I copied the list of clubs from a poorly written article hence the Man City mistake, although to be fair the ownership is not dissimilar in nature to the Chinese.
I thought there was a clause that Mr Knight put in place that put massive restrictions on anyone's ability to sell the club?
Clearly TB is by far the majority shareholder and could sell his shareholding but others may not or can't, maybe a buyer would want 100%?
My feelings would be well done TB, you delivered on your promise, we have a great stadium, are Prem Lge ready and you make a few bob (p.s. I don't think he'd sell all of his holding but maybe 33%?) but I'd worry about a future of an owner without the historic understanding of the club and, possibly, with a short term ambition?
Biggest worry for all English clubs will be when (not if) the TV bubble bursts and the Sky Money Fountain dries up. More so than ever I wouldn't invest in English football.
You make that sound like Knight turned down loads of offers.I'm not sure there's any such thing as "the Chinese". We have to face facts that football clubs are saleable commodities these days - there are some foreign investors who have been good, stable owners for their clubs (Abramovich, Sheikh Mansoor, Kroenke and Liebherr at Saints) and others who have been complete nightmares (Venkys, Vincent Tan, Duchâtelet at Charlton). I'd suggest none can be defined by their race, nationality, creed, religion - just by their personality.
I would of course have concerns about a Chinese investment bank buying the club. IBs typically only invest in companies where they see a very obvious way to make lots of money, or if they have someone they are fronting up for that doesn't want to be identified. Without having an inside track on this, I'm not going to throw any accusations about - but I'm not sure I can see the 'easy money' angle in this case!
Dick Knight did us a huge favour in sitting tight until he was confident he could pass the reins to someone he trusted. I have a lot of faith that Tony would do the same.
My thoughts as well. I like the fact we're owned by a fan and we have fans on the board; we would definitely lose something if we were owned by an outsider. I'd settle for what we've got rather than the promise of Champions' League football, and as we've all seen with other clubs having a rich foreign owner is no guarantee of stability let alone success.Not going to lie, I wouldn't like it. I have no problem if Tony at some point wanted to cash in but given all this club has gone through for it to fall into the hands of someone with no feeling not only for the club but the sport in general would sadden me greatly.
There is a difference between supporting a team that you feel a connection too and one that you feel is a rich man's plaything.
Man City?
The real question should be, why are all these supposedly loaded Chinese people buying up all the Midlands clubs and making them shit?
Do the Chinese have a problem with the accent or something?
"The Chinese"
If you can believe what his Uncle Ray said when Tony bought the Club, he did it to restore control of the Albion to the Bloom family. Selling the Club to the Chinese (or, indeed, anyone else) would simply negate that original intention. It won't happen.