by Modgull » 05 May 2013, 07:10
Its that time of year again when the forum goes a bit quiet so I thought I would try and liven things up with a rant, a rant that my son puts to me very forcefully.
The rant is - why are Clubs allowed to massively overspend and therefore cheat their way to success and then, when they go bust - causing untold misery for all the poor creditors - they can take a modest 10 point penalty (often, like Portsmouth, when they are already down) and then start the cycle all over again?
His rant was precipitated by the rumour that Rene Howe has been offered a lucrative three year contract by Argyle, something we could never afford to do. Remember, Argyle went into administration owing something like £17M and creditors got less than a penny in the pound from the administration process. Many went bust and one, apparently, was a charity.
And, of course, Portsmouth start next season level with us despite going into administration twice in short order.
When Luton did this they had a 30 point deduction in the following season so where is the consistency?
In Scotland, Rangers had to start again at the bottom but that was because they were liquidated I believe.
Surely, the only way to make Clubs more responsible is to increase the penalties and publish them at the outset (I am not sure if this is already done?)
What do Members of this forum think?
Its that time of year again when the forum goes a bit quiet so I thought I would try and liven things up with a rant, a rant that my son puts to me very forcefully.
The rant is - why are Clubs allowed to massively overspend and therefore cheat their way to success and then, when they go bust - causing untold misery for all the poor creditors - they can take a modest 10 point penalty (often, like Portsmouth, when they are already down) and then start the cycle all over again?
His rant was precipitated by the rumour that Rene Howe has been offered a lucrative three year contract by Argyle, something we could never afford to do. Remember, Argyle went into administration owing something like £17M and creditors got less than a penny in the pound from the administration process. Many went bust and one, apparently, was a charity.
And, of course, Portsmouth start next season level with us despite going into administration twice in short order.
When Luton did this they had a 30 point deduction in the following season so where is the consistency?
In Scotland, Rangers had to start again at the bottom but that was because they were liquidated I believe.
Surely, the only way to make Clubs more responsible is to increase the penalties and publish them at the outset (I am not sure if this is already done?)
What do Members of this forum think?