Its the oldest trick in the book as all you do is go into administration,stiff the daft creditors and pay them off at 10p in the £ or whatever and take the points deduction.
No-one is going to take your stadium away from you so you start again debt free with often the same group of owners under a slightly different guise.
The list of clubs is endless who have used this method of reconstruction and its all done on purpose and the same club always emerges at the other end.
Livi are past masters and might have done it 3 times now and its still the exact same club playing out of the exact same stadium with the exact same fans.
Results 31 to 60 of 102
Thread: Dumbarton FC - Administration
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19-11-2024 09:00 AM #31
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19-11-2024 09:02 AM #32
I remember Malonga scoring a screamer in one of the rare highlights of our visits there in the Championship.
Also young John McGinn making his debut there as a sub and immediately pinging an effortless 50 yard pass. Couldn't save us from defeat but we knew we had a player alright.
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19-11-2024 09:05 AM #33This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It’s been a bigger problem for Dundee, Motherwell, right through to Hearts and Rangers.
The past few years have been pretty unprecedented financially and I think a lot of folk are in denial about it. Covid, war in Ukraine, Trussonomics and the “cost of living crisis” have led to costs rocketing for businesses. There’s only so far that many organisations can go to cover those costs by either finding new customers or putting up prices - and I could imagine it being a very challenging trading environment for lower league football clubs, challenging to the extent that it might force some fairly radical change.
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19-11-2024 09:06 AM #34This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote''It's always been just part of the culture. Growing up, for most working-class kids, is all about football, music or clothes. You might not have much money, but whatever you have got, you're going to look good.'' - Paul Weller
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19-11-2024 09:43 AM #35
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19-11-2024 10:02 AM #36
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You're spot on about the denial of the financial hit everything is having. I know even from my line of work the eye watering costs to keep things running. I certainly wouldn't want to be the person in charge of balancing the books at a Forfar or Stirling Albion for example.
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19-11-2024 10:08 AM #37This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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19-11-2024 10:57 AM #38This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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19-11-2024 11:15 AM #39This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It all just happened sometime around the earlyish eighties
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19-11-2024 12:17 PM #40This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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19-11-2024 05:01 PM #41
I don't think less teams makes any difference to the economic dynamics of Scottish football.
If we say that Arbroath, Montrose, Forfar and Brechin are all too close together are fans of the respective clubs all going to go and watch Angus County? Or all get behind whichever team makes the cut to be the one that represents the area? Same is true of Fife. Raith Rovers, East Fife, Cowdenbeath and Dunfermilne fans aren't all going to get behind Fife United any more than we were going to get behind Mercer's 'merger'. A cursory glance at ICT shows what happens when you merge teams against the wishes of the fans. It's unsustainable long term because you will never grow a fanbase.
'We need less teams' is an often heard cry but with little substance into how it materially improves things. All it would do is see a generation of fans lost to senior football altogether or more people 'supporting' a Glasgow side on TV.
There may well be an organic loss of clubs given time but there are probably fans of global superclubs and football administrators alike who would quite happily see a club like Hibs as collateral damage in that organic loss in their quest for even more money concentrated in an increasingly closed shop. We'd hardly see that as a positive because a couple of Scottish mega clubs would theoretically be better for the greater good.
These clubs aren't stealing support from each other or the bigger clubs. There isn't a big pool of supporters waiting to get behind a local team if only a couple of other teams in the area got punted to the sidelines. The only clubs hoovering up support from all over are Celtic and Rangers.
We really don't have that many full time teams in Scotland, the majority in the league set up are part time. Regionalisation may be one solution to keep costs down but even then Scotland is so lowland heavy in terms of population and teams I'm not sure that is workable either.Last edited by Pretty Boy; 19-11-2024 at 05:04 PM.
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19-11-2024 05:53 PM #42
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Something will have to change in how the SPFL runs or how it funds the lower leagues though because the financial issues will only grow worse I think in the coming few seasons for some clubs.
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19-11-2024 07:02 PM #43This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
But only two fewer.Mature, sensible signature required for responsible position. Good prospects for the right candidate. Apply within.
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19-11-2024 07:17 PM #44
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https://open.substack.com/pub/andrew...meOnShare=true
There needs to be purposeful action taken by the SPFL. We need to work with everyone not just for two clubs.
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19-11-2024 07:37 PM #45This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuotePM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
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19-11-2024 07:58 PM #46This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
the moment we went away from that is where football went wrong. There was zero gate accounting that the likes of Hamilton opted for. Chasing the football money outwith the sustainable parameter is a slippery slope as well increasingly find."We know the people who have invested so far are simple fans." Vladimir Romanov - Scotsman 10th December 2012
"Romanov was like a breath of fresh air - laced with cyanide." Me.
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19-11-2024 08:46 PM #47
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Denmark have 24 in a professional system before it drops into the separate semi-professional set up and then into a non-professional pyramid.
Croatia have 26 in it's two professional league before it goes straight into a regional set up.
Norway have went with two divisions of 16 then straight into a regional set up.
Times have changed and the genie is out the bottle. Gone are the days of the Doonhamers all going back down from Glasgow to Dumfries to watch Queens, or Greenock halving it's population and Dumbarton shrinking by two thirds over the course of the last 100 years to help sustain a healthy local support for teams.
We can talk about sharing more of Celtic and Rangers' European money down the SPFL but everyone will have their own argument as to why they're due the money more than anyone else. The TV deal money isn't going to get any better either so how much can we spare to go around 42 teams before it starts to hurt our co-efficiency for example. All so we can prop up a couple extra clubs that we feel an obligation to do so because they've been here all this time?
For me I'd be reformatting the SPFL into 2 divisions of around 32 teams and dropping 10 of them back out into the lowland/highland league. I know it's an unpopular opinion and it's likely to never happen as turkeys won't vote for christmas but I think it would be the best route to make better use of what little money we have in the game without it going to clubs miles down the ladder to pay semi-professional players that have no real business doing so to the extent they are.
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19-11-2024 09:37 PM #48This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Was a while ago, lolLast edited by erin go bragh; 19-11-2024 at 09:40 PM.
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19-11-2024 09:48 PM #49
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20-11-2024 07:01 AM #50This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Last edited by superfurryhibby; 20-11-2024 at 09:07 AM.
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20-11-2024 07:05 AM #51This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
100% this. I just can't be bothered typing it all out! 2 leagues then regional. Would actually help smaller teams really. Teams like Dumbarton, and other s***e like that, can still exist, I just think there's not really any place for these teams in a senior, country wide set up. Especially in a country like Scotland.
As for Celtic and Rangers's, well it's been like this really for over 100 years so what's going to change now?
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20-11-2024 08:18 AM #52This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
We effectively have 22 professional teams in the country and the rest are part time teams as it is. If the suggestion above is to increase the pro set up to 2 leagues of 16 then you'd be trying to support more rather than less full time teams (assuming the 2nd tier would be run as a fully professional full time league). Obviously the money is slightly less thinly spread but enough that it would make a material difference? Teams coming out of any regional pyramid would still then be faced with the logistical and financial pressures of going into a national set up unless the idea was to make the theoretical top 2 tiers a closed shop?
We currently have the Lowland and Highland Leagues with the EoS, WoS etc etc feeding in. Trying to divide lower league clubs into a further regional set up would be something of a logistical nightmare. We have seen it when the LC group stages were regionalised with Hearts being in a south group and Hibs in a north to try and balance the books so to speak. I'm not against the idea of change but trying to implement regionalisation in Scotland would lead to a massive disparity in teams from the central belt and the south when compared to the highlands/north both in terms of numbers and quality. It's already the case really with the top end of the East and West of Scotland leagues stacked with top teams at the level all fighting for a place in the Lowland League whilst the North Caledonian League, Midlands League and North Superleague are all of a far lower standard and in terms of numbers with nothing like the same level of competition to enter the Highland League.
Times have undoubtedly changed since every town could support a football team or 2 but without a time machine there is no easy fix. Let's be honest Edinburgh isn't really big enough to support 2 teams when you look at the size of some one club cities down south but it's a cultural and societal legacy. Most clubs at the lower levels have been pretty effective at cutting their cloths to adapt to new circumstances and with the opening of the pyramid clubs like East Stirling, Albion Rovers and Brechin have found their level whilst more ambitious clubs better set up to cope with the logistics and finances of the national set up have taken their place.PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
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20-11-2024 09:14 AM #53
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20-11-2024 10:56 AM #54This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The point about regionalisation. There would be fixes to some of the issues you mention feeder leagues and a pyramid system would work itself out over time.
Not sure we will ever see a 16 team top league though, Turkeys don't vote for Christmas. The second tier also needs to be smaller for financial viability.
This also brings the women's game into focus for me, the madness of Hibs trying to support a professional women's game and competing with the gruesome twosome in order to access the "riches" of women's European competition. A stupid proposition that can't be sustainable on the crowds etc.Last edited by superfurryhibby; 20-11-2024 at 03:04 PM.
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20-11-2024 11:08 AM #55This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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20-11-2024 11:59 AM #56
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But I think if we were to change to say a 16/16 or even a 12/20 set up for arguments sake it doesn't necessarily mean that anyone who gets promoted into the 'Championship' has to become full-time overnight, the same as how anyone who get promoted to it now doesn't necessarily need to make that change. And anyone in a regional set up can keep themselves as a semi-pro team if they feel it helps their case to get promoted or if they can financially justify it. It's the clubs prerogative if they want to put more money in and budget for it or adapt and 'cut their cloth' as we've already mentioned teams doing.
Of course the teams would face some pressures with getting promoted, but that isn't really adding anything new to what we already have if say Spartans go from Lowland league to League 2. But you'd like to think by making this type of change the prize money can be more condensed to help ease the transition of anyone coming up from this hypothetical regional division into a more established championship division and a mix of better gate receipts and prize money for a Spartans or a Forfar for example who make it up that season.
It's proven to be a system that works elsewhere in nations that have similar sized populations and some even span greater distances than we have. I see no reason why it can't work here.
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20-11-2024 12:39 PM #57
Less clubs means more money for the remaining ones no?
Dumbarton add nothing to the game and have been taking money that will be shared around the others in future.
Any club that can’t support itself financially shouldn’t be in the professional leagues.
They can still be a community club being financed by their local community. If there’s not enough people interested to keep them going then so be it.
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20-11-2024 12:59 PM #58This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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20-11-2024 02:09 PM #59
I remember when COVID hit and many predicted some clubs might struggle in the future, a couple of years past that now though but still the economy is not in good place so hard to blame it on that.
Just hope the Scottish game can survive lower league in the future.
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20-11-2024 05:56 PM #60This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Last edited by CropleyWasGod; 20-11-2024 at 05:59 PM.
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