gambler and true to his nature he is gambling. I don't know what he is gambling on...probably upon an upswing in the commercial property market and/or the arrival of a (probably Australsia based or backed) investor buying a majority stake in the club from him at some future date, attracted by the value of the clubs newly developed real estate and its further evelopment potential as well as the premium for the "UK football brand"
From Mr Bloom's business savvy side, and if the assumption is correct, the gamble here is probably twofold; that the investor will part with much more cash than Mr Bloom has had to shell out either from capital or in interest or in lost opportunity in the interim and that even after selling a majority stake Mr Bloom will be left with as many shares as had before which, due to the investment by the investor, are worth much more more than they are now.
Anyway, provided the fundamentals all go generally in the right direction the club should do well enough as a footballing entity in this scenario and so I'm pretty sure everyone will be happy.
The risks are those of an uncertain future...these are infinite...but here's a few of the obviuous ones
a) The Football League object to Mr Bloom on the basis of Section 9 of their Regulations as per http://www.football-league.co.uk/staticFiles/78/3/0,,10794~888,00.pdf
b) Mr Bloom having insufficient funds (from either raised debt or realiseable equity) to provide the liquidity under the terms of his personal guarantees when called to do so by the Club and the Club goes into administration
c) That the size of the commitment (£93m), the terms of the guarantee (nil interest) and Mr Bloom's history (start ups/gambling/betting and Australasia/Far East) will excite unwonted interest from external agencies.
d) That the global recession undermines commercial property values over a longer period than Mr Bloom can stand
e) That the Albion crash and burn on the playing side.
f) That the recession undermines professional football in the UK, reducing the number of full-time, professional clubs.
One conclusion is that Life, like Football, is uncertain and because of this it is exciting and to be enjoyed. We should thank Mr Bloom for making it moreso today and enjoy the consequences which are neither good or bad, but merely consequences.
Well, find me someone who is seriously rich who hasn't got anyone ready to blast them.
Fact of life, nice people don't usually make rich people. Get over it.
Even Richard Branson has probably done a few things hes not proud of.
<snip>
Mr Bloom has never been convicted so the thread is factually incorrect and libellous. What's more the whole Cyprus thing just reads like a bunch of barmy sour grapes to me and cannot be taken seriously.
I think this is exciting as it is certainly news; but thinking about it during the day I doubt it is the cut and dried great deal everyone seems to long for;
The fact is that that Albion have had a tough time in the past and despite this second coming the smart money would be on a potentially rocky road ahead.
If Mr Bloom is a good business man and he is committed to the Albion then, all things being equal, that's a great start.
It appears that Mr Bloom is providing a cashflow guarantee. Now, a guarantor is often described as "a fool with a pen in his hand"...but...Mr Bloom is no fool; he is, from what I can gather (and, as I don't know him personally, is from media and news...and you should NEVER believe anything you read in the papers or on message boards and websites) a very smart man, as well as a gambler who not only plays the odds but also takes a chance as well as being business savvy.
The obvious first question behind all the hype and misdirection is what level guarantee does the club have to maintain cashflow commitements...e.g. if Mr Bloom deafults on his personal guarantee? This may occur for any number of reasons if the odds turn against Mr Bloom in either this deal or in others. I doubt sincerely that the Directors will have been able to insist on/secure the club any liens on Mr Bloom's assets to really secure the future of the club, given that the terms of the "loan" are "interest free".
Anyway - as the Albion know from bitter experience, nothing in life is free.
I suspect Mr Bloom, who almost certainly doesn't have anything like £93m of his own to spare in either cash or assets, has thought all this through and that he will continue to trade in his other businesses and will make payments and even raise personal debt if necessary, as and when the time comes, to find the cash for the Club to pay the bills as and when they fall due.
Essentially he is a gambler and true to his nature he is gambling. I don't know what he is gambling on...probably upon an upswing in the commercial property market and/or the arrival of a (probably Australsia based or backed) investor buying a majority stake in the club from him at some future date, attracted by the value of the clubs newly developed real estate and its further evelopment potential as well as the premium for the "UK football brand"
From Mr Bloom's business savvy side, and if the assumption is correct, the gamble here is probably twofold; that the investor will part with much more cash than Mr Bloom has had to shell out either from capital or in interest or in lost opportunity in the interim and that even after selling a majority stake Mr Bloom will be left with as many shares as had before which, due to the investment by the investor, are worth much more more than they are now.
Anyway, provided the fundamentals all go generally in the right direction the club should do well enough as a footballing entity in this scenario and so I'm pretty sure everyone will be happy.
The risks are those of an uncertain future...these are infinite...but here's a few of the obviuous ones
a) The Football League object to Mr Bloom on the basis of Section 9 of their Regulations as per http://www.football-league.co.uk/staticFiles/78/3/0,,10794~888,00.pdf
b) Mr Bloom having insufficient funds (from either raised debt or realiseable equity) to provide the liquidity under the terms of his personal guarantees when called to do so by the Club and the Club goes into administration
c) That the size of the commitment (£93m), the terms of the guarantee (nil interest) and Mr Bloom's history (start ups/gambling/betting and Australasia/Far East) will excite unwonted interest from external agencies.
d) That the global recession undermines commercial property values over a longer period than Mr Bloom can stand
e) That the Albion crash and burn on the playing side.
f) That the recession undermines professional football in the UK, reducing the number of full-time, professional clubs.
One conclusion is that Life, like Football, is uncertain and because of this it is exciting and to be enjoyed. We should thank Mr Bloom for making it moreso today and enjoy the consequences which are neither good or bad, but merely consequences.
Someone has a serious grudge against Tony Bloom. Hardly an objective bit of writing
There's also a few definite untruths that I can see, all I can say is
private box at Chelsea FC?