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The 2016 Takeover Thread


Sam3773

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18 minutes ago, The Fun Factory said:

Will we now have a five year plan?

If it's the Chinese, it's more likely to be a 500 year plan.

*Zhou Enlai French Revolution reference

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1 minute ago, jonny-recession said:

If I'm not mistaken aren't PSG owned by the state of Qatar? 

Not sure that being owned or backed by the Chinese Government is the worst thing in the world if it follows that model.

I think everyone is just concerned that if these "grants" they are giving us are suddenly used against us. It's very easy for someone on the receiving end of things to suddenly be held accountable if the giver starts to believe their time and money was wasted. The last thing we want is to be held to ransom by basically China. 

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7 hours ago, Made In Aston said:

Also Hollis told Shelley Oz of MOMS that the deal would be game changing

Pretty sure this is lost in translation. She asked someone if they thought it would be a game changer.

Nobody has actually said it will be game changing.

Would love it though.

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4 minutes ago, villan_007 said:

Pretty sure this is lost in translation. She asked someone if they thought it would be a game changer.

Nobody has actually said it will be game changing.

Would love it though.

yep. Definitely a bit of chinese whispers....

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http://m.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/36318889

Relegated Aston Villa could be sold to a Chinese businessman by the end of this week for as little as £60m.

American Randy Lerner, who bought the club a decade ago for a similar sum, is closer to a deal than at any time since putting it up for sale in 2014.

The unnamed buyer's team is now looking over Villa's financial records.

A new manager for the Midlands club - likely to be either Nigel Pearson or Roberto di Matteo - will not be announced until the deal is done.

There have been several approaches made to Lerner since he put Villa up for sale but none have progressed as far as this.

Villa are preparing for life in the Championship following their relegation from the Premier League.

They finished bottom of the table with 17 points after sacking Remi Garde at the end of March.

Former Leicester City manager Pearson and ex-Chelsea and West Bromwich Albion boss Di Matteo are the two favoured candidates to replace the Frenchman.

Both men have management experience of the Championship, a division Villa find themselves in for the first time since 1987-88.

The double announcement of new owner and manager could coincide, but there are still numerous hurdles to be cleared.

A purchase agreement must be signed, proof of funds is necessary and the Football League needs to approve of the potential investor.

Lerner has accepted blame for Villa's relegation

Although Lerner wants out of Villa, he is still concerned that his successor has the club's best interests at heart.

Any new owner will need to pump in more than just the estimated purchase price of around £60m.

Additional money will be needed for the appointment of a new manager and his support staff, as well as a new chief executive, a finance director and a commercial director.

The club may also need to pay up the contracts of unwanted players and find funds to bring in ones more suited to the rigours of Championship football.

Giving established players long contracts in the past year, as well as signing 12 new ones last summer to the tune of £55m, means Villa's first-team squad is thought to have 74 years left on contracts.

The man earmarked as the new chief executive is Keith Wyness, who did the job at Everton for five years until 2009.

Wyness was well-regarded in his time at Everton and has built up extensive contacts in football, including in China.

He has also acted as a consultant in buying and selling clubs, while also advising clubs on developments of stadiums and training grounds.

Wyness has been seen at Villa Park on match days recently and has started to follow Villa-related social media accounts.

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Good to see that Pat 'the voice of Midlands football' Murphy is capable of quoting what's been on VT for days.....utter clown.

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It's nothing to do with racism. 

The Chinese government stinks from arsehole to breakfast. 

If they are our new owners I'll be seriously considering whether I continue any connection with this club (and thus football at all).

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5 minutes ago, Harry said:

Good to see that Pat 'the voice of Midlands football' Murphy is capable of quoting what's been on VT for days.....utter clown.

He has said it will be an individual, not a consortium or government backed. Which differs from everything else talked about recently. 

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16 minutes ago, Barney_avfc said:

http://m.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/36318889

Relegated Aston Villa could be sold to a Chinese businessman by the end of this week for as little as £60m.

American Randy Lerner, who bought the club a decade ago for a similar sum, is closer to a deal than at any time since putting it up for sale in 2014.

The unnamed buyer's team is now looking over Villa's financial records.

A new manager for the Midlands club - likely to be either Nigel Pearson or Roberto di Matteo - will not be announced until the deal is done.

There have been several approaches made to Lerner since he put Villa up for sale but none have progressed as far as this.

Villa are preparing for life in the Championship following their relegation from the Premier League.

They finished bottom of the table with 17 points after sacking Remi Garde at the end of March.

Former Leicester City manager Pearson and ex-Chelsea and West Bromwich Albion boss Di Matteo are the two favoured candidates to replace the Frenchman.

Both men have management experience of the Championship, a division Villa find themselves in for the first time since 1987-88.

The double announcement of new owner and manager could coincide, but there are still numerous hurdles to be cleared.

A purchase agreement must be signed, proof of funds is necessary and the Football League needs to approve of the potential investor.

 

Lerner has accepted blame for Villa's relegation

Although Lerner wants out of Villa, he is still concerned that his successor has the club's best interests at heart.

Any new owner will need to pump in more than just the estimated purchase price of around £60m.

Additional money will be needed for the appointment of a new manager and his support staff, as well as a new chief executive, a finance director and a commercial director.

The club may also need to pay up the contracts of unwanted players and find funds to bring in ones more suited to the rigours of Championship football.

Giving established players long contracts in the past year, as well as signing 12 new ones last summer to the tune of £55m, means Villa's first-team squad is thought to have 74 years left on contracts.

The man earmarked as the new chief executive is Keith Wyness, who did the job at Everton for five years until 2009.

Wyness was well-regarded in his time at Everton and has built up extensive contacts in football, including in China.

He has also acted as a consultant in buying and selling clubs, while also advising clubs on developments of stadiums and training grounds.

Wyness has been seen at Villa Park on match days recently and has started to follow Villa-related social media accounts.

 

Well if the the unnamed buyer is looking at our financial records then there is a fair chance they will pull out. Our financial records are bloody awful :lol:

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