The Right Result

Archive for February, 2008

NEWCASTLE UNITED v MIDDLESBROUGH - Owen-ed some luck

Sunday 3rd February 2008

newcastle-v-middlesbro.jpg

Panel Decision

Three games into the second Keegan era and no wins and no goals, it seemed that Newcastle United had got off to the perfect start in the Tyne - Tees derby at St James’ Park. The early goal was chalked off though for an alleged foul on Middlesbrough keeper Mark Schwarzer by Michael Owen. However, we can see no such foul and, for the fourth time this season, we rule in favour of the England striker and the goal should have stood. To rub salt in to the Toon wounds, Boro grabbed a point with a late Robert Huth header. That goal should have been disallowed as Lee Dong Gook was offside under the ‘interfering with an opponent criteria’. It is difficult to state a case in Boro’s defence as the Korean international jumped well within touching distance of a Newcastle defender. It seems inevitable that his movement must have been deceiving or distracting an opponent.

The Right Result is a 2-0 win for Newcastle United.

3 comments February 4th, 2008 The Right Result


ROBOT CAMEL JOCKEYS

1604866.jpgAs ever, no use turning to BBC’s Alan Green. His insight into Liverpool’s financial travails equated to don’t know, don’t care. “I’m no financial expert,” confirmed the commentator who regularly has to ask Graham Taylor what’s going on.

But despite the forests laid waste by its media coverage, the Liverpool saga is simple. Two Americans borrowed money to buy Liverpool, borrowed again to repay the loan and will make Liverpool repay that loan. OK?

The sub-plots have provided the complexities…and the entertainment. And if the borrowers are as irony-free as many Americans appear, these sub-plots will be lost on them. The major irony is that Liverpool fans had the choice of serial borrowers or human rights de-activists, after months decrying…er…serial borrowers (Glazer) and human rights de-activists (Thaksin), leaving die-hard Scouse militants supporting a Dubai dictatorship’s takeover-plan.

Some revelations about Dubai’s ruling Maktoum family would sit comfortably in a Chris Morris spoof (and I’m convinced Morris is behind them). The Economist’s ‘index of democracy’ has Dubai two notches below Zimbabwe. And allegations of mass exploitation of migrant-workers have been trumped by those of child-abuse relating to the family’s camel-racing interests. Child camel jockeys (yes!) have been banned as a result and replaced with…ROBOT…camel jockeys. Hilarious, if it wasn’t so awful. The borrowers’ financial-creativities are trifles besides.

Hicks is so distrusted (Gillett’s recent silence being top-notch PR) that you half-wonder if the ‘O’ in ‘Thomas O. Hicks’ is a clumsy (Al)Fayed-style affectation to appeal to Liverpool’s Irish affinities. Not that unpopularity phases him – even if Gillett HAS voted ‘go now’ in some local-paper polls.

He certainly has no Liverpool affinities, what friend of George W. Bush would? He funded Dubya’s election campaigns for Texas governor and leader of the free world. And his 1999 purchase of Texas Rangers baseball team netted minor investor Bush $15m – the club’s value increasing in part due to its new, taxpayer-funded, stadium. Hicks also benefited from $50bn-worth of debt-led takeovers before Liverpool (not always benefiting the companies).

The danger signs for Liverpool were immediate. Dallas Morning News sportswriter Tim Cowlishaw warned: “He knows nothing about soccer…he will view it as an investment.” “Work to start the new stadium in 60 days” (Gillett, February 2007) became work to start breaking promises in 60 days. And six months ago, Hicks’ deal with investment bank Goldman Sachs to ‘roll’ their loans into one – secured against Liverpool’s assets – foundered on Goldman’s insistence on increased personal investment. This one loan was sixteen times Liverpool’s operating profits. Twice as large as Glazer’s loans-to-operating profits ratio.

Critics were muffled by PR-machines, Champions League success and £26m on Torres. And some dealt with themselves. One American supporters-club member was withdrawn from a SKY interview after “telling the producer Hicks and Gillett were two-bit hustlers. It wasn’t the narrative the PR agency paid for.” No kidding.

AFC Liverpool” notions foundered on lack of protest experience among fans. FC United and AFC Wimbledon’s founders had years of it – their clubs’ continuing success a testament. So ‘Shares Liverpool FC’ was a positive. The idea of fans organising and funding large buy-outs needs testing. Finding 100,000 Liverpool fans with £5,000 spare each IS a test. But they can’t have better leadership than Rogan Taylor, who has spoken more football-sense than I’ve had hot dinners, since the post-Heysel formation of the Football Supporters AssociatioN.

Many clubs, from Real Madrid to Rushden, are mutually-owned, with one shareholder, one vote a common practice. And the shares non-tradeable. “Enormous potential” was the Supporters Trust movement’s take on SLFC. One practical problem, though. Hicks says the club is not for sale (and who would doubt his word?), even at the £500m which would ‘earn’ him ten times more this year than the most over-paid Premier League prima-donna).

The startling number of Hicks-apologists among football fans (i.e. ANY) would doubtless disapprove. On the Guardian’s web-site, of all places, someone asked: “Do people want Hicks to use his own money (to buy Liverpool)?” The response “Why not?” was deemed “moronic.” That near-billionaire Hicks shouldn’t offload costs onto fans or should be judged on his benefit to football not his bank balance was dismissed as quaint.

You borrow money to buy a house” they cried, presumably someone else paying their mortgages. Which reminded me of a joke. An old man complaining: “£3.50 for a cup of tea??” A young man answering: “Well, I didn’t INVITE you, Grandad.” Supporters’ money funds core club activities NOT their takeovers. But if the Guardian is a guide, such takeovers could become the new orthodoxy. (With better timing than the actual tackle, Jamie Garragher’s penalty-giveaway at Upton Park landed Liverpool outside the European qualification places. Should they end the season there, whither the borrowers’ business plan? The question remains rhetorical).

Because “football is a business and these financial requirements will introduce better management into football…it will be in everybody’s interests to have a well-run club.” Liverpool undeniably required such discipline. Despite the Champions League runs, the borrowers inherited debts of at least £44.8m (reference to which does nothing for CEO Rick Parry’s cascading popularity-rating, Parry already painfully-perched “on the horns of a dilemma” after his support for the borrowers brought them to Anfield instead of DIC).

But that quote came from 1997, ‘justifying’ stock-market flotation. And while, on an abacus, the theory had legs, in the ‘real world’ Hicks-apologists bang on about, it got taken out at the knees. The uncertainties which provide football’s major appeal proved too much for a certainty-hungry stock market.

And they will for American billionaires “building the value of the brand.” Because the brand could be Man Yoo (and no sane person can rely on Michael Dawson every week, speaks an angry Spurs fan)…or Derby. “There’s no reason why we can’t make Derby an iconic worldwide brand” declared new owner Andy Appleby, ignoring the league table.

The borrowers’ charge-sheet extends beyond the above. Gillett’s ignored, Glazer-esque statement that the new stadium’s “upgraded supporter experience” would be “factored into ticket costs” (an upgraded spending experience?). Hicks’ mid-summer nod to his domestic audience: “People are worried I might take money from Rangers to go to Liverpool. But it’s the reverse.” And his breathtaking financial misjudgement: “Liverpool is going to throw off lots of money.” He was right to wonder why Liverpool “threw off” £26m for Torres and dropped him every fortnight, but still…

Not to mention their original offer document’s ‘assurance’ (too late) that debt-interest payments “will not depend to any significant (my italics) on the business of Liverpool.” On one’s definition of ‘significant’ hangs the view that Hicks planned all this all along.

It’s ending in tears already. When a plan involves “the richest club in the world” (Man Yoo) sucking up to Saudi Arabia BECAUSE…THEY…NEED…THE…MONEY…, that plan is NOT working. Hell awaits.

WHICH NEEDS NO FURTHER COMMENT:

Despite he not having kicked a competitive football in four months, David Beckham’s non-inclusion in Capello’s first England squad was deemed more newsworthy than Robert Green’s (how many Villa games DID Capello watch?).

So fortunately, there was considered opinion to hand when the media went looking on Thursday: “He’s a strong character, he’ll bounce back. He’ll get his 100th cap,” said one.

And the source of this insight? Elton John.

Which needs no further comment.

‘MotorMurph’ is written by Mark Murphy

Add comment February 4th, 2008 The Right Result


BLACKBURN ROVERS v EVERTON - The Wiley balloon goes up

Saturday 2nd February 2008

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Panel Decision

Having been in charge of the balloon-assisted FA Cup game at Sheffield United last week, it seems that Alan Wiley’s confidence may have been blown. One of the top performing refs had an unusually controversial day at Ewood Park to leave Everton fuming. The Toffees should have been awarded a second-half penalty following Zurab Khizanishvili’s awkward challenge on Andrew Johnson. The former Crystal Palace ace has reason to be doubly aggreived as his later ‘goal’ that was disallowed for offside was valid. It seems that Mr Wiley’s assistant had become confused by Blackburn Rovers keeper Brad Friedel charging outside of his area and beyond his colleagues. At least two opponents remained nearer to the Rovers goal-line than the Everton striker.

The Right Result is a 2-0 win for Everton.

13 comments February 4th, 2008 The Right Result


PORTSMOUTH v CHELSEA - Fratton duck broken

Saturday 2nd February 2008

portsmouth-v-chelsea.jpg

Panel Decision

Six months in to the campaign, Fratton Park has finally become the last Premier League venue to be subject to a Right Result decision. And, just like buses, you wait ages for one then two come along together. With the score at 0-0 in the first-half, Portsmouth should have been awarded a penalty due to a deliberate handball by Chelsea right-back Juliano Belletti. After the break, it seemed that deadline signing Jermain Defoe had continued his record on scoring on his debut for a new club. However, the new Pompey marksman had just advanced in to an offside position before firing his shot past Petr Cech. And after all that fuss and long wait, as the two incidents cancel themselves out, the result remains as the same.

The Right Result is a 1-1 draw.

1 comment February 4th, 2008 The Right Result


TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR v MANCHESTER UNITED - Pen from Evra

Saturday 2nd February 2008

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Panel Decision

An old maxim is that good teams can win despite playing poorly. Manchester United have taken it one step further by winning when they’ve drawn! United failed to find the familiar fluency at White Hart Lane and escaped with a draw via a last gasp goal. However the late, late equaliser could have been trebled in value. Replays from behind the goal revealed a definite push by Aaron Lennon as left-back Patrice Evra stormed in to the Spurs area when United trailed 0-1 in the first-half. It could maybe be classed as an attacker’s challenge but, nonetheless, should have resulted in a vital penalty for the below-par visitors.

The Right Result is a 2-1 win for Manchester United.

4 comments February 4th, 2008 The Right Result


MANCHESTER CITY v ARSENAL - Eduardo denied

Saturday 2nd February 2008

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Panel Decision

Another impressive display by Arsenal was probably more worthy of a greater margin than their eventual 3-1 victory at Manchester City. However, we have to peg the Gunners back to a single goal success. Despite a splendid piece of finishing, Eduardo had strayed into an offside position before converting the second goal.

The Right Result is a 2-1 win for Arsenal.

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