EXCLUSIVE: Coventry City chairman Tim Fisher dismisses takeover rumours and insists Mark... (1 Viewer)

Chipfat

Well-Known Member
A boycott is an official stance not based on natural declining factors. Relegation naturally reduces attendances but sales will still be around the 3,000 mark and attendances at around 5-6,000 minimum.

I think you could be bang on with that figure, but how sad is the reality that it could truly be a regular crowd for a city a club this big as ours.

When you put it like this it shows how much Tim and Sisu have damaged this club, i believe they are planning for the businesses future, sadly its a different train of thought than the fans have regarding the team and club.
 

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Captain Dart

Well-Known Member
Usually with Timmy it is best to look at what this is an attempt to distract people from.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
A boycott is an official stance not based on natural declining factors. Relegation naturally reduces attendances but sales will still be around the 3,000 mark and attendances at around 5-6,000 minimum.

I'm not behind a boycott myself whether that be season tickets or someone like myself who might do a dozen games a season or even one game a season but if you think that the season ticket holders who are talking about boycotting next season are doing it because of relegation you really are deluded.

I hope you're right on the attendance figures, actually no, I hope you're wrong and they actually turn out to be much higher but at this moment in time with TF and SISU's continued presence I can't see it. And that's why they're rattled and repeating previously broken promises and renewing initiatives that had apparently previously happened.
 

rupert_bear

Well-Known Member
Tim Fisher's statement ! If Ms Sepalla reiterates it I'll give him a chance, but we know she won't. A statement was well overdue he's said f/a since we got to Wembley, through that woeful run of results which cast us drift in the league and only just commented re Mark Robins appointment. Not sure if he's trying to instil calm waters for Mondays meeting, hopefully won't deter probing serious questions or the deputation I've heard will be waiting outside.
 

Brylowes

Well-Known Member
Honestly think these statements are at least as much about appeasing unwelcome
Vocal Outside interest, as they are the fans.
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
ITS bull---- just to sell season tickets, they are getting worried that know one will buy one, so he gives you hope and you lot believe him every year.

it's quite simply sorted, recruit early, extend the early bird prices so it will encourage people who are happy with the recruitment to buy STs a a decent price.
Repeat the car crash of last close season and once more fisher will have been proven to be full of shit.
 

I was eleven in 87

Well-Known Member
The guy is full of shit, heard it all before and if this is the case then why now, FFS why has nobody asked him why has it took him 6 years or the owners 8 year to work out a plan. All bullshit, all said before and all about trying to pull fans pants down again by selling us a dream that now they are engaged with the club.

He is obviously trying to sell fans to invest in the club through ST's. He has got more cheek than Nicki Minaj, But then again, i would if i was him, i mean the man has point blank lied since he has been here and got away with it. So i suppose his train of thought is why not play the same hand since turning up, its never failed him yet.
I completely agree with you.
I am sick of hearing the same story from this bloke but just using different words each time!!
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
CCFC's current malaise is not down to "natural declining factors" i think many are taking a stance

What stance is being taken on April 2nd?
 

dongonzalos

Well-Known Member
The Sky Blues boss believes several of his signings have come up short because not enough background checks had been done on them – a situation he feels is already being resolved with a strategic scouting network now in place to improve the quality of recruitment.


“Reflecting on this season, one of the areas we must improve on as a football club is recruitment,” he said, “and as manager I take responsibility for that.

“It’s an area I saw as needing significant improvement when I first came in because we didn’t have a real scouting network in place, and it has taken us time.

2014.

Coventry City are in the process of setting up a new scouting network for manager Tony Mowbray and beyond.

The Sky Blues boss had expressed his concern that there was no player database or a single scout on the books when he was appointed last month.


But chief executive Steve Waggott has revealed: “I have been assembling a new scouting network to serve Tony and the club into the future.

“For a club such as ours scouts play a vital role on two levels. They are the trusted eyes and ears of the manager at games around the country.


2015

“It will be a recruitment system which includes a refreshed scouting network, a clear set of talent identification criteria and transparent communication to the board on progress – from identification of the talent through to securing the talent.

2017

I wouldn't be giving up our academy for our new scouting network just yet.
 
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christonabike

Well-Known Member
The Sky Blues boss believes several of his signings have come up short because not enough background checks had been done on them – a situation he feels is already being resolved with a strategic scouting network now in place to improve the quality of recruitment.


“Reflecting on this season, one of the areas we must improve on as a football club is recruitment,” he said, “and as manager I take responsibility for that.

“It’s an area I saw as needing significant improvement when I first came in because we didn’t have a real scouting network in place, and it has taken us time.

2014.

Coventry City are in the process of setting up a new scouting network for manager Tony Mowbray and beyond.

The Sky Blues boss had expressed his concern that there was no player database or a single scout on the books when he was appointed last month.


But chief executive Steve Waggott has revealed: “I have been assembling a new scouting network to serve Tony and the club into the future.

“For a club such as ours scouts play a vital role on two levels. They are the trusted eyes and ears of the manager at games around the country.


2015

“It will be a recruitment system which includes a refreshed scouting network, a clear set of talent identification criteria and transparent communication to the board on progress – from identification of the talent through to securing the talent.

2017

I wouldn't be giving up or academy for our new scouting network just yet.
Same old shit spouted out from the Sisu prayer book. Roll on October when Robins fooks off.
Even Slade quotes the managers quotes.......
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Seems to me 40,000 are flocking the the sisu temple.
giphy.gif
 

smouch1975

Well-Known Member
Joy: Timmy, some billiards player on the radio has my number and calls me
Tim: Time for me to roll out the same old same old mistress

Sent from my SM-N915G using Tapatalk
 

italiahorse

Well-Known Member
Seems to me 40,000 are flocking the the sisu temple.
It gripes me that Sisu will be hob nobbing with the FA big wigs.
The real fans are the ones out in the cold.
You seem to be ridiculing most these 40,000 fans for backing the team in a one off game.
Sums you up.
 

st john

Well-Known Member
I still think something different is happening, and TF's comments reinforce that in my mind. I can't remember such positive comments being made when we were relegated last time, whether bullshit or not, and his comments completely contradict what he has been saying over the last few months.
Maybe it's a takeover attempt, maybe pressure from investers, but being in L2 (or worse) does not appear to be in their plans.
Sacking RS and getting MR in seems to be a lot of trouble and cost to go to just to sell a few hundred extra season tickets. He will know that his credibility is zero, and many people will wait in the summer to see what happens on recruitment. I think it's safe to say that if player recruitment goes anything like last summer he will be rumbled well before the season starts.
 

COVKIDSNEVERQUIT

Well-Known Member
COVENTRY City chairman Tim Fisher insists Mark Robins WILL get the 'tools for the job' - and dismissed speculation his is trying to put together a consortium to take over the club.

Continue reading...
My god he has more front than KATIE PRICE and more SPIN than my washing machine . :banghead:
 

Great_Expectations

Well-Known Member
You're optimistic! I only know one person that is renewing next year
Is it me?

Or me and the three people I go with - now you know of six!

Genuine question - do the statements from the chairman, or the club in general, really have that much of an influence on people's decision to buy an ST?

With minimal investment and a decent manager (I.e. worst case scenario for us next season), we can perform well in L2. If TF is to be believed, then with the proposed budget and Robins we should definitely be challenging.
 

dongonzalos

Well-Known Member
I still think something different is happening, and TF's comments reinforce that in my mind. I can't remember such positive comments being made when we were relegated last time.

COVENTRY City’s chief executive Tim Fisher meets owners Sisu this week to ask for the cash to fund an immediate return to the Championship.

He says that manager Andy Thorn is “front and centre” in the restructuring proposals he will present to the owners and that he is determined to do everything possible to hold on to star asset Richard Keogh – who has just one season left on his contract – and the Academy graduates who have broken into the first team this season.

Speaking barely an hour after Coventry’s relegation had been confirmed on Saturday, the man who was thrust into the hot seat in December stressed: “It would be really easy to have the knee-jerk reaction – fire the manager, get rid of a load of players – but that’s not what this is about.


"The one thing we have lacked over a number of years is a little bit of stability.

“We’re going to review what has happened this season when there have been a number of mistakes on and off the pitch and we all know what they are. We’re going to learn from those and, following the post-mortem, we’re going to restructure.

“Sisu have asked me for a plan – ‘if we go down into League One, how do we get back?’

“We are working on that plan and we will crack on with re-assessing where we are and then rebuilding.


“It’s a negotiation between the board and the owner; we will ask for a budget, and it will be a bounce-back budget.

We want to have a robust bid to get out of League One; there’s no ‘let’s go down and consolidate for a couple of years and see where we get to’ – we are going to make a bid to get out.”

The Sky Blues need Sisu to confirm that they will bankroll the club for the next 12 months before their outstanding accounts can be signed off and their transfer embargo lifted.

“They have to look at the plan, look at the numbers,” said Fisher. “They may say that it isn’t acceptable, but I think they like the idea of bouncing back.

“Sisu haven’t signed off that budget because in effect they were waiting to see what would happen, was it Championship of League One. Talking to Joy Seppala, she’s clear in her mind – ‘if we’re going to go down, we’ve got to come back up, right?’

The Sky Blues have worked their way through ten managers since they slipped out of the top flight 11 years ago but Fisher stressed: “This is where we need to draw a line in the sand and say enough – enough of firing managers. We need to get out of that habit and, to draw a football analogy, put our foot on the ball, give Andy a chance to reorganise the resources.

“Andy is front and centre stage at the moment and we are going to work with him to make sure that he’s got all the resources lined up.

“We’re sitting down with him to decide which players he wants to keep. We need a spine, we need the key players and, as reflected in all the awards he has won, Richard has been the heartbeat of that team.

“He’s a good player and there will be intense pressure from outside to extract him, without a doubt, but this week he gave us a provisional commitment that he wants to stay and we’ll do our best to keep him.

“There is always a figure X but it would have to be a big figure; I think the value of Richard staying would far outweigh a little bit of cash with money on appearances and so on and so forth.

“Certain things we’d like to do but may be out of our hands. Some players who are out of contract, I suspect, may leave; we respect that and we’ll have to bring in some additional resources.

“It is a highlight of the year for me that those Academy boys have grown into men and it would be a shame if we were to get rid of them now.

“We’d like Ollie Norwood to stay and I think there is a chance he will.

"I suspect a Championship club will come in for Alex Nimely on loan but he has indicated that he would be delighted to stay.”

The supporters’ disenchantment has deepened after Thorn was denied any opportunity to replace stars like Marlon King and Aron Gunnarsson while Ben Turner and Lukas Jutkiewicz were sold to cut the debts.

“There is a general acceptance that mistakes were made,” said Fisher, “and one of those mistakes was letting players in key positions leave and not replacing them with talent. That is recognised by the owner.

“I’ll do my best to ensure that Sisu remain motivated to keep going; that’s one of my principal roles here – showing them the positivity.

"When we were eight points adrift and pulled it back, that was motivational for them; unfortunately we had that recent slump in form that has killed us.

“It’s difficult for Sisu to reconcile investing £40m and the antipathy that we’ve all seen.

“What happens on the pitch is the key to all of this; if you get that right what happens off the pitch becomes secondary, even tertiary. That is why we’ve got to get that bit right.
 

singers_pore

Well-Known Member
COVENTRY City’s chief executive Tim Fisher meets owners Sisu this week to ask for the cash to fund an immediate return to the Championship.

He says that manager Andy Thorn is “front and centre” in the restructuring proposals he will present to the owners and that he is determined to do everything possible to hold on to star asset Richard Keogh – who has just one season left on his contract – and the Academy graduates who have broken into the first team this season.

Speaking barely an hour after Coventry’s relegation had been confirmed on Saturday, the man who was thrust into the hot seat in December stressed: “It would be really easy to have the knee-jerk reaction – fire the manager, get rid of a load of players – but that’s not what this is about.


"The one thing we have lacked over a number of years is a little bit of stability.

“We’re going to review what has happened this season when there have been a number of mistakes on and off the pitch and we all know what they are. We’re going to learn from those and, following the post-mortem, we’re going to restructure.

“Sisu have asked me for a plan – ‘if we go down into League One, how do we get back?’

“We are working on that plan and we will crack on with re-assessing where we are and then rebuilding.


“It’s a negotiation between the board and the owner; we will ask for a budget, and it will be a bounce-back budget.

We want to have a robust bid to get out of League One; there’s no ‘let’s go down and consolidate for a couple of years and see where we get to’ – we are going to make a bid to get out.”

The Sky Blues need Sisu to confirm that they will bankroll the club for the next 12 months before their outstanding accounts can be signed off and their transfer embargo lifted.

“They have to look at the plan, look at the numbers,” said Fisher. “They may say that it isn’t acceptable, but I think they like the idea of bouncing back.

“Sisu haven’t signed off that budget because in effect they were waiting to see what would happen, was it Championship of League One. Talking to Joy Seppala, she’s clear in her mind – ‘if we’re going to go down, we’ve got to come back up, right?’

The Sky Blues have worked their way through ten managers since they slipped out of the top flight 11 years ago but Fisher stressed: “This is where we need to draw a line in the sand and say enough – enough of firing managers. We need to get out of that habit and, to draw a football analogy, put our foot on the ball, give Andy a chance to reorganise the resources.

“Andy is front and centre stage at the moment and we are going to work with him to make sure that he’s got all the resources lined up.

“We’re sitting down with him to decide which players he wants to keep. We need a spine, we need the key players and, as reflected in all the awards he has won, Richard has been the heartbeat of that team.

“He’s a good player and there will be intense pressure from outside to extract him, without a doubt, but this week he gave us a provisional commitment that he wants to stay and we’ll do our best to keep him.

“There is always a figure X but it would have to be a big figure; I think the value of Richard staying would far outweigh a little bit of cash with money on appearances and so on and so forth.

“Certain things we’d like to do but may be out of our hands. Some players who are out of contract, I suspect, may leave; we respect that and we’ll have to bring in some additional resources.

“It is a highlight of the year for me that those Academy boys have grown into men and it would be a shame if we were to get rid of them now.

“We’d like Ollie Norwood to stay and I think there is a chance he will.

"I suspect a Championship club will come in for Alex Nimely on loan but he has indicated that he would be delighted to stay.”

The supporters’ disenchantment has deepened after Thorn was denied any opportunity to replace stars like Marlon King and Aron Gunnarsson while Ben Turner and Lukas Jutkiewicz were sold to cut the debts.

“There is a general acceptance that mistakes were made,” said Fisher, “and one of those mistakes was letting players in key positions leave and not replacing them with talent. That is recognised by the owner.

“I’ll do my best to ensure that Sisu remain motivated to keep going; that’s one of my principal roles here – showing them the positivity.

"When we were eight points adrift and pulled it back, that was motivational for them; unfortunately we had that recent slump in form that has killed us.

“It’s difficult for Sisu to reconcile investing £40m and the antipathy that we’ve all seen.

“What happens on the pitch is the key to all of this; if you get that right what happens off the pitch becomes secondary, even tertiary. That is why we’ve got to get that bit right.

When Fisher starts bullshitting at the Trust meeting someone should remind him of this.
 

Gazolba

Well-Known Member
Robins has been given the tools for the job. Here is the first tool.
It can be placed on the ground for the players to practice dribbling around. Or it can be worn on the head as practice for when we win the Checkatrade Cup.
By placing it in the middle of the goal line, it's an adequate substitute for our goal-keeper.
It can also be held up to your ear to hear the latest news about our new stadium.
Toilet-Plunger-cropped.jpg
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member

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