Showing posts with label owners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label owners. Show all posts

Monday, October 18, 2010

Liverpool slump in front of new owners

Liverpool's new owners watched their team slump to a comprehensive 2-0 defeat at Merseyside rivals Everton which sent them second bottom of the Premier League on Sunday.

Manchester City won 3-2 at Blackpool to move second in the table after Liverpool owners John W Henry and Tom Werner watched goals by Tim Cahill and Mikel Arteta condemn the five-times European champions to their fourth defeat of the season.

Fernando Torres went closest for the visitors at Goodison Park when his first-half header was turned over the bar by Everton keeper Tim Howard, but Liverpool offered little else.

They slipped one place in the standings on goal difference, level on six points with Wolverhampton Wanderers and bottom-placed West Ham United.

Chelsea stayed top after a 0-0 draw at Aston Villa on Saturday. City are second, two points behind, Arsenal third after a 2-1 win at home to Birmingham City and Manchester United fourth after a 2-2 draw with West Bromwich Albion at Old Trafford.

Hodgson under pressure

Henry's New England Sports Ventures, owners of the Boston Red Sox baseball team, completed a takeover of Liverpool on Friday after contentious legal battles with the previous US owners, Tom Hicks and George Gillett.

The jubilant scenes in London on Friday concluded one of the most dramatic weeks in Liverpool's 118-year history, yet the euphoria of the takeover battle did not carry over to the pitch.

Everton fans taunted their counterparts with chants of "Going down" after the defeat that left Liverpool 19th in the table, their lowest ever position in the Premier League.

Manager Roy Hodgson was given a vote of confidence by Henry before Sunday's match, but the defeat is certain to focus attention on the future of the Englishman who has presided over Liverpool's worst start to a season for over 50 years.

"I don't feel it to be a crisis,” Hodgson told Sky Sports. “The way we played today -- I don't think anyone would believe that's the level of football a team in the bottom three or four would play.”

"On the other hand, there's six points from eight games and that's a very, very poor return.

“We do need to start winning and climbing up that table soon, and until we do so I daresay the word 'crisis' will be bandied around."

Determined run

The breakthrough came from Seamus Coleman's determined run into the area. The Irish defender's cross took a deflection and the ball sat up for Cahill to drill his finish past Jose Reina.

Everton doubled their lead five minutes after halftime, when Sotiros Kyrgiakos's headed clearance from a corner fell to an unmarked Arteta, whose right-foot shot from the edge of the area swerved viciously and left Reina clutching at air.

At Bloomfield Road, Carlos Tevez put City ahead after 67 minutes with a neat touch at the near post from James Milner's cross.

Marlon Harewood got the faintest of touches to a free kick to bring Blackpool level with a header in the 78th minute, but City were back in front within a minute. Argentine Tevez robbed defender Ian Evatt -- who claimed he was fouled -- and his shot took a deflection before finding the bottom corner.

Spain forward David Silva made it three with a splendid solo goal, selling two dummies in the area and curling home a left-foot shot. Gary Taylor-Fletcher's stoppage-time strike was a consolation for the home side.

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Saturday, October 9, 2010

Liverpool agree sale but legal battle looms

Liverpool's board has agreed to sell the club to the owners of baseball's Boston Red Sox but the fate of England's most successful soccer team could yet be decided in court as an ownership dispute rages on.

The Premier League club said on Wednesday they had accepted a 300 million pounds (US$477.6 million) offer from New England Sports Ventures (NESV) but the deal is being complicated because they are facing a legal challenge from their current owners.

Americans Tom Hicks and George Gillett sought on Tuesday to replace two members of the five-man board with their own people in a final bid to retain control.

Hicks and Gillett also confirmed their commitment to selling Liverpool but said the current offer "dramatically" undervalued the club.

"The board has been legally reconstituted and the new board does not approve of this proposed transaction," a spokesman for the owners said.

The proposed deal's price tag of $477.6 million includes $317.8 million in writing down all acquisition debt and taking on additional working capital debts and other liabilities.

The club's American owners would also not have been happy to hear that a sale to NESV has the support of Liverpool's major creditors Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), according to a source familiar with the situation.

Liverpool chairman Martin Broughton said he was disappointed the current owners had "tried everything to prevent the deal from happening" but added the potential new owners were the best people for the job.

An NESV statement said it wanted to "stabilize the club and ultimately return Liverpool FC to its rightful place in English and European football, successfully competing for and winning trophies."

Unpopular owners

Hicks and Gillett bought the Merseyside club in February 2007 for $347.9 million and have been unpopular with fans for burdening it with debt, leaving little money for transfers.

Fans have held many protests calling for their departure, blaming the club's worst start to a season for more than half a century on a lack of new players, but they still struck a note of caution.

"We've heard all these promises before and it amounted to very little," James McKenna, a representative of the Spirit of Shankly supporters group, told Reuters.

Broughton sought to allay such fears, saying NESV wanted to create a 60,000-seater stadium in a "short timetable" -- be it a new ground or an expansion of Anfield -- and pointed to their track record with the Red Sox.

"NESV's philosophy is all about winning and they have fully demonstrated that at Red Sox," he said, referring to the two World Series the team won in 2004 and 2007 after an 86-year wait.

The first title came two years after the takeover by NESV, headed by multi-millionaire John W. Henry.

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