Two things. Firstly, as far as I'm concerned it's water under the bridge, and good luck to the new owners, they seem to be doing an alright job so far (anyone who gets on Roddy's bad side is ok by me) with banning the fans responsible for trouble in Derry.
However (secondly

) a lot of fans of other teams do feel that Rovers got off lightly with the examinership and a points deduction that doesn't look like relegating them. I can understand you saying that the previous administration are the ones to blame (clearly that's true) but you have to understand that they represented Shamrock Rovers the football club (just as you do now) and it is the club at whom other supporters direct their animosity. As a supporter of a club, you have the luxury of making a distinction between the club as a theoretical entity and the various parts that make up the club. Thus you can love Rovers/Shels whoever but not like the owner/manager/coaches etc. That distinction lessens as you move away from the club, so that to a fan of another team, it is just one single entity, with no discernable change depending on personnel changes.
So what made people angry? Well, it was perceived that Rovers bought their way out of trouble last year with money that was not there. The poaching of a manager from fellow relegation strugglers was viewed by the rest of the league as extremely low, and personally, I thought it was very bad taste. I also think that the FAI/EL/Revenue had a big role to play as it was common knowledge that things weren't kosher, but nothing was fully investigated. (again, kudos to the fans who had pointed this out to no avail).
But the biggest sticking point I think is that other fans can see a situation where a club in less disarray than Rovers were in, are more heavily punished due to a clampdown, increasing standards, whatever you want to call it. Take Waterford for example. If we could write off 96% of our debt and start next year with a similar points deduction then we'd almost probably take it, and I think other clubs would be in a similar boat. The perception remains that the biggest offenders (as yet) got off lightly because it was the league's first case.
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