Roflmao aint ya justPathetic. Desperate for the last word. Only one person tried to start an argument here.
Roflmao aint ya justPathetic. Desperate for the last word. Only one person tried to start an argument here.
He and the commercial team have done very well to fill the stadium again. He reminds me of Don Robinson. He, too, came along when the club was in the doldrums and support was sparse and he increased the gates simply by talking the club up and presenting a positive attitude. I don't think he invested a lot, certainly not in the stadium, which we owned, or in players, and he too sacked a manager ( Brian Horton) in similar circumstances to Acun. Robinson threw the towel in soon afterwards.Because it was absolutely the right thing to do, the support had been decimated by the previous owner and reversing that had to be a priority for any new owner. He's managed to do if far more quickly and comprehensively than anyone expected and deserves credit for it.
He and the commercial team have done very well to fill the stadium again. He reminds me of Don Robinson. He, too, came along when the club was in the doldrums and support was sparse and he increased the gates simply by talking the club up and presenting a positive attitude. I don't think he invested a lot, certainly not in the stadium, which we owned, or in players, and he too sacked a manager ( Brian Horton) in similar circumstances to Acun. Robinson threw the towel in soon afterwards.
Personally I don't see much actual investment in the team from Acun. The increase in gate receipts and the add on's must go some way into funding the loan players we had last season? Not forgetting £17m also came in within days of him buying the club from the sale of KLP. Of course we don't know how that money was divided, indeed, if at all? or how much reflected what Acun actually paid for the club?
So for me, the real investment comes this season (hopefully) Players first, then in bricks and mortar, but for anyone to think Acun and his team are here because they suddenly fell in love with Hull City and not because they saw a huge business opportunity is extremely naive.
After the Bradford City fire Don had to spend hundreds of thousands on BP. Much of it was behind the scenes, rewiring and safety works etc, but the south stand terrace was completely re-concreted with new crash barriers installed. Never dull times with Dr Death though.He and the commercial team have done very well to fill the stadium again. He reminds me of Don Robinson. He, too, came along when the club was in the doldrums and support was sparse and he increased the gates simply by talking the club up and presenting a positive attitude. I don't think he invested a lot, certainly not in the stadium, which we owned, or in players, and he too sacked a manager ( Brian Horton) in similar circumstances to Acun. Robinson threw the towel in soon afterwards.
Personally I don't see much actual investment in the team from Acun. The increase in gate receipts and the add on's must go some way into funding the loan players we had last season? Not forgetting £17m also came in within days of him buying the club from the sale of KLP. Of course we don't know how that money was divided, indeed, if at all? or how much reflected what Acun actually paid for the club?
So for me, the real investment comes this season (hopefully) Players first, then in bricks and mortar, but for anyone to think Acun and his team are here because they suddenly fell in love with Hull City and not because they saw a huge business opportunity is extremely naive.
A football club is quite possibly the worst possible investment anyone can make, football club owners generally lose a fortune.
As the old adage goes, the quickest way to become a millionaire is by starting out as a billionaire and buying a football club.
Unless...You can turn a Championship Club into a Premier outfit in a short space of time?
Nah, not all ....See Ken Bates for details....He bought football clubs using other peoples money ...never ever his own. ie Oldham, then Chelsea...Sold them on for lots more £££. Now lives in Monaco has a tax exile with a massive ££££ m fortune.A football club is quite possibly the worst possible investment anyone can make, football club owners generally lose a fortune.
As the old adage goes, the quickest way to become a millionaire is by starting out as a billionaire and buying a football club.
Adam Pearson did alright for himself from his time with Hull City.Nah, not all ....See Ken Bates for details....He bought football clubs using other peoples money ...never ever his own. ie Oldham, then Chelsea...Sold them on for lots more £££. Now lives in Monaco has a tax exile with a massive ££££ m fortune.
I bet Master Bates did okay when he get rid of Leeds.Adam Pearson did alright for himself from his time with Hull City.
How much did he reduce his personal wealth by during his tenure?Like Russell Bartlett?
Grrrr bloody transfers getting in the way of buildings....so basically you're saying he shouldn't have bought anyone (the money we've wasted on transfer fees, agents fees and wages) and built a training ground for no one to train in as he didn't buy anyone?The training ground really does bug me. When you look at the money we've wasted on transfer fees, agents fees and wages in his 2.5 years here, we could've had a £15-20m complex almost paid off.
Adam Pearson did alright for himself from his time with Hull City.
How much did he reduce his personal wealth by during his tenure?
This appointment is dragging on a bit. Barcelona did it in the Flick of an eye.
Nah, not all ....See Ken Bates for details....He bought football clubs using other peoples money ...never ever his own. ie Oldham, then Chelsea...Sold them on for lots more £££. Now lives in Monaco has a tax exile with a massive ££££ m fortune.
Hard to believe, perhaps, but Blaster is now 92 years of age..The exception that proves the rule.