The ring road from the airport is an EU enterprise zone like the one in Luxembourg and full of massive companies enjoying the tax and providing lots of jobs - probably because we have the City of London . It’s not democratic at all .
* Language, mine, and many others, was quite foul when it came to light the accounts were made up by M. Fish Ltd, and all for a bargain 80k.Wasn't Martin Fish* an accountant? That was a wonderful experience.
Good to see you again on here, but maybe this is not the best thread to come back to, everyone is falling out and it's not much more than petty squabbling.
You’re bang on with this one, Corporation Tax in Ireland is only 12.5% and lots of international companies base their EU operations there.
I’ve never actually been to Dublin, I need to sort a trip there at some point.
You’re bang on with this one, Corporation Tax in Ireland is only 12.5% and lots of international companies base their EU operations there.
I’ve never actually been to Dublin, I need to sort a trip there at some point.
It just seems to suggest that Acun is trying to avoid putting money in unless he has to but if the chips are down, he’ll do it.Acun: "When it comes to payments for suppliers, unfortunately the club experienced a financial fluidity problem when it failed to receive a £1.5m payment for a player to settle supplier invoices." "I will cover this shortage until we receive the funds we're due, and our team will be in contact with all suppliers to resolve any outstanding issues as soon as possible."
It's a bit ambiguously worded but wouldnt anybody just pay the club, the club pays the suppliers and then when the club receives the £1.5m they would pay Acun back?
I love these 'improve the academy' statements. What exactly is it they want improving? As you've said the players came along who had ability. The work for promising players is done by grassroots coaches all over the UK. Then they go to an academy and are coached by club coaches. The pitches used are excellent. The programmes I've seen are as good as any other academy I've seen. They play the same teams as other Academies.Sorry but that wasn’t down to the Allams , two local players came along with real ability for the first time in years , it happens like tha
That’s because they ran it like accountants do , ‘know the COST of everything’ but the ‘value’ of nothing .
Yeah it sounds like a right problem, acun think he’s got problems aswelldefo not…during the Covid lockdowns I considered bringing it to Hull marina but it was too wide to get in through the lock gates so no chance on a canal
From experience, you need a fully functioning pancreas. Just saying.
Hope you well.

But the essence of the topic is important to the clubs future. Spectators seem to have done the Rose Tinted Glasses job when looking back at the Allams. A pair of scrotes. This owner? Not great but he has time to redeem himself. Fibbing to supporters isn't the same as hating, manipulating their honesty, building false promises and trying to hijack the clubs name, culture and hard won identity.
Some seem to have forgotten this.
Literally nobody on this thread has said that the Allams were good owners.
That’s a valid point, I’d certainly be missing out on some of its finest attributes.
Outside of the alcohol ban, I’m very well thanks, hope all’s good with you.![]()
I love these 'improve the academy' statements. What exactly is it they want improving? As you've said the players came along who had ability. The work for promising players is done by grassroots coaches all over the UK. Then they go to an academy and are coached by club coaches. The pitches used are excellent. The programmes I've seen are as good as any other academy I've seen. They play the same teams as other Academies.
What exactly is it Acun should be investing in? I'd suggest the area that needs investment is scouting and satellite Academies because we cannot compete with the bigger clubs in the North for that. But hardly going to be a game changer, especially in the short term of 2 to 5 years.
The job he claimed to do for nothing.* Language, mine, and many others, was quite foul when it came to light the accounts were made up by M. Fish Ltd, and all for a bargain 80k.
The views expressed in my posts are not necessarily mine.
Probably got Chris Lee to do them in the afternoons.The job he claimed to do for nothing.
But only 3% of academy players ever play in the Premier League, so whatever Cat 1 academies do, it actually doesn’t work.Glad you asked!
For a start. Making steps towards Cat 1 would be a good start. As per the FA handbook this would allow us recruit from a wider catchment area and employ more staff.
Ideally, and this will come as no surprise, bringing it to one campus alongside the first team would be a great benefit. Many players have said as such as it does give the youth a vision of what they can achieve and how they should be training and handling themselves.
Specifically to us, and I’m only saying this from people who have a fair expertise on the matter, is giving a clear pathway for youth products to break into the team. I know of one player who has left the academy because they don’t see a reasonable path.
Most of our academy at the moment is built up of youth prospects that we’ve picked up as “rejects”, for lack of a better term, due to our Cat status being inferior to teams like Leeds (Cat 1).
Moving the academy to the first team training ground is not investment in the academy, it would be am investment in the training ground, something he has already spoken about trying to do. It's not a simple thing to sort out given the lack of room for expansion at Cottingham and no chance of moving the fair from the stadium.Glad you asked!
For a start. Making steps towards Cat 1 would be a good start. As per the FA handbook this would allow us recruit from a wider catchment area and employ more staff.
Ideally, and this will come as no surprise, bringing it to one campus alongside the first team would be a great benefit. Many players have said as such as it does give the youth a vision of what they can achieve and how they should be training and handling themselves.
Specifically to us, and I’m only saying this from people who have a fair expertise on the matter, is giving a clear pathway for youth products to break into the team. I know of one player who has left the academy because they don’t see a reasonable path.
Most of our academy at the moment is built up of youth prospects that we’ve picked up as “rejects”, for lack of a better term, due to our Cat status being inferior to teams like Leeds (Cat 1).
Someone mentioned to me the other day that the combined fees for KLP and Greaves are more than academy sales in the the same period for the majority of clubs outside of the Prem. Bristol obviously had a higher one with Alex Scott but adding those two of ours together along with the smaller ones has made our academy a very profitable one in the EFL.But only 3% of academy players ever play in the Premier League, so whatever Cat 1 academies do, it actually doesn’t work.
Someone mentioned to me the other day that the combined fees for KLP and Greaves are more than academy sales in the the same period for the majority of clubs outside of the Prem. Bristol obviously had a higher one with Alex Scott but adding those two of ours together along with the smaller ones has made out academy a very profitable one in the EFL.