Quote:
geezer, on 08 January 2011 - 09:52 PM, said:I hope he stays because we could win trophys with this man im convinced but he needs a decent budget
This 100% my belief also.
I see no evidence of the artist formerly known as the former CEO or the board of directors taking any action to prevent Sean Connor from leaving. A number of people are of the opinion that this has been among their primary goals, along with the intention to implement an amateur playing squad.
The original budget being peddled by Leeson was eventually negotiated up by GUST to something that was realistic and at times, extremely conservative.... something that would give Connor a fighting chance. With a licence possibly now in sight and the prospect of some cash on the gate to begin covering loans, which is the single focus of the directors, Leeson's bull**** tactics will have succeeded once again.
The board of Galway United have absolutely no interest in the well-being of the club. I have said this on a number of occasions in the past season, however... what is baffling to me is that, if I wanted to kill Galway United and leave the directors on the hook for the loans they themselves racked up, I couldn't do a better job than they are doing themselves. Their continued refusal to remove Leeson as an employee from the position of CEO is ludicrous. The only explanation that seems to hold any water for me, and this is just speculation, is that Leeson has them by the short and curlies over some issue that has yet to surface publicly.
As has been pointed out to me, and I wholeheartedly agree with it... Leeson does not understand football. If he thinks anybody will go to Terryland if we field, for all intents an purposes, an amateur team put together by some clown that's friendly with Nick and the FAI who is willing to tow the party line, he is hugely mistaken. We will get hockeyed every other week and possibly set a record low points total. I will not be seen in Terryland if this happens.
Everything I've seen so far is the same old delaying tactics. "Lets get to the end of the season... " etc, etc. And the cycle begins again when a little untraceable cash flows through the turnstiles.
Another ludicrous "opinion" either put forward verbally or heavily implied by the club, is that the Trust would be incapable of running the club. It was never the intention of the trust to take over the club at the outset of the current reinvigoration the fan-base, but a number of factors have meant that in order to save the club, this move would be prudent.
GUST have some extremely skilled people among their ranks, I wouldn't even count myself among them. I'm talking accountants, public servants, business people with decades of experience, many people with masses of actual football knowledge, people with nothing but the well-being of the club at heart. When hard questions are asked of them, they don't pretend to have more important things to do abroad and get spotted around town scratching their holes. People drawing a wage should not **** off abroad at a moments notice and become un-contactable for upwards of 3 to 4 weeks in the middle of the season in the run up to the biggest fundraiser of the year, returning in time to see it make an alleged loss, including a €5,000 "administrative error". Multinational corporations with millions in monthly revenues would have a full-scale investigation over that amount of money (Barings Bank being a notable exception), not a shrug of the shoulders and "oh well...".
I have had informal conversations with a few business owners who are firm in their belief that they themselves and many others would never do business with Galway United with the status quo remaining.
Who gave bus companies cheques when they refused to leave without payment?
Who paid player insurance administered centrally by the FAI, when no game could possibly take place in its absence?
Who made arrangements to have the players fed before the matches when the reputation of the club was so tarnished that nobody in their right mind would accommodate them?
Who put a roof over the heads of a number of players made homeless by reckless behaviour and ensured that both them and their manager were not left without an income.
Who made contact with Galway FA and made an agreement with them, as they (correctly, in my view) would not deal with the club and possibly could have terminated the lease?
Who made out cheques to various creditors in order to keep the show on the road?
Who made payments to the revenue in an attempt to clean up the mess left by frankly ridiculous agreements made to pay back large amounts during periods when there were no home games to cover wages, never mind anything else?
Who were the ones responsible for what we thought at the time to be a successful friendly with Liverpool? The activities of the trust should have contributed to eliminating the clubs money problems for the rest of 2010, but activities of others scuppered any hope of that.
Who is there week-in week-out to take the criticisms of angry and baffled punters who do not understand the relationship, or lack thereof, between the trust and the club.
Who are taking a pro-active approach to redeveloping Galway United as a community club?
Who wrote, designed, printed and sold the Galway United match programme at no cost to the club and handed over the proceeds, less the cost of servicing a large debt run up with the printers before the trust took over the administration of it?
Who spend days selling season tickets on their own time since November?
Who took calls and visits in person from creditors directed to contact GUST when trying to collect payment for good or services provided to Galway United?
This last point is quite interesting as it marks extraordinary turnaround from the earlier policy of directing certain persons not to deal with GUST in any capacity. However, when creditors were looking to get paid, they were delighted to "cooperate" with the supporters.
Nick himself said that he pulled back from the day-to-day running of the club after the season finished. He must have been absolutely delighted to do so, as the club hadn't two euro coins to rub together.