Deleted member 37369
Well-known member
- Aug 21, 2018
- 1,994
I’ve enjoyed reading your posts. Great points and well argued. The point you made about net spend and not yet being in a position to offload players to recoup some of your spend had already gone through my head.For the past 14yrs we'd been a billboard for Sports Direct. These owners are vile and the PL, the Government or the FA should have stopped it from happening. But they don't care. And of course, it's the fans who are criticised despite having no say in it. Mind, you're kidding yourself if you think there any many Premier League clubs that are their fans' club. Man City, Arsenal, Leicester, and so on, they're not the local clubs they once were. When Bloom sells you, it won't be to a local Brighton fan will it? That's just the nature of late stage capitalism and a succession of Governments who don't understand football's place in our culture.
It's hard to explain to fans of other clubs how bleak it was under Ashley. Especially to fans of clubs who've really had it bad. Newcastle have never been in the third tier, not been in financial difficulty since the PL was formed, not had threats of administration or winding up orders. So how could we moan? Well, for me it was an existential issue. After decades of supporting us through the good and bad, I found myself not caring. Stay up or go down, who cares? NUFC wouldn't try in the cups, wouldn't try in the league once survival/promotion was guaranteed. Didn't invest in local talent. It was nothing. The rotting corpse of a pigeon hanging in the netting above the stand, wires dangling from the tv brackets in the concourse, windows that hadn't been washed in years. Ashley didn't kill my club, he just put it in a financially induced coma. A zombie club, existing to exist.
I say this to try and give a sense of the desperation on Tyneside. Those scenes you maybe saw outside St James' when the takeover was announced, they would 100% have been replicated had the new owners been from South America, or some faceless multinational hedge fund, or that rarest of breeds, a local boy done good. We didn't want the Saudis in, we wanted Ashley out. The Athletic ran a poll and worded the question like "Are you in favour of the Saudi takeover", overwhelmingly the respondents said yes. Because that was the only horse in town. If the Orleggi group had rocked up with a £300m bid you better believe we would have preferred that one.
Every time we sign someone, any time we succeed, if we ever win something the ownership will be brought up. And it absolutely should. Questions should be asked, but asked of those with the power to make change; the FA, the PL, the Government.