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The wonderful story of Leeds Utd Mr Ridsdale and Mr Bates. One of the most wonderful stories of football of all time.
April - Leeds Sporting announce a £1.86m half-year profit but Ridsdale issues a warning that spiralling wages and transfer fees had to be brought under control for the clubs to survive. He gives David O'Leary a new £6million five-year contract. June - Wins a place as a Premiership representative on the Football Association council. Also ties Jonathan Woodgate to Elland Road until 2003 by giving him a £500,000-a-year pay rise. However, tells star striker Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink the club will not be held to ransom over £50,000-a-week pay demand. August - Agrees club record breaking £12 million fee for Hasselbaink from Atletico Madrid. November - Announces that O'Leary has a job at Elland Road for life. Thus far a certain irregularity of thought appears to be seen.
January - Warns players Lee Bowyer and Jonathan Woodgate that they face serious internal discipline if they are proved to have broken the club's code of conduct following the pair's arrest in connection with a serious assault in Leeds city centre. March - Admits he will sack Bowyer and Woodgate if they are found guilty of an attack on an Asian student. April - Announces Leeds Sporting profits have risen by 89% in the last six months of 2000. May - Agrees club record purchase of Olivier Dacourt for £7.2m from Lens. Dismisses talk of £7m signing Mark Viduka from Celtic, only to announce a deal has been agreed days later. A certain irregularity of thought appears to be seen. August - Ridsdale agrees a new six-year deal with David O'Leary. November - Sanctions the British-record £18m transfer of Rio Ferdinand from West Ham.
March - Leeds Sporting's profits for the second half of 2000 fall by 99% following purchase of Ferdinand, Dacourt, Viduka and Dominic Matteo. May - Announces that Leeds are looking at building a new stadium away from Elland Road. September - Lands a job as non-executive chairman of a technology firm. Warns Leeds players if they take part in a Professional Footballers' Association-led strike over television money they will not be paid. October - Denies making a move for Derby's Seth Johnson, only to have a £7m bid accepted several days later. It was revealed Ridsdale was English football's highest paid boardroom boss, a 62% pay rise taking his wages to £600,000. November - Sanctions more spending with the £11m purchase of Liverpool's Robbie Fowler. December - Ridsdale slaps Bowyer on transfer list after he refuses to accept internal club discipline following his acquittal of all charges at assault trial, although the midfielder later backs down and pays £64,000 fine.
March - Leeds announce a loss of £13.8m for the last six months of 2001. May - Puts Bowyer on transfer list again after midfielder rejects new contract, claiming he wasted Leeds' time. June - Sacks manager David O'Leary because of poor results. July - Secures services of former England manager Terry Venables to take over from O'Leary. August - Loses battle to keep Rio Ferdinand but sells defender to Manchester United for record £30m. 29 November - Re-elected to the board of Leeds United plc.
31 March - Resigns as chairman. Leeds collapse develops as their losses escalate, they fail to get into the Champions League, and start to sell off everything and everyone. By 2007 they are struggling to keep themselves from dropping further and further into oblivion. Ridsdale denies it is anything to do with him as he takes over at Cardiff. 31 March - Resigns as chairman. Leeds collapse develops as th
Then with Mr Ridsdale all gone, you'd think everything would be sorted out, except that along came Mr Bates and...
Leeds are relegated into League One (ie Division 3). The moment this is confirmed Mr Bates takes the club into administration, thus losing them 10point in the current season (rather than starting next season with -10). The receivers then refuse to look out for bids from any other consortia and sell the new club back to Mr Bates as Leeds prepare for a new spiritual home. The administrator, KPMG, set up two ballots for creditors to determine the future ownership of the Elland Road club. Mark Taylor, a current Leeds director and member of Bates's Leeds United Football Club consortium bidding to take over today, said the offshore company Astor Investment Holdings has a claim against the club in the region of £18m. That sum makes it the most influential creditor and entitles it to approximately 45% of the votes in today's ballot - 75% of votes are required to approve any single bid. Astor had already made plain to the administrator its preference for Bates's bid, which is one of six on the table and offers to pay creditors only 1p in every pound owed. The pressure has been stepped up in recent days and, having received instructions from Astor, KPMG has issued a letter to all creditors warning that the offshore company will veto all offers other than the Leeds United Football Club bid, whose directors are Bates, Taylor and the club's current chief executive, Shaun Harvey. KPMG's letter states further that, if the Bates bid is not approved, Astor will allow the club to slip into liquidation. It is an intriguing development, particularly given the existence of a rival bid from the former Leeds director Simon Morris that guarantees a payment of £8m to Astor plus a share in future profits arising from the intended redevelopment of Elland Road, which Morris would propose to buy back from its landlord. Taylor explained to the Guardian last night that during a meeting with representatives of Astor in Guernsey this week he had received reassurances about the company's faith in Bates's management and the reasons why it would decline the £8m offer. "I think the reason for that is that they are prepared to back the current management, that is Ken Bates and Shaun Harvey," said Taylor. "Astor always went into it on the basis that they would back Ken. "I went to Guernsey in the week and they are very, very disappointed that the Leeds business community has not supported the club in any way at all. When we were looking for investment - on quite reasonable terms, I might add - no one came forward. Now people are coming out of the woodwork." There have long been unsubstantiated rumours that Astor is controlled by Bates - which would have implications for the company's voting rights in the creditors' ballot - but this has always been denied by Bates and the administrator. Taylor insisted yesterday that the identities of Astor's ultimate owners had been disclosed to the administrator. That contradicts a statement this week from KPMG's joint administrator, Richard Fleming, who declared that the owners of Astor were unknown to him. However, the administrator reiterated yesterday that to the best of its knowledge there was no legal connection between the offshore company and Bates, something it has emphasised throughout the process of administration. "The administrators have undertaken extensive inquiries and they were assured that Astor Investment Holdings is not a connected party," said a spokeswoman for KPMG. Vying with the Morris and Bates bids are four other consortiums, two from the US, one from the UK and another from a private individual whose provenance has been withheld. The second UK consortium proposes to pay a total of £108,966 to non-football employee creditors and £3,185,003 to unsecured creditors. The first US fund would pay up to £3m to unsecured creditors while proposing to discuss outstanding liabilities with investor creditors such as Astor and another offshore company, Krato Trust. The second has offered £108,966 to non-football employees, £3,282,102 to investor creditors, £1,235,144 to other unsecured creditors and some further dividends contingent on future promotions. The private individual would pay just less than £1.5m to unsecured creditors and £4.5m towards the club's running costs in May and June. Astor opposes all these bids. Leeds numbers £18m The amount that Astor Investment Holdings would lose if the club were bankrupted £8m The sum Astor could receive were creditors to approve the UK-based consortium led by the former Leeds director Simon Morris 1p in the £ How much Ken Bates's consortium proposes to pay creditors The result: a tie - they are counting it all again
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Last modified: February 23, 2008
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