Show me any over football club who’ve managed to attract too many shady characters to their doors with such seemingly such effortless ease. In Part I we saw the names of Venables and Ashby who both were banned from holding Directorships in any business for a total of seven years and the latter was even jailed. The families of the Deacons and the Gregory’s who both managed to take Pompey to the brink of bankruptcy and Milan Mandaric who despite delivering the good times back to the club, stands trial as I type accused of tax evasion with old boss Harry Redknapp. If they weren’t bad enough, the list of names continues and gets steadily worse. Only at Pompey!
Harry Redknapp
Harry’s time at Pompey brought us a multitude of memories, from FA Cup wins and promotion to the English Premier League to his departure to neighbours Southampton where to his credit he did manage to get them relegated before returning to manage us for a second time. Harry was even given the freedom of Portsmouth after his FA Cup win though I suspect he probably chooses not to come within five yards of stepping foot in the city unless he has lost all leave of his senses which with Harry is always a genuine possibility. Interestingly Mandaric also had been given the same freedom and the pair remain 2 of only 32 people to have been given the honour. Other more illustrious names include Field Marshall Montgomery and Sir Winston Churchill.
In the past week or so we’ve learnt that Harry writes like a two year old or so he claims, so the fact he managed to find out so much information on players and bring a total of 88 into the club during his time is quite a mean feet and shouldn’t be under estimated. Our ex owner Milan Mandaric stated how Harry could act like a child when he wanted to buy a player. All these it seems great characteristics for paying a manager £4.2 million a year. I know I nearly fell of my chair when I read that part too.
Redknapp originally came to Pompey as Director of Football before taking over as Manager and guiding the club to promotion winning The Championship in the process. During his time as Director of football he had managed to negotiate into his contract that he would be paid 10% of any transfer fees received for any players sold in profit, this figure then dropped to 5% when he became manager. Little wonder Harry has a reputation for being a wheeler dealer at the club’s he has managed in his time. As manager of West Ham he was paid a fee of £300,000 when the club sold defender Rio Ferdinand to Leeds United for a then record British transfer fee of £18 million. It was this payment which triggered the investigation by the HMRC into Harry’s business affairs and the accusations now levelled at him that both he and Mandaric allegedly evaded paying tax on the monies paid to him into the Monaco account he set up in the name of his dog. Perhaps he wasn’t sure how to spell Harry Redknapp. Was it one p at the end or two? I know lets use the dog’s name it’s shorter and easier to remember.
Like Mandaric, Harry will lean his fate next Tuesday when the jury decides the fate of both men. Whatever the jury decide Harry successfully pocketed money from the club and did so legitimately and with no moral qualms in taking money that could have been reinvested into the club. Mandaric saw no problem or issue with it either. Money it seems was no object at the height of success with the club. Only when Harry went scurrying like a sewer rat to Tottenham Hotspurs did we start to really work out what a mess he’d help to cause. Paying players like ex England international Sol Campbell a reported £100,000 a week was always going to end in tears let’s be honest.
Alexandre Gaydamak
In January 2006 the man more affectionately known as Sacha walked into the club to become
co-owner with Milan Mandaric. In July 2006 he became the sole owner of the club and Mandaric took on a position of Non-Executive Chairman which he held until he left the club. Sacha is son to Arcadi Gaydamak a man who in 2000 had a warrant issued for his arrest by Paris Magistrates wanting him for questioning over an alleged arms-for-oil deal with Angola in the early 1990s. Premier League officials were quick to point out that Sacha’s takeover would be subject to him passing the Fit and Proper Persons Test. Well that’s a relief then. Like the word bankruptcy this won’t be the last time in the tale that those words will crop up in the story.
co-owner with Milan Mandaric. In July 2006 he became the sole owner of the club and Mandaric took on a position of Non-Executive Chairman which he held until he left the club. Sacha is son to Arcadi Gaydamak a man who in 2000 had a warrant issued for his arrest by Paris Magistrates wanting him for questioning over an alleged arms-for-oil deal with Angola in the early 1990s. Premier League officials were quick to point out that Sacha’s takeover would be subject to him passing the Fit and Proper Persons Test. Well that’s a relief then. Like the word bankruptcy this won’t be the last time in the tale that those words will crop up in the story.
With the test passed and no problems arising from being the son of a wanted arms dealer everything was looking on the up for Pompey.
The 2006-2007 season saw the arrival of so many big names it was hard to believe that any of it was real. The following arrived on free transfers but with big contracts; Sol Campbell, Nwankwo Kanu, Sylvain Distin and Hermann Hreidarsson. In the mid 1980’s Paul Mariner was rumoured to be the best paid player in the country when he was at Pompey being paid £2,000 per week. Here we were twenty years later reportedly paying Campbell £100,000 per week, fifty times more! But the player acquisition hadn’t stopped there; those were just the free transfers;
Lauren £500,000
Andy Cole £500,000
Djimi Traore £1 million
David James £1.2 million
Niko Kranjcar £3.5 million
Sulley Muntari £7 million
Seven million pounds on a single player! Who couldn’t help but not dream that the club had won the lottery around this time? In total 14 new faces were brought in for combined fee’s of around £13.7 million. Money it seemed was no object, no fee to high and no wage to large. Pompey were spending big and really making waves in the footballing world.
The 2007 – 2008 season saw the spending continue with real aplomb;
Glen Johnson £4 million
Lassana Diarra £5.5 million
David Nugent £6 million
John Utaka £7 million
Jermaine Defoe £7.5 million
In total eight players were recruited on combined fee’s of £30 million.
Into 2008 – 2009 and we were still at it;
Hayden Mullins £2 million
Angelos Basinas £3.5 million
Nadir Belhadj £4.4 million
Younes Kaboul £5 million
Peter Crouch £10 million
Now I’ve followed the club since 1986 and my father has done since the 1950s and I am sure we are not alone in saying that the notion of Pompey ever spending ten million on one player would have been utterly ridiculous. The thing is sat here in early twenty twelve it’s still as barmy looking back at how much was better spent and the wages involved. This season was interesting for who left the club though. Sure seven players had come in for £24.9 million combined, but Muntari, Mendes, Diarra and Defoe were sold for combined fees of £47.2 million.
Just to show you how far the club had come in a decade, in the 1998-1999 season we had brought seven players in for a combined total of £630,000 and the highest fee paid was a quarter of a million for Steve Claridge. Ten years later the highest fee paid was 40 times that amount. Diarra was sold for £16.5 million! Our entire playing squad isn’t worth that now. It was shear madness to think that it could all be sustained.
Everyone now knows it couldn’t be sustained. The problem is when it’s happening and your watching Sol Campbell walk up the new Wembley steps and holding the FA Cup aloft in triumph you’re not really sat giving any thought to I wonder who’s paying for all this.
In 2006 Pompey made a loss of £912, 397 for the year which wasn’t the worst set of results for a club like Pompey. However 2007 saw a loss of £23.4 million, in 2008 £16.9 million and in 2009 £14.47 million to bring a combined total of £55.7 million. For clubs like Chelsea and Manchester City bank rolled by the personal wealth of billionaires, figures like these wouldn’t be blinked at. When the money is being funded from bank loans and the numbers land on a bank managers desk you can imagine the stench being omitted from the orifices of the Managers at Barclays and Standard Chartered Bank. They wanted their money back unsurprisingly. The salary level was 109% of the income which was the same as at Manchester City.
The club once again was again in financial meltdown only this time we’d taken the bar to an even greater height. This wasn’t £25,000 that Pompey had to find. Sacha had managed to turn the scene of chaos into one from Ben Hur; the banks were baying for blood.
CEO Peter Storrie was charged with finding a new owner for the club and fast and the stories that follow just get worse and all the more unbelievable. Gaydamak stands allegedly accused of asset stripping the club for good measure. Remarkably Sacha is still owed money by the club.
Arcadi Gaydamak
When the club was once more put up for sale by Sacha, reports starting circulating in September 2008 that Arcadi Gaydamak was laying claim to being the real owner of Portsmouth. The Jerusalem-based Russian-Israeli businessman listed all his assets to Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronot, including Portsmouth which he valued at £300million. He made the claims to counter any accusation that financial difficulties were threatening his £1 billion personal fortune.
In March 2010 CEO Peter Storrie gave an interview with Daily Telegraph journalist Henry Winter suggesting Sacha had run into problems because as he put it “Everything got frozen in Israel.”
Much has already been written about Arcadi Gaydamak over the years and as I previously mentioned at that time he had a warrant out for his arrest. One thing I can suggest is that even the English Premier League’s Fit or Proper person’s test would have seen that Arcadi Gaydamak wouldn’t have been deemed fit and proper to run a football club. But then again Thaksin Shinawatra was allowed to gain control of Manchester City so perhaps I could be wrong. Surely lessons would be learnt and the same mistakes couldn’t be made again? Surely one of the fundamental basics for passing a test to own a football club would be to prove you have the financial capability to do so.
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