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Broken Bolton: where did it all go wrong for Wanderers?

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Bollotom2014
gloswhite
xmiles
NickFazer
Hipster_Nebula
Sluffy
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Sluffy

Sluffy
Admin

It is not straightforward sometimes understanding how Bolton Wanderers have strayed dangerously close to being financially shipwrecked when it does not seem too long ago that Sam Allardyce was dancing on the pitch with Jay-Jay Okocha and they were establishing themselves as the poster-boy team for every club of that size that wanted a place at the top table.

Yet there were a few clues offered up in a case at the high court recently about the kind of financial thinking that has helped to put them into this position and the only plausible reason why it has not generated more publicity is they are no longer involved in the glare of the Premier League.

The case was brought by an agent named Tony McGill, suing for £300,000 because he claimed he had set up a deal for Gavin McCann to sign from Aston Villa only to be cut out of the arrangement when Bolton brought in the sports agency SEM “at the last minute”. McGill lost his case, having not had a binding contract with McCann, but the judge did describe him as “basically credible” whereas it was a different choice of words to describe the Bolton chairman, Phil Gartside.

Broken Bolton: where did it all go wrong for Wanderers? Phil-Gartside-the-Bolton--009

In court it emerged the agreement with SEM was dishonestly backdated to strengthen the agency’s position and, according to McGill’s lawyers, “forestall” any inquiry from the Football Association. Gartside originally claimed to have signed the document on 1 June but then admitted it was actually a week later. Judge Waksman describes the backdating as “amateurish”. He was not convinced Gartside was party to it but did note he was “becoming visibly uncomfortable when asked questions about this; I consider that he only accepted that he signed on 8 June when the other evidence rendered such a concession inevitable”. Gartside’s overall evidence, the judge concluded, contained “significant elements which were unsatisfactory”. As for SEM, the judge described evidence put forward by its chief executive, Jerome Anderson – and the supporters of Blackburn Rovers will remember this guy – as “very unreliable” and in one part “clearly implausible”. His colleague Jeff Weston was “unconvincing” and some of what he said had been “absurd”.

All that reflects badly on Gartside but it is the sums of money that really jump out and the fact that Bolton were willing to pay £300,000 in agent fees from what would ordinarily have been a routine £1m deal. Agents do not usually charge 30% unless they are dealing with exceedingly obliging clubs. And what did SEM do for that windfall? The judge makes it clear: “The result is that, in truth, SEM did little or nothing for their fee.” Little or nothing, and an invoice for £300,000, plus VAT. Nice work if you can get it.

Bolton, to recap, announced debts of £168.3m in their last financial figures, published in December. They are on their knees, without a manager and bottom of the Championship, and when the Bolton News interviewed Gartside a few days ago and asked him to explain the figures his answer was a wonderful piece of head-in-sand deflection. “I’m sick of answering that question,” he said. “If someone has been willing to invest that sort of money in this football team, why does anyone complain about it?”

That someone is the club’s owner, Eddie Davies, the Bolton-raised businessman who started watching his local team in 1958, the year Nat Lofthouse’s goals won the FA Cup, made his fortune through kettle parts and, at the age of 68, is the sole reason, from his home in the Isle of Man and via a company listed in Bermuda, why they are not rattling collection buckets outside the stadium.

Unfortunately for Gartside, the questions are perfectly legitimate given Bolton did, lest it be forgotten, spend 11 years in the most lucrative league in the world. Yes, their relegation in 2012 was a grievous setback and any club that struggles to get back under the parachute payments will inevitably suffer for it. Yet it is still staggering to see the speed at which Bolton have unravelled. There is more to it than just being a victim of circumstance and Gartside has to take a significant portion of the blame when the decision-making on his watch has been so profoundly poor.

It is certainly starting to seem like a trick of the mind that Gartside was once regarded as one of the sport’s more impressive administrators, thought of so highly he was given a place on the Wembley board and put in charge of the FA’s selection process when David Bernstein was made chairman. Then again, people used to rave about Peter Ridsdale at Leeds United. They do not have any fancy goldfish I am aware of in the ground we are now obliged to call the Macron but they do have a habit of being careless with their money and they have also been terribly short-sighted in their planning.

Johan Elmander may be taken as one example. He did not do a great deal for Bolton – he once went 11 months without a league goal – but the Swedish striker was the club’s record signing when he arrived from Toulouse in 2008. They gave him a three-year contract and, first of all, what a strange piece of business that was when a player’s valuation starts to depreciate as soon as he is down to two years. Elmander was extremely poor for two seasons then had a better third year and left for Galatasaray on a free transfer. He had cost Bolton £8.2m and he was on £45,000-a-week wages. So, in total, one player alone cost Bolton in excess of £15m.

Perhaps Gartside could explain why he considered a 31-year-old midfielder worthy of a three-year contract and £25,000-a-week wages as he did in 2012 for Keith Andrews, a moderate player who has been loaned out for the past two seasons. Yet there are plenty of other examples. The list is substantial and this, more than anything, is where Bolton have lost their money: poor signings, exorbitant wages, muddled thinking.

Gartside once described as “numpties” the Bolton supporters who dared criticise him. The volume has been turned up lately – a poll in the local newspaper shows 94% want him to resign – and the crowd are probably entitled to be jumpy when, a few miles up the road, there is another club that Bolton once looked down on but who could probably now teach them a thing or two. Wigan Athletic’s debt is a manageable £20.7m and their last financial figures showed an £822,000 profit. True, this is only their second season in the Championship, compared with Bolton’s third, and the next set of results might be revealing. Yet there is no hint of implosion; just the sense they are run with clarity and common sense.

At Bolton it is a history of strange and often unexplained goings-on if one thinks back to the infamous Panorama documentary about Allardyce and, later on, the considerable influence of Mark Curtis, one of the industry’s more controversial agents. Bolton never did get round to replying to the list of 20 questions my colleague David Conn put to them in 2007 about their financial dealings (although all of those named in the Panorama programme denied the allegations).

“I’m sick of answering that question,” Gartside said about the mountain of debt, and no doubt he is. In football the people in powerful positions never do like to go into detail when, ultimately, it might highlight their failures.

http://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2014/oct/11/phil-gartside-bolton-wanderers-abyss?CMP=twt_gu

Hipster_Nebula

Hipster_Nebula
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

I saw alot of people on twitter saying this was amazing and a "must read" for fans.

not knocking the article itself but what does it actually tell us/explore that we dont already know? We bought too many average players for far too much money and paid them and their agents too much, over and over again, not to mention the poor managerial appointments.

nothing new, to me anyway.

NickFazer

NickFazer
El Hadji Diouf
El Hadji Diouf

It all goes wrong when you start to believe in your own publicity. Egotism is a common flaw of human nature and is especially prominent in competitive or "driven" people, a feeling of infallibility that often ends in reckless and sometimes criminal behaviour, just look at the number of sports people and celebrities that go off he rails through fame and adulation.

xmiles

xmiles
Jay Jay Okocha
Jay Jay Okocha

A reasonable summary of some of the reasons why we would be better off without Gartside.

Andrews was of course another of Coyle's genius signings.

gloswhite

gloswhite
Guðni Bergsson
Guðni Bergsson

Hipster_Nebula wrote:I saw alot of people on twitter saying this was amazing and a "must read" for fans.

not knocking the article itself but what does it actually tell us/explore that we dont already know? We bought too many average players for far too much money and paid them and their agents too much, over and over again, not to mention the poor managerial appointments.

nothing new, to me anyway.

I think the change from previously, is that it is from an informed and 'legitimate' source, and cannot be ignored, whereas the same comments from supporters are studiously ignored, and even denounced as muttterings from those who don't know the game. Its an outside voice saying just what the fans have been saying for years, and with a bit of luck, it will be picked up by others outside. No matter how you read it, it shows Gartside in a very poor light, and over a few years his decisions have been wrong.
If I was ED, I would have a very serious look at Mr Gartside and his goings-on over the years.

Hipster_Nebula

Hipster_Nebula
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

thing is it's not particularly informed. The basis for it is the recent court case, his only other source of info goes all the back to that shoddy panorama programme and he tries to make a link.

the rest is just questions that basically amounts too "where did the money go?" Even though he basically answers the question in the first few paragraphs. 

what fans really want is answers, this is what a real investigation by a journalist might un-earth. 

(not suggesting he's portraying this as a big investigation btw)

Bollotom2014

Bollotom2014
Andy Walker
Andy Walker

The offshore finance 'Industry' is so murky I'm surprised that anyone involved in it can be deemed to be sutable under the FA suitability criteria. So Phil can only tell us the fairy tales he's been told

Guest


Guest

Yeah, 'cos "Phil's" squeaky clean isn't he....?

Bollotom2014

Bollotom2014
Andy Walker
Andy Walker

Not at all, Breadman, but I doubt his business acumen is on par with the real sharks, or he'd be head of Royal Mail or an MP.  Very Happy

gloswhite

gloswhite
Guðni Bergsson
Guðni Bergsson

Any raising of the profile for Gartside's misdeeds will now be overshadowed by the, hopefully, emergence of a new manager, who will start to get us moving in the right direction. (In other words, he's got away with it again)

luckyPeterpiper

luckyPeterpiper
Ivan Campo
Ivan Campo

It went wrong because Phil became much more interested in his role with the FA than with doing the job he actually gets paid for. He also is allegedly as bent as a nine bob note, surrounds himself with equally shady characters and Eddie is clearly a lot less than honest about where Moonshift and Burnden leisure actually got their money from or how more than a hundred and sixty MILLION quid has disappeared from our club despite us spending eleven straight seasons in the top flight and having four consecutive top eight finishes with two European campaigns to boot. 

The numbers will never add up because they're hidden behind things like Eddie's "success fee" that he took when Anelka was sold to Chelsea.

observer


Andy Walker
Andy Walker

luckyPeterpiper wrote:It went wrong because Phil became much more interested in his role with the FA than with doing the job he actually gets paid for. He also is allegedly as bent as a nine bob note, surrounds himself with equally shady characters and Eddie is clearly a lot less than honest about where Moonshift and Burnden leisure actually got their money from or how more than a hundred and sixty MILLION quid has disappeared from our club despite us spending eleven straight seasons in the top flight and having four consecutive top eight finishes with two European campaigns to boot. 

The numbers will never add up because they're hidden behind things like Eddie's "success fee" that he took when Anelka was sold to Chelsea.
For more information, please take LPP's newest course, "Creative Accounting 101." This is a basic course, but you can follow with "Creative Accounting 201, 301 and 401."  When you complete the course, you can then progress to LPP's latest course, "Follow the Money."  Only then, will you be able to understand the baffling world of high finance.  It's as simple as Three Card Monte!  LPP's highlights include how to tell the world your wage bill in the Championship is equal to over £30,000 a week for each and every player.  Amaze your friends with this ability.  Make money vanish before their very eyes.  It will reappear, but only you will be able to find it!

Soul Kitchen

Soul Kitchen
Ivan Campo
Ivan Campo

We've managed to shake off the flu but the cancer shows no sign of going into remission!! 
Do the honourable thing Gartside and tend your garden you odious fat person!!!!

luckyPeterpiper

luckyPeterpiper
Ivan Campo
Ivan Campo

observer wrote:
luckyPeterpiper wrote:It went wrong because Phil became much more interested in his role with the FA than with doing the job he actually gets paid for. He also is allegedly as bent as a nine bob note, surrounds himself with equally shady characters and Eddie is clearly a lot less than honest about where Moonshift and Burnden leisure actually got their money from or how more than a hundred and sixty MILLION quid has disappeared from our club despite us spending eleven straight seasons in the top flight and having four consecutive top eight finishes with two European campaigns to boot. 

The numbers will never add up because they're hidden behind things like Eddie's "success fee" that he took when Anelka was sold to Chelsea.
For more information, please take LPP's newest course, "Creative Accounting 101." This is a basic course, but you can follow with "Creative Accounting 201, 301 and 401."  When you complete the course, you can then progress to LPP's latest course, "Follow the Money."  Only then, will you be able to understand the baffling world of high finance.  It's as simple as Three Card Monte!  LPP's highlights include how to tell the world your wage bill in the Championship is equal to over £30,000 a week for each and every player.  Amaze your friends with this ability.  Make money vanish before their very eyes.  It will reappear, but only you will be able to find it!
Not entirely sure what your point is meant to be observer. But the fact remains that after eleven years in the premier league a club our size should NOT be in debt to more than a hundred and sixty million quid. And how can the owner have lent us (or invested if you prefer) almost three times his own reported total worth?

That money had to come from somewhere but Gartside says it's Eddie's money full stop when there is no way it can be. That's not creative accounts of any kind, that's numbers made available to the public as a whole and available from Company House until recently as a matter of public record. No matter how much PG wriggles and alters the dates on the paperwork the fact remains that money has genuinely vanished with no real trace as to how that happened or where it went. 

We're not the only club this has happened to either. Leeds Utd and Portsmouth wound up in serious trouble thanks to murky dealings with 'parent companies' and the like and so to a lesser degree did Southampton. 

I fear for our future, the present is a fog of 'shell companies' and 'offshore investment' yet somehow Phil thinks we're the envy of many clubs at this level thanks to our financial stability in the same breath he says we don't HAVE any money. Don't you believe that things are too murky and that a number of insanely strange things have happened given the position we've found ourselves in?

observer


Andy Walker
Andy Walker

luckyPeterpiper wrote:
observer wrote:
luckyPeterpiper wrote:It went wrong because Phil became much more interested in his role with the FA than with doing the job he actually gets paid for. He also is allegedly as bent as a nine bob note, surrounds himself with equally shady characters and Eddie is clearly a lot less than honest about where Moonshift and Burnden leisure actually got their money from or how more than a hundred and sixty MILLION quid has disappeared from our club despite us spending eleven straight seasons in the top flight and having four consecutive top eight finishes with two European campaigns to boot. 

The numbers will never add up because they're hidden behind things like Eddie's "success fee" that he took when Anelka was sold to Chelsea.
For more information, please take LPP's newest course, "Creative Accounting 101." This is a basic course, but you can follow with "Creative Accounting 201, 301 and 401."  When you complete the course, you can then progress to LPP's latest course, "Follow the Money."  Only then, will you be able to understand the baffling world of high finance.  It's as simple as Three Card Monte!  LPP's highlights include how to tell the world your wage bill in the Championship is equal to over £30,000 a week for each and every player.  Amaze your friends with this ability.  Make money vanish before their very eyes.  It will reappear, but only you will be able to find it!
Not entirely sure what your point is meant to be observer. But the fact remains that after eleven years in the premier league a club our size should NOT be in debt to more than a hundred and sixty million quid. And how can the owner have lent us (or invested if you prefer) almost three times his own reported total worth?

That money had to come from somewhere but Gartside says it's Eddie's money full stop when there is no way it can be. That's not creative accounts of any kind, that's numbers made available to the public as a whole and available from Company House until recently as a matter of public record. No matter how much PG wriggles and alters the dates on the paperwork the fact remains that money has genuinely vanished with no real trace as to how that happened or where it went. 

We're not the only club this has happened to either. Leeds Utd and Portsmouth wound up in serious trouble thanks to murky dealings with 'parent companies' and the like and so to a lesser degree did Southampton. 

I fear for our future, the present is a fog of 'shell companies' and 'offshore investment' yet somehow Phil thinks we're the envy of many clubs at this level thanks to our financial stability in the same breath he says we don't HAVE any money. Don't you believe that things are too murky and that a number of insanely strange things have happened given the position we've found ourselves in?
Sorry that you did not understand the humour in it, but I totally agree with your point of view.  We were not paying 30,000 quid to each and every player every week... which would have added up to the number Gartside said the club was spending.  But it takes higher accounting skills (which was the humourous portion) to achieve such mastery of hiding numbers.  What my equivalent to this is, is the game of Three Card Monte.  You can watch the cards go round and round, but you have no idea of what happened and how things switched positions.  In this case, it is accounting genius... and Gartside does not want to be asked about it.  Remember the judge's admonition to him in court.  At the present, I think only a few really understand where the money is and what benefits have been taken by the corporations involved. If I were ED, and I had a genius accountant who could dazzle me with the movement of monies, I would keep him in my employ.  Hence, why Gartside is around.  If it was for the football business, he would have been ousted a long time ago.  Hence, we have to conclude, he is a master of accounting and of keeping the corporations solvent and ED happy.

wanderlust

wanderlust
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

The economics are very dubious but I think that the reason we're in this position is unrealistic expectation from the fans and the weak Board's inability to manage expectations or control their managers. Allardyce was basically given a book of blank cheques and Lee, Megson and Coyle didn't fare much worse - although it's difficult to work out who was the biggest culprit on balance.

If we hadn't spent the money that was asked for, we probably wouldn't have stayed in the Premiership for anywhere near as long as we did.
The only reason the big players came to us was because we'd pay them and their agents over the odds and we quickly established a reputation as a "soft touch" in the market - a reputation that Dougie has gone a long way to dismantling.
Unsurprising then that it wasn't sustainable and that loyalty to the shirt was transitory.
Perhaps if the Board had stood up and been counted we wouldn't have swapped our longer term future for a couple of seasons flirting with Europe?

That said, as I write I'm drinking a coffee out of my BWFC v Atletico Madrid mug....

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