ALL three of the remaining bidders for Rangers have refused to rule out liquidating the club, should they get their hands on it in the coming weeks. It emerged on Friday that Club 9 Sports, one of the groups interested in purchasing the club, have liquidation as part of their strategy (thought it not is their only strategy), but it is now believed that the other two, the Blue Knights and a Singaporean consortium, would also consider forming a new company if they felt they had no other option. Probably for the first time in public, the Rangers administrators gave serious credence yesterday to the possibility of the club having to be liquidated. They donât see it as a fait accompli, but they have certainly altered their position, which was previously to say that liquidation was not really on the cards. âThe preferred option remains a CVA,â said co-administrator Paul Clark. âAnd we still think itâs achievable and weâre still recommending that as the preferred course of action to the bidders. We must accept, though, that we have in Rangers a financially-stricken institution and there is an amount of toxicity in there as a result of whatâs gone on. So all of the options have to remain open and it may be that some of the bidders decide that they would rather start afresh. We prefer a CVA but it has to be a credible arrangement. Itâs a fine balancing act. âCVA is our option and it remains an option for all of the bidders. However, we cannot rule out the winning bid could prefer a different structure that meant the sale of the business to a new company and in that eventuality it is certainly possible that Rangers would be liquidated, but it would only be done so after the football club was made safe.â In what has become an intensely complex affair, Duff & Phelps have called for final and best bids by Wednesday. They are keeping the door open to all-comers until then, including any party who might not yet have got involved, or Brian Kennedy who stood back from the process last week. The best-case scenario is that, by Friday of this week, or more likely just after Easter, a preferred bidder will be announced. Clark refused to comment on speculation that Club 9 are in the box-seat now. âVery soon we will have our front-runner, our single party and that party will enter into an exclusivity period of probably two to three weeks so we can get the final deal in place. Our strategy remains to have an owner installed before the end of the season. It will be tight but itâs feasible. We will be locked into an agreement with one party either side of the Easter weekend. The situation remains fluid. I donât think you should assume that each party has just come up with a single solution [CVA or liquidation].â It is understood that all parties have different scenarios in their bids, a plan for a CVA and a plan for liquidation and even, in the case of at least one of the bids, some kind of intricate hybrid of the two. Clark repeated his view that Craig Whyte will not be an impediment to a sale without explaining precisely what their plan is to remove him from his shareholding. It emerged also that the police have tried to contact Whyte as regards concerns they may have for his personal safety if he proves stubborn and refuses to back away from the scene. Whyte, itâs believed, hasnât yet responded to their calls. Paul Murray, of the Blue Knights, was critical of the administrators yesterday in that regard. âThe administrators believe there are legal mechanisms to get the shares from Craig Whyte. What Iâd say is, why didnât they start that legal action seven weeks ago, rather than now? The last thing Rangers need is more protracted legal battles. There are so many things to sort out â player contracts for instance,â he said. âIf itâs not resolved in the next couple of weeks, I fear they might not be able to do a CVA.â In terms of the stories linking West Brom with a bid for Steven Naismith, the administrator wouldnât directly confirm or deny it, but he did say thereâs been interest in some of the Rangers players. âI will say that we have had approaches in relation to player transfers. Weâve had some approaches and we will have discussions with Ally McCoist before any decisions are made. Weâre not in a position to make any decisions at the moment in any case. âI should say that it was only a few weeks ago that the players made sacrifices in terms of accepting huge cuts to their salary and had they not accepted those cuts then the issue of bids for players wouldnât have existed because we would have had to let them go. They might not have been around to attract offers. There wouldnât have been any decisions to make. Theyâd have been gone.â If there is a feeling that we are approaching endgame in the purchase of the club, there is still much uncertainty about what that outcome might look like. From their position of downplaying a liquidation, the administrators have shifted somewhat. The coming week will be another full of frenzied activity. http://www.scotsman.com/scotland-on...inistrators-position-on-liquidation-1-2209479
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/17576834 dave king's view. the only people who do not think they will be liquidated are rangers fans. obviously this is a timmy conspiracy
Yes I did wonder about that, seems the new trend in company liquidations is having your cake and eating it. I assume they want to retain the Rangers FC name, history and honours, I have no other guess apart from that.
"Acquiring the club would be the easy part from a funding perspective," he told BBC Scotland. "I believe that the Ticketus claim will ultimately not survive legal scrutiny. Says the man who owes the SA tax authorities a fortune.
the press have just started to soften them up for liquidation. also have not seen anything in the media about channel 4 on friday. i wonder why
A good sensible article ,Dev well research. Liquidation is the only viable option because the people who buy the club now will not be in it for the long time. Two or three years maximum and having stabilized the club, they would hope towards the top of the SPL these buyers will walk away with as much profit as possible. Current buyers cannot get Rangers back as a growing concern if faced with approximately £100m debts at the outset. £20 or £30m tops would give them an opportunity to steer to calmer waters and have something to sell. To much pressure on poor Craig Whyte will mean he will stick his heals in and their could be legal cases for five years which would not be in the buyers interest, so it will take a light touch with Whyte.
A newco could keep the name I guess. Seeing as nobody is using it. even the livery and all that ****e......Although the numbers 1, 8, 7, 3 will mean nothing. The history is gone though. That can't be kept.
I don't think that's allowed either, they could become Glasgow Rangers, that would be the sensible choice I think seeing as how most people think that's what they are anyway.
Isn't this Craig Whytes plan? Spend **** all for club Liquidation but ring fence stadium New co with stadium sold for silly money to silly billy
I just read a different report of the same story in the express. A canny bit of word play from Paul Clark that pretty much amounts to what you are saying....or maybe he just ****ed up. The fun would come when 2-3 newcos vie over the lineage of Rangers.......which none of them will have anyway. Paul Clark of Duff and Phelps said: “The preferred option remains a CVA. We still think it’s achievable and we’re still recommending that as the preferred course of action to the bidders. “But we must accept that we have in Rangers a financially stricken institution so all of the options have to remain open. “I may be that some of the bidders decide that they would rather start afresh. “We prefer a CVA but it has to be a credible arrangement. It’s a fine balancing act. CVA is our option and it remains an option for all of the bidders. “However, we can’t rule out the winning bidder could prefer a different structure that would mean the sale of the business to a new company. “In that eventuality it is certainly possible that Rangers would be liquidated, but it would only be done so after the football club was made safe. “You can name-swap so there is no impediment to any newco calling itself Glasgow Rangers. The name can be secured, there’s no issue there. “Therefore RFC is saved but the shell that it used to operate from – and I understand the history of it – would be the thing that disappears. The club remains but the corporate shell goes. “I’m not saying that it is the most likely outcome but it probably needs to be put out there.”
Yeah. It looked that way. I am still not sure the margins and time are worth it for him. He took a big risk with media spin, but that is going to plan too now.
Cant happen the now as liquidating mid season would mean no relegation and they would have no choice but to start again in the 3rd division. So why bring it up the now? Bit of a PR disaster to be honest.
Liquidating any time should mean that a new team has to start at the bottom. Electing a team into the top flight is an absolute joke. That is the kind of **** they did in 1912, not 2012. There will be enough resistance to that to stop in happening. The Huns sniffing round StMirren know that too. This is being done to prepare the Huns for death. Looking at the Kübler-Ross model, these lies and spin help to bring all the Huns on at the same pace. 1) Denial- No ****in way are we gettin' liquidised pal. Wan hundrit n' forty years ae unsurpassed dignity juss wiped oot? Nae chance. Rab Ignoose must stay oopen. B) Anger- Why are none ae ye ****s daein nuthin? That ****in' Liewhell and Rhegan basturts are the cause ae awra this. iii) Bargaining- Aw right....If we ar pure liquidised n'at we'll stay in ra SPL an' keep oor histree n'at. That is where we are right now. next is depression, then acceptance.
Hmm, Ive already registered " Glasgow Rangers " as a company name for one wing of rogueleader enterprises ltd. I suppose they could buy it from me if they`re really stuck.
In honesty I only found out about a year ago myself that huns take a bit of an exception, for some reason, to being called Glasgow Rangers. So a few years back, when I last seen the Belfast hun in question, I never recognised GRFC as being particularly unusual.