Paxman II
Well-Known Member
Why so long to determine where the 'Golden Share' lies and if that means an immediate points deduction?
I would have to guess that the whereabouts of which company legally has the 'Golden Share' is proving a bit of a conundrum?
ACL say the FL told them it was with CCFC LTD and Fisher and the administrator understand it to be with CCFC Holdings Ltd.
Now just how can either side be so adamant? It suggest there is some ambiguity probably arising out of how and when those shares were transferred from one entity to the other and within the scope of the FL rules.
I find it difficult to see how SISU (lets just call them that) would make such a faux par?
I find it more likely to think the FL jumped too quickly with a simple response to ACL and in so doing brought ACL to the quick conclusion of petitioning the court.
Which side had all their ducks lined up correctly? ACL or SISU?
This is never a question of which side you agree with or hate the most. It's simply a case of legal strategy.
Even if the FL come out and state the shares are with CCFC Ltd and thus making ACL correct it will not go unchallenged by SISU unless they then state they lied? I doubt very much they lied on a legal stance and I think the FL will be in a difficult corner.
The end problem for me is whether the FL lawyers decide that CCFC Ltd and CCFC Holdings Ltd are extricable linked. It looks it on the surface but if CCFC Ltd don't have shares, player registrations etc then that is not the case. Think that will be SISU's ultimate argument.
The years have rolled on and at various times SISU have manipulated their position legally (to their belief) so they control as much as possible the outcomes in order to protect their investors money, with the long term hope that they will eventually find a deal with stadium owners which will give them ability to survive as a football club otherwise it will be unsustainable.
ACL have known this all along it must be said. They did offer a compromise on rent which SISU accepted but did not go much further on other vital access to revenue streams.
The upshot is they will have to if they want a football club at the Ricoh for Coventry and to exist.
Any other prospective owner will simply need the same considerations anyway. So if ACL had managed to bring about an intended admin purchase from say Mr Haskell he would want the same if not more of the revenue streams.
So I can't help thinking all this got lost in personal vendettas (more so from ACL) who felt cheated and undermined but that's business. You may hate the firm in situ but you can't act any differently towards them or anyone else.
I worry that should that should the points be deducted and the two entities be proven as one then SISU will reluctantly and eventually stop funding the football club with bad money after bad without a solid deal over the stadium forthcoming. They would eventually wind up the company and we will have no football club after 125 years.
A deal MUST be done.
I would have to guess that the whereabouts of which company legally has the 'Golden Share' is proving a bit of a conundrum?
ACL say the FL told them it was with CCFC LTD and Fisher and the administrator understand it to be with CCFC Holdings Ltd.
Now just how can either side be so adamant? It suggest there is some ambiguity probably arising out of how and when those shares were transferred from one entity to the other and within the scope of the FL rules.
I find it difficult to see how SISU (lets just call them that) would make such a faux par?
I find it more likely to think the FL jumped too quickly with a simple response to ACL and in so doing brought ACL to the quick conclusion of petitioning the court.
Which side had all their ducks lined up correctly? ACL or SISU?
This is never a question of which side you agree with or hate the most. It's simply a case of legal strategy.
Even if the FL come out and state the shares are with CCFC Ltd and thus making ACL correct it will not go unchallenged by SISU unless they then state they lied? I doubt very much they lied on a legal stance and I think the FL will be in a difficult corner.
The end problem for me is whether the FL lawyers decide that CCFC Ltd and CCFC Holdings Ltd are extricable linked. It looks it on the surface but if CCFC Ltd don't have shares, player registrations etc then that is not the case. Think that will be SISU's ultimate argument.
The years have rolled on and at various times SISU have manipulated their position legally (to their belief) so they control as much as possible the outcomes in order to protect their investors money, with the long term hope that they will eventually find a deal with stadium owners which will give them ability to survive as a football club otherwise it will be unsustainable.
ACL have known this all along it must be said. They did offer a compromise on rent which SISU accepted but did not go much further on other vital access to revenue streams.
The upshot is they will have to if they want a football club at the Ricoh for Coventry and to exist.
Any other prospective owner will simply need the same considerations anyway. So if ACL had managed to bring about an intended admin purchase from say Mr Haskell he would want the same if not more of the revenue streams.
So I can't help thinking all this got lost in personal vendettas (more so from ACL) who felt cheated and undermined but that's business. You may hate the firm in situ but you can't act any differently towards them or anyone else.
I worry that should that should the points be deducted and the two entities be proven as one then SISU will reluctantly and eventually stop funding the football club with bad money after bad without a solid deal over the stadium forthcoming. They would eventually wind up the company and we will have no football club after 125 years.
A deal MUST be done.