Close but no prawn sarnies, on 15 December 2016 - 11:55 AM, said:
The simple reality is that Dave Allen and the directors of most football clubs invest significant amounts of time and cash into their clubs, unless you are in the premier league or one of the so called sleeping giant clubs the chance of getting your money back is remote and difficult to extract assuming its there.
In many instances the directors accept this because like us they are fans first and foremost.
We all know the likelyhood of a buyer coming to a club like ours is very slim, particularly at the quoted figures
So it would appear that we are most likely stuck with the status quo.
The frustration for every one is that for a while it looked really promising and we assumed (with improved crowds, wembley appearances, player sales, seemingly bouyant off field income) it was sustainable. Unfortunately it would appear not.
If we have been correctly managed with no abnormal costs it beggars the question how can any lower league club who has relocated survive ??
The big hope is that we will survive and normal service will resume , yo yo between leagues two and one in front of 3000-4500 home fans
pretty much what i have known in my 40 plus years watching town.
When Allen first arrived admitting his intention to invest to profit, it appeared a win-win scenario.
Grow CFC to sell?
Who could begrudge the majority shareholder his return for what he'd deliver at our club.
However few asked - and I'm as guilty as anyone - what might happen if the plan failed.
For the first few years he was as good as his word; two league titles, two Wembley visits and entertaining football in a modern stadium. But then debts largely resulting from decisions he made seemed to see him lose interest, the Club apparently becoming an expensive pain in the ass.
The plan had indeed failed.
So now we're left with an outfit populated by characters whose only connection is via their bank accounts - the four long term directors being the latest of a plethora of Chesterfield folk forced out/choosing to leave the Proact (depending on which rumours you believe) - and a business that looks a pale imitation of the 'bouncing' one initially created on Sheffield Road.
All that said it's absurd to suggest we should simply accept a return to yo-yo, Saltergate style ambitions.
We have the infrastructure and we have the fanbase.
What we don't currently have is a football club run in a straightforward, controversy free manner.