You don't know they are not looking at that,however he/they make funds available that can be used they will already know how they wish to do things. I think maybe the club won't benefit to much until it achieves promotion.
Most owners don't want to just 'inject more equity' as they want to be able to include the debt in the sale price. It's why when owners do it it's met with such praise.
Yes, most owners think about their own return on their investment. Which is perfectly valid. All I'm saying is they have an alternate route available if they have big backers, and if they choose not to take it while claiming they are being altruistic, then it tells a different story. Either they don't have big backers, or..
Indeed, but it was obviously more advantageous to their owners to risk sanction exploiting dodgy loopholes than 'simply investing more equity' which suggests to me that its not always that 'simple'.
I don't think you can say Mel Morris wasn't a big backer, nor that he wasn't altruistic at least at the start with the money he put into his boyhood club - especially given that he had the cash to buy Pride Park at significantly over valuation.
I would imagine if any money was invested into Hull City it wouldn’t be done so directly Maybe things like investing in one of Acun’s TV channels
Rosie on Yuriel Celi... "He's a development one [signing], he won't come into my group," Rosenior told Hull Live. "He'll be someone that we're looking to develop and I love the way that the owners explain to me in the way they want to invest in the football club. He's someone that's more of a long term project." The Hull boss also reflected on the club's transfer strategy and explained why more players from abroad may well be coming to play in England in the near future. "A lot of clubs are going to South America," he added. "Obviously with Brexit it has changed the rules in terms of the registration and the [immigration] points you need to come to England. "So a lot of teams, I look at Brighton and [Alexis] Mac Allister won a World Cup with Argentina, they signed him as a young player coming through. We have to be creative in the way that we recruit and and that's the start of that process."
Vale and Baxter have gone back, but Simons is staying and Rosie fancies signing him on a permanent. We're also talking to a top flight club about a keeper to replace Baxter (who almost certainly isn't now being signed permanently).