Pay it from what though? The new club has practically the same revenues as the old club, lower if anything.
54,321 sold - wws will never die - ***
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Pay it from what though? The new club has practically the same revenues as the old club, lower if anything.
From those revenues. Same as other clubs are paying off their debts from their existing revenues.
(Not to take one side or the other in the debate, but that's how it'd be done).
The club folded because it couldn't pay its debts. There's no comparison between Derry City in 2009 and the currently solvent but indebted clubs in today's league.
Immoral? We're in fairly good company with most of the rest of the league when it comes to immoral and unethical behaviour. The list of clubs that have failed to pay all debts in full and on time and shafted various creditors is a fairly long one.
My point was that legally we aren't able to selectively pay our debts, no matter how much people want us to.
And I'd argue that the directors who got us into the mess getting hit with the largest penalty is natural justice. As was said above, the reality is that most of the creditors (by volume and number) were fans.
For the record, I wasn't calling Derry immoral.
Just playing devils advocate.
It shold be remembered too that Derry weren't demoted due to debts, but rather because of the dual contracts.
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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The big question here is: if licensing isn't going to prevent clubs from dumping their debts and then reappearing, what the hell is it for? Surely this is one of the central reasons for having it, yet it has proved completely ineffective in this regard. We hear a lot about 'moral hazard' these days and surely this is a case where it has to be taken seriously. Otherwise clubs with few assets would be foolish not to chase the dream in the knowledge that the consequences for meltdown are fleeting.
#NeverStopNotGivingUp
I'm just not sure why you pointed it out, because it's a very practical question.
If a business can't pay its debts, them it's not a viable business and nobody, with the possible exception of Finn Harps, is going to benefit from Derry City flagellating itself and especially not the small businesses that depend on a successful Derry City to survive.
If you enter an agreement to repay all debts over, say, 10 years as part of a goodwill donation, it becomes a bit more manageable because you've taken out the time pressure of repaying, which is a major factor. You're under no legal obligation to repay - you don't technically owe the money - so you can't be sued for slow payment.
Even if that were desirable and financially viable, that's still a large amount of money from the club's operating budget that could otherwise be spent on the football pitch. Debt like that is a noose around anyone's neck, whether it's legally a debt or just a voluntary commitment. It might be in some creditors' interests for the club to service all of its debts, but not all of them, and if a club like Derry goes to the wall, the effect is a lot wider than just the people who are owed money.
Yep, not going to argue with that. But it would be possible to make the repayments from their current revenues, which was my only point.
If we're talking about moral obligations then surely you'd argue that every club that has been through an examinership process where creditors received less than 100% or indeed any club that has failed to pay a supplier in full should, morally speaking, make good that debt?
I think you'd have to, yep.
So Derry writing off almost €1million in debt, bypassing the A League and allowed to have a budget which is vastly higher than the rest of sides in the division is punishment?
Who has exactly suffered in this situation, other than the creditors?
So what's different in Derry 2009 and 2010?
-They played pre-season in the "old" Derry's 2009 strip.
-They have the same manager as before.
-The same colours.
-The old club's (1994-2009 and 1928-1994) honours.
-Have founded in 1928 on the club crest.
-Play in the Brandywell.
Cobh were drop kicked into the A-League with their debt whilst Kildare and Kilkenny were simply allowed to fold from senior football.
No surprise that other clubs fans may back Derry in this, after all, their club may be looking at the same avenue in the not too distant future.
By the way, it is sour grapes, I have no problem admitting that. We, as a club, bust our hump every season with fundraisers and ticket draws to keep the club afloat whilst trying to field 3 or more sides and service debt. We also saw our club undergo a huge review to sort out the working of the club and to ensure that the huge debt is not run up again.
In turn, a club that cheated to gain sucess in European and domestic competition can start a fresh and buy their way straight back to the Premier Division again.
Rant over, now bring on the usual whiter than white Derry fans with their usual "get over it" bullology.
No-one was willing to take over the mantle of running Kildare and Kilkenny; those cases are completely different to here.
You'd imagine the Derry directors would have been banned from running companies, so they'd suffer as well. Which would be good.
I agree.
And the logical follow on from that is that all those fans who spout moral outrage, yet hide behind their club having stiffed their creditors by way of a "mutual agreement", e.g. successful examinership debt forgiveness, are, simply, hypocrites of the highest order?
(I recognise UCD aren't among the above bunch, not having to my knowledge stiffed anyone)
Derry City FC/or friends of DCFC have paid over £100k to debters this season. That's including honouring the pre-paid season tickets bought last year.
So if you think Bohs are big read this. http://www.astronomy.ie/perpespective.html
Should Derry pay their debts too?
Cobh and Derry suffered similar difficulties - the only difference is that for Cobh it made more business sense to restructure, while Derry was beyond repair. For Cobh restructuring meant dropping to a lower level to build a squad from scratch, whereas Derry have enough fans to generate a budget to sustain a First Division team. It's nothing to do with fairness - if Cobh had presented a credible business plan for starting the season in D1, they would have been considered too.
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