Kevin Maton (11 Viewers)

steveo1987

Well-Known Member
Was he educated at an independent school then? A bit of basic research shows that he is a tool all round, some of his twitter likes and retweets are something else.
 

tisza

Well-Known Member
Wonder whether the real issue is someone a bondholder maybe ?? 😂 😂 😂
Club finances are a stick Maton and his pals frequently used to beat CCFC but apparently not applicable to Wasps.
Wasps debt seems worse than ccfc's ever was due to the larger % of external debt.
It's an ill conceived tweet that smacks of desperation.
 

Nick

Administrator
Wonder whether the real issue is someone a bondholder maybe ?? 😂 😂 😂
Club finances are a stick Maton and his pals frequently used to beat CCFC but apparently not applicable to Wasps.
Wasps debt seems worse than ccfc's ever was due to the larger % of external debt.
It's an ill conceived tweet that smacks of desperation.

Can you imagine what they all say to each other behind closed doors in secret meetings if that is what they think is OK to tweet publicly?
 

Legia Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Wonder whether the real issue is someone a bondholder maybe ?? 😂 😂 😂
Club finances are a stick Maton and his pals frequently used to beat CCFC but apparently not applicable to Wasps.
Wasps debt seems worse than ccfc's ever was due to the larger % of external debt.
It's an ill conceived tweet that smacks of desperation.

I've banged on about this before & not sure when he will next stand for election, but surely it would be worth putting up an independent pro CCFC/ anti Maton single issue candidate based on this back history (and any others like him whatever their party affiliation) to get him off the council. It does not take many votes to sway a local council seat, so is surely doable with just a little organisation. As well as getting him off the council it would also send out a warning to other councillors who do not respect the interests of the football club.
 
D

Deleted member 2477

Guest
From his tweets, it looks like his interest in Wasps seems to go much further than "being a fan".

Can't imagine he'd be asking for the same leniency for the football club
Just another two faced lying politician with his finger in the pie. His kind always have a hidden agenda usually to do with money.
 

tisza

Well-Known Member
Can you imagine what they all say to each other behind closed doors in secret meetings if that is what they think is OK to tweet publicly?
We'll never know. Like the full council meeting to sell to Wasps remains sealed !!!
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
I've banged on about this before & not sure when he will next stand for election, but surely it would be worth putting up an independent pro CCFC/ anti Maton single issue candidate based on this back history (and any others like him whatever their party affiliation) to get him off the council. It does not take many votes to sway a local council seat, so is surely doable with just a little organisation. As well as getting him off the council it would also send out a warning to other councillors who do not respect the interests of the football club.

I think we all know the ideal man for the job
 

Legia Sky Blue

Well-Known Member

I said 'independent' 😂

Grendel is clearly a Tory so Maton's supporters would simply say it was a backdoor ploy to bring in a Tory, so in this instance if an 'independent' couldn't be found it would probably be better to have a Labour leaning candidate - say Schmee or Sky Blue Dreamer for instance.

Grendel would undoubtedly be perfect to run against any Tory councillor with an anti CCFC agenda however.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Someone did stand in an anti council approach in my ward once he knocked on my door - must of been a while ago - he didn’t get many votes I don’t think
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
Someone did stand in an anti council approach in my ward once he knocked on my door - must of been a while ago - he didn’t get many votes I don’t think
Yeah one issue candidates are a little annoying locally. Better to win the support of already elected members to do the right thing
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
The council I am sure are going to do all they can to keep Wasps alive not only as they have invested reputationally in it but also the complete minefield it would create if the Bond and the Lease defaults

No one actually knows what would happen but no scenario is looking very attractive to them.
 

tisza

Well-Known Member
The council I am sure are going to do all they can to keep Wasps alive not only as they have invested reputationally in it but also the complete minefield it would create if the Bond and the Lease defaults

No one actually knows what would happen but no scenario is looking very attractive to them.
Catch 22. Pour support into a business that doesn't look capable of surviving much past the short term even with help now. Get hammered for that as well. A businessman would take the loss, a politician will go down with ship
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
The council I am sure are going to do all they can to keep Wasps alive not only as they have invested reputationally in it but also the complete minefield it would create if the Bond and the Lease defaults

No one actually knows what would happen but no scenario is looking very attractive to them.

The reputational damage alone will see the council move heaven and earth to help where they can, until the actors involved in the story move on to pastures new I suppose.
 

better days

Well-Known Member
From Planet Rugby
A pretty fair and balanced story, especially as it's a rugby publication
Maton and his cronies must be crapping themselves
Skeletons are likely to come rattling out of the CCC cupboard if Wasps do go pop


Loose Pass: Wasps’ woes, the Rugby Championship’s fascinating battle and a ruined surprise for those just waking up
Date published: August 16 2022 - Lawrence Nolan


This week we will mostly be concerning ourselves with uncomfortable rumours in England, the fascinating battle between philosophical schools in the Rugby Championship and a mis-step among broadcasters…
What’s up at Wasps?
And just when we thought we might all get away with it too. It’s no secret that Covid shaved off any pretence of profitability among England’s Premiership clubs, no understatement to say that the lowering of the salary cap may save a couple of clubs from trying a Barcelona



Tough times were had, yet it did look as though we might not get any casualties. But now Wasps, one of England’s grandest old names, are looking decidedly ragged. Unable to fulfil financial commitments, under likely legal pressure from their groundshare partners, short of squad depth and without the means to fill the roster, a lean season looms. If they make it that far.
Rumours – unsubstantiated and formally denied – continue to abound about the club going into administration, with a GBP 35m bond issue not being redeemed to investors in time and the club struggling to refinance it. It’s a heck of a lot of money, yet a year ago some creative financial work might have made it look less daunting. Certainly seven years ago, when the bond was issued, the world was a very different place economically. Now though, with base interest rates having risen 1.5 percentage points in the last nine months alone, it looks a far more intimidating liability when it comes to refinancing. Charity is in short supply right now and however grand an old name Wasps are, this is, unfortunately, not soccer.

The bond was issued to finance the purchase of the Coventry Arena, but the Arena business was hammered by the pandemic far more than the club itself, leaving the club as a whole much less valuable. Wasps recently applied for public support for the Arena business on the basis of the negative pandemic effects to the tune of GBP 13m, an application which already has many observers up in arms because of the likely use of the money to finance the team. The overriding impression is that if that public funding is refused, Wasps will not be able to redeem their bond and will be forced to asset-strip at best. At worst there may not be a professional sporting club any more.


That would not be unpleasant news for Wasps’ Arena tenants, Coventry City football club, who are livid about the state of the pitch after it was used for the Commonwealth Games Sevens and who were forced to postpone at least two home games and to move another. They are considering legal action and if you see pictures of the playing surface, it is difficult to see how they do not have a case for compensation, which would weigh still further on Wasps’ balance sheet.
There’s been a couple of statements from club administrative leadership on both subjects, but perhaps most disturbing is the disconnect from the fan base. Wasps do not have their communications positions filled – the current job advertisements are for day-to-day with expenses only – and a former employee has called the administration an ‘absolute bin fire’, saying: “Once the old guard of supporters are disengaged, and the new supporters that they’ve lumped all their hopes on don’t materialise, what then?” Many, many fans took to social media to agree, asking en masse for the silence to be broken and for some information.
Not all of the strife is necessarily Wasps’ administrators’ fault. The pandemic and the current economic imbalances were as unforeseeable as they were brutal. Yet the ongoing annual losses of so many Premiership clubs, the constant stretch of resource and the lack of pragmatism in business models were likely to claim a victim at some point, even in times of relative enlightenment post-London Welsh. They may not be in administration, but the future of Wasps looks bleak indeed.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
There's so many of these articles now you have to wonder if some of the journalists have knowledge that the house of cards is going to collapse. Seems a bit of a coincidence that they are all coming out at the same time.
 

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