nestegg wrote:
Ok. You may be right. Pl educate us.
1) Kindly list the 5 most poignant reasons;
2) Discuss the other alternatives, and
3) What would you do Mr Deputy Dog ?
We reiterate ..... one of the nesteggers (who claims to be the Bulls #1 fan) has been .....
lol
PEST-NEG
I would go and talk to the creditors and explain to them that they can either wait a bit and get their money or spit their dummy out now and get nothing. Which is sort of an informal CVA but in our case without the 12 point deduction. And is remarkably similar to what CB appears to be doing, although for your own (probably histrionic) purposes you describe this process as bullying. I agree with STUL, your business naivety is funny, to the point of being pitiable. If you are short of cash then there are plenty of awkward decisions to make such as do we pay over the paye or do we fold the whole business, put however many people out of a job, screw all the creditors, and totally wreck what has been achieved? What would you do in that circumstance, Egg-on-face? You cannot not make a decision in such circumstances, and buying a bit of time to get the new owners in is a far better option then folding the business.
If you think about it the last five years or so has in effect been one long CVA, with OK paying off Hoods creditors Green paying off OKs and Chalmers paying of Greens. From the sound of it (but still no consolation to those owed right now) the new syndicate won't have the same burden of debts to pay off, for example ROGER all net wages have been paid haven't they so no hang over on that aspect of wages for the new owners.
My preferred option was starting again from scratch, no Bulls name, especially no Odsal, start in C1 or pennines league division fifty, but that would be less of a burden than the conditions the RFL impose for having a team with the Bulls name. History shows us what can be done:
When AFC Wimbledon was formed, it affiliated to both the London and Surrey Football Associations, and entered the Premier Division of the Combined Counties League, the ninth tier of English football. The club has since been promoted six times in 13 seasons, going from the ninth tier (Combined Counties Premier) to the third (League One).They succeed because they have the fans.