Mary_Mungo_Midge
Well-Known Member
No, it's not my bid for rhetorical question of 2012.
I was almost moved to call Mr Linnell after Saturday's game and the resultant phone-in after his assertion that SISU 'were the only option' we had back in 2007.
Now, I think they were the only option ahead of administration. Well, apart of Akli Davis who apparently claimed: "After looking through the finances and seeing the numbers, the club is falling apart. The debt does not tally. Good luck to whoever takes them on." Retrospectively wise.
Now, Linnell shoots anyone down who criticises SISU, or at least did last week, stating that without their take-over, we'd cease to exist. Surely he's wrong?
Looking at clubs who have entered administration of a similar size to us, and I think the list runs - Middlesbrough, Crystal Palace, QPR, Bradford, Leicester, Ipswich, Wimbledon, Derby, Leeds (bigger, I acknowledge), Pompey or Southampton - how many have ceased to exist?
Okay, Bradford are worse-off, as are Wimbledon - but that's a function of their Milton Keynes folly as much as anything; and Pompey are, well... Pompey. But what about the others? Surely they've come through the process a stronger entity, not a non-entity as our Stuart seems to categorically state?
This not aimed at being an analysis of our fortunes under SISU - honest - but more an analysis of others who have entered administration and seemingly 'bounced back' and not withered as is claimed
I was almost moved to call Mr Linnell after Saturday's game and the resultant phone-in after his assertion that SISU 'were the only option' we had back in 2007.
Now, I think they were the only option ahead of administration. Well, apart of Akli Davis who apparently claimed: "After looking through the finances and seeing the numbers, the club is falling apart. The debt does not tally. Good luck to whoever takes them on." Retrospectively wise.
Now, Linnell shoots anyone down who criticises SISU, or at least did last week, stating that without their take-over, we'd cease to exist. Surely he's wrong?
Looking at clubs who have entered administration of a similar size to us, and I think the list runs - Middlesbrough, Crystal Palace, QPR, Bradford, Leicester, Ipswich, Wimbledon, Derby, Leeds (bigger, I acknowledge), Pompey or Southampton - how many have ceased to exist?
Okay, Bradford are worse-off, as are Wimbledon - but that's a function of their Milton Keynes folly as much as anything; and Pompey are, well... Pompey. But what about the others? Surely they've come through the process a stronger entity, not a non-entity as our Stuart seems to categorically state?
This not aimed at being an analysis of our fortunes under SISU - honest - but more an analysis of others who have entered administration and seemingly 'bounced back' and not withered as is claimed