Football clubs collapse

Another two British football clubs have entered administration, joining a long line of clubs fighting for their future this season

Written by Kevin Reed

Players and coaching staff at Rotherham United were asked to take wage deferrals by administrators from XL Business Solutions.

‘Unfortunately the redundancies and wage deferrals were a necessity,’ said administrator Jeremy Bleazard.

Gretna has also entered administration and received emergency funding from the Scottish Premier League to keep the company alive. Luton Town and Bournemouth are attempting to clinch deals with buyers to secure their medium-term futures.

But Gerald Krasner, administrator at Bournemouth, warned the club’s attempt to enter a CVA could be blocked by the taxman, as football creditors would be treated as priority and a lack of a CVA could see the club face a points deduction much like Leeds United did at the beginning of the season.

Grant Thornton’s Joe McLean says the financial management bar has been raised in football clubs over the last five years.

‘The Football League has tried to encourage salary capping with some success, but it hasn’t been adopted widely,’ said McLean.

Enjoyed this article? Help spread the word:

Comments

Reader comments for this story

White papers

Related jobs

Spotlight

Ride the fast-track to success with YP

April edition of Young Professional features a guide to standing...

Bob Baddeley, Holidaybreak FD

Profile: Bob Baddeley, FD of Holidaybreak

These may be tough times for the travel industry -...

The credit crunch and fair value - a special report

This special report on fair value contains the latest news,...

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Search white papers

Search white papers

Have your say

Are online bankruptcies a good thing?
Yes, this is the 21st century after all
No, it makes it too easy to abuse

Job of the week

More finance jobs...

Your next job