According to our last audited accounts, published last December, our debt to Marcus Evans stood at £89.26m. The good news is that the debt is owed entirely to Evans and not to any third party organisation, avoiding complications or forced repayments. The bad news is that if Evans was to sell the club on, a potential buyer would have to pay the value of club, plus the debt to Evans, and then anything extra Evans wants. The figure was £32m when Evans originally bought the club. That was the price for backing Keane and Jewell with wasted millions and then having to leave McCarthy and Hurst to work within tight budgets.
As Warky said, I’d love a big cash injection to help Hurst (hopefully Evans will be tempted in a couple of windows time if he sees progression), but that £89m figure will keep on inching upwards regardless. Surely it’s better to keep it manageable than risk adding another £20m onto it by splashing out? Had Evans surrounded himself with better advisors and football people when he initially took over, there is a good chance that the figure wouldn’t be that high and we would have had a promotion campaign by now.