For the record you can't just say that you are going to pay off 10c of every euro owed. The people you owe money to have to accept these terms
Ok lads still a little ignorant about the whole process and what exactly a clubs hope to get out of it. So, i am hoping maybe some of you could put me straight of what exactly a club that enters this process hope to acheive.
I understand it is a process of protecting the club/company that runs the club from its creditors. Thats fine, What i can't figure out is that this seems like a perfect solution to racking up a load of debt and then dumping it of for €0.10 or €0.15 cent in every euro? It just seems like a god send, all good no downside and so easy to get that we should all be at it every couple of seasons.
With Shamrock Rovers and Cork City i could see that new owners wanted to come in and take the club over, and that in that respect they both understood that things could not continue as they were and change was needed. The main argument seems to have been, by the current owners of both Shams and Cork (400 c and TC&Foras), that they felt the previous owners were not capable or incompetent of running the club and that they could run it at cost, thus both allowing their communities to benifit from a decision of allowing them to start ove again.
But the thing that pickles me about the whole process is, lets take Drogheda, to me it is going to be the same faces running the club after? Vincent Hoey (who comes across on TV as an awful nice man and a man any club would love to have) stated that he hoped that the club would remain full time ! I mean surely this is a case of them applying for this, hoping to get their slate wipped clean and then continue on again paying way to much wages and racking up debts? Is examinership the new in-thing in Irish football? Seems to be.
For the record you can't just say that you are going to pay off 10c of every euro owed. The people you owe money to have to accept these terms
http://www.examinership.ie/examinership.htm
might be of some use
"Some weeks the lady is good looking and some weeks they're not. Our performance today would have been not the best looking bird but at least we got her in the taxi". - Ian Holloway
Drogheda owe the Revenue half a million. Dont think they will accept 10c in the euro.
You're right Mr. Hoey does come across as a very nice man who has DUFC's interests at heart. However, sometimes I wonder to myself, is he up front, spinning or in denial.
It appears to me that the non-payment of E1/2m in taxes has little to do with plans to move to a new ground. As with any other club, these are bills that should have been paid regardless of any hard luck story.
Rovers & Cork were different in that they didn't own their ground - whereas Drogheda do.
Presumably this counts as a core asset and can't be touched by creditors yet?
Drogheda must be fairly confident that the Examinership will work out and they won't be put into receivership?
More of a gamble for Drogs though than it was for Rovers & Cork?
An examiner is an officer of the Court appointed by the Court.
Examinership is commonly refered to as the "Breathing Space".Basically no legal action can be brought against the Co. during the process.
An examiner will only be appointed if the courts believe the Co. has a chance of survival.
At the end of the process he proposes a "Scheme of Arrangment" which can be accepted/rejected by the Court.
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"Cause Galway are MASSIVE"-RW Rover on 24/8/07 00:29am
Dont forget that players can reclaim tax paid under the sportsman revenue thingy when they retire if they have played here for 10 years or whatever that was brought in to stop the likes of O'Driscoll going to France.
In the Rovers & Cork case the previous players lost out bigtime because the tax was never paid so can never be reclaimed!
A subtle point that is probably overlooked by many dopey players!
So its not really the tax man who is losing out but the players themselves in the long run.
bhs
54,321 sold - wws will never die - ***
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New blog if anyone's interested - http://loihistory.wordpress.com/
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He didn't do himself any favours with the planning authorities - if they survive, secure investment for a new ground and go looking for planning permission.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/...069691359.html
Originally Posted by IT
54,321 sold - wws will never die - ***
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New blog if anyone's interested - http://loihistory.wordpress.com/
LOI section on balls.ie - http://balls.ie/league-of-ireland/
But if it's sold and Drogheda get a new ground, Drogs buy it back off the FAI for a notional E50k and keep the balance I think?
Fair enough they don't own it outright as such but presumably they hold some 'interest' in it from which they would benefit?
It was hoped to use the proceeds of the sale of United Park, a ground not owned by the club but vested in the FAI, to fund the development of a new stadium, residential units, offices and leisure facilities.
Can a club that has been in examinership play in Europe the following season? I think there is a UEFA rule that says that clubs that have been in administration cannot within 3 years take part in European competition.
Does anyone know the full picture on this?
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