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Duchatelet is THE Problem

Any owners that we have who do not purchase The Valley will surely hinder our prospects on the pitch.
With the lease winding down rapidly I can see a bleak future unless someone comes in and buys everything.
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  • Any owners that we have who do not purchase The Valley will surely hinder our prospects on the pitch.
    With the lease winding down rapidly I can see a bleak future unless someone comes in and buys everything.
    or negotiate a 99year lease. 
  • Any owners that we have who do not purchase The Valley will surely hinder our prospects on the pitch.
    With the lease winding down rapidly I can see a bleak future unless someone comes in and buys everything.
    Is it such a crazy idea to crowd fund for a share (for the supporters trust)?
  • He is A problem, but he is not THE problem. We spend more on transfers and wages than most of this division and yet we massively underperform constantly.

    We are currently sat below the likes of Stockport, Mansfield, Lincoln and Exeter and are level on points with Stevenage. That has nothing to do with us not owning our ground.
    Absolutely 100% dead right. It's been going on with small exceptions since Pardew was here. 
  • Any owners that we have who do not purchase The Valley will surely hinder our prospects on the pitch.
    With the lease winding down rapidly I can see a bleak future unless someone comes in and buys everything.
    Is it such a crazy idea to crowd fund for a share (for the supporters trust)?
    Yes, it’s a nice idea but it isn’t realistic. The costs would be huge (remember the property would require maintenance & upkeep). I doubt we’d have enough fans with deep enough pockets to make it viable. 
  • Any owners that we have who do not purchase The Valley will surely hinder our prospects on the pitch.
    With the lease winding down rapidly I can see a bleak future unless someone comes in and buys everything.
    Is it such a crazy idea to crowd fund for a share (for the supporters trust)?
    it's not crazy, but it's not realistic.

    1. Roland and Roderick have substantially overvalued the real-estate 
    2. You can't buy a bit of a stadium, who is going to buy the rest?
    3. Even if we got the Valley and SL at reasonable price, say £15m. You would need 291,080 (population of Greenwich Borough) to give £52 each, or 27,111(capacity of the Valley) to give £554 each, or 8000(season ticket holders) to give £1875 each.

    The wider football fraternity are generous, loads of people chipped in to fix the pitch at Plough Lane.
  • edited November 24
    He is A problem, but he is not THE problem. We spend more on transfers and wages than most of this division and yet we massively underperform constantly.

    We are currently sat below the likes of Stockport, Mansfield, Lincoln and Exeter and are level on points with Stevenage. That has nothing to do with us not owning our ground.
    Absolutely 100% dead right. It's been going on with small exceptions since Pardew was here. 
    Are we League One's Everton? They seem to be perennial underperformers and are pretty competitive with their net spend. 
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  • CafcWest said:
    I'd rather, at the moment, the owners spend more money on decent players than the ground.  Owning the ground is important but improviing our dreadful team more so at the moment.
    It’s both. Business need sensible investment plans covering both short and long term strategic goals. 
  • Improve our team and the ground becomes more expensive... 
  • Bilko said:
    msomerton said:
    Any owners that we have who do not purchase The Valley will surely hinder our prospects on the pitch.
    With the lease winding down rapidly I can see a bleak future unless someone comes in and buys everything.
    or negotiate a 99year lease. 
    In 99 years, we will still be in this crap division.
    Fortunately, I won't be around to see it....

  • DA9DA9
    edited November 24
    .
  • He is A problem, but he is not THE problem. We spend more on transfers and wages than most of this division and yet we massively underperform constantly.

    We are currently sat below the likes of Stockport, Mansfield, Lincoln and Exeter and are level on points with Stevenage. That has nothing to do with us not owning our ground.
    Absolutely 100% dead right. It's been going on with small exceptions since Pardew was here. 
    Are we League One's Everton? They seem to be perennial underperformers and are pretty competitive with their net spend. 
    There’s probably something in that, albeit with much smaller numbers involved. Probably the people least concerned with the ground situation are the players and manager, their main concern is winning matches. Everton will eventually move to a state of the art stadium but that doesn’t seem to have enlivened them very much on the pitch. If footballers lost sleep over their ground situations, we probably wouldn’t have won many games from 1985 to 1992. What drives me mad is year on year, even with our straightened circumstances we have more resources than teams who outbattle and beat us, over and over again. 
  • arny23394 said:
    Can anyone explain the correlation between owning a stadium and being successful on the pitch. Man City don’t own their stadium and they do alright. 

    The problem is we keep signing shit players and employing shit managers. 

  • arny23394 said:
    Can anyone explain the correlation between owning a stadium and being successful on the pitch. Man City don’t own their stadium and they do alright. 

    The problem is we keep signing shit players and employing shit managers. 
    I don't think there's always direct correlation and we can't say there's a blanket rule where ground ownership is always necessarily good and ground leasing is bad. I guess the main factors on whether it's positive or not are how friendly or hostile the owners are to the club, how much the rent is, how long the lease is, how easy it is to make any necessary changes, who has the rights on stadium usage outside of football, how secure the long term relationship with the landlord is and the consequent ability to keep the arrangement going in the long term. 

    From what I understand Manchester City are very happy with their situation. And why wouldn't they be, they got a 20k upgrade on their old Maine Road ground, handed to them on a plate. They know that the city council who are a strategic ally are both friendly partners, and are highly unlikely to be able to secure a better deal from anyone else. The club have the whip hand in that relationship and they and they know it. They also hold the licence to put on non-footballing events of their choice.

    Contrast this to our situation where the owner is known for his petulance, has a grouse against the club he once owned and has seriously overestimated the value of the stadium and the prospects of building on the land. Now I don't suppose any of us really know what RD is thinking. Maybe he has some affection for the club (though if he has, he had a funny way of showing it when he was the owner). We do know that he is 78 years old now and we expect that when he goes, ownership will be passed to Roderick. Again, we don't know what Roderick's thinking is. But that the lease can change hands so easily, is quite an existential threat to both to the future of the lease and the future of the club. For this reason, I think Elfsberg is quite right to be concerned.

    That said, I think those who have said that this is a problem rather than the problem are spot on. Something is rotten at CAFC, and the most rotten thing is unlikely to be the lease on the ground. 
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  • Convinced from very early on that his motive was the Land.
    I wonder how many will complain if we move grounds who are complacent atm.
  • Convinced from very early on that his motive was the Land.
    I wonder how many will complain if we move grounds who are complacent atm.
    If he is after money from selling land he gone about it in an expensive way.
    How much would he get for selling the Valley.
    I can tell you that Archbishop Tennison school which covers just over one acre of central London went for £8.7 million.

  • edited November 25
    msomerton said:
    Convinced from very early on that his motive was the Land.
    I wonder how many will complain if we move grounds who are complacent atm.
    If he is after money from selling land he gone about it in an expensive way.
    How much would he get for selling the Valley.
    I can tell you that Archbishop Tennison school which covers just over one acre of central London went for £8.7 million.

    I have no idea, I am not 'ITK', I have always believed it is his end game.
    As for his advancing years, no doubt his family take over.
  • arny23394 said:
    Can anyone explain the correlation between owning a stadium and being successful on the pitch. Man City don’t own their stadium and they do alright. 

    The problem is we keep signing shit players and employing shit managers. 
    Absolutely this, of course the club owning the ground is the best outcome, but it's definitely not what holds us back season after season.
  • edited November 25
    Has everyone forgot what happened when we LOST The Valley?   

    Was it not the most important thing to get it back? All the efforts people put in?    The Valley Party?   Fund raising?  The celebrations and relief when we finally returned?  

    I suppose we should just put that aside and just think about a quick win here and there.  Best forget about the foundations of this club and securing our future.  

    Typical “I want it now” mentality, without any thought about what it may mean to the survival/existence of the club in the future. 

    And as for comparisons with Man C….   Ffs.   Get real.  
    No one forgot anything. No one is against club ownership of the Valley. To suggest otherwise is crazy.

    The entire premise of the thread is that lack of ownership of the stadium prevents the team being successful on the pitch. That’s clearly false looking at Man City or Coventry‘s rise from League 2 to Championship play off final or even going back to Charlton Athletic in the late 80s.

    That doesn’t mean anyone is angling for, or complacent to the possibility of, a return to the Selhurst days.
  • Has everyone forgot what happened when we LOST The Valley?   

    Was it not the most important thing to get it back? All the efforts people put in?    The Valley Party?   Fund raising?  The celebrations and relief when we finally returned?  

    I suppose we should just put that aside and just think about a quick win here and there.  Best forget about the foundations of this club and securing our future.  

    Typical “I want it now” mentality, without any thought about what it may mean to the survival/existence of the club in the future. 

    And as for comparisons with Man C….   Ffs.   Get real.  
    Losing money and fans hand over fist in the league one seems far more of a threat than who owns the ground.
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Roland Out Forever!