Quote from: cdward on February 28, 2012, 08:50:53 PMMON was backed into a corner and felt he had no option but to walk, claiming constructive dismissal and won his case. It would seem that Randy had decided not to back his manager any longer. I can't help thinking that Paul Faulkner has a lot to answer in all this. Just before MON went Faulkner came in, and our financial decision making has been terrible ever since. MON had his faults, but Faulkner seems to making some terrible decisions that threaten to drag us down. Was Faulkner the one who decided the Milner money should not be spent? That in my opinion was the start of the end.Or Faulkner realised that the expenditure was unsustainable and action was needed? We don't know the facts....
MON was backed into a corner and felt he had no option but to walk, claiming constructive dismissal and won his case. It would seem that Randy had decided not to back his manager any longer. I can't help thinking that Paul Faulkner has a lot to answer in all this. Just before MON went Faulkner came in, and our financial decision making has been terrible ever since. MON had his faults, but Faulkner seems to making some terrible decisions that threaten to drag us down. Was Faulkner the one who decided the Milner money should not be spent? That in my opinion was the start of the end.
Quote from: hawkeye on February 28, 2012, 08:14:21 PMStill dont get the pay off, if MON walked without justification then there would be no pay off, this was an out of court settlement which meant they new they were going to lose and or the damage they would have sustaind at a hearing would have been worse.It seems pretty obvious to me.They were caught flat footed when he bailed (to the extent that Lerner, having been in the UK for a few days prior, quickly had to fly back) and the thought of paying the little twerp anything was like salt in the axe wound. Even if he was entitled to it.Whether that money was due to him because of image rights, meeting targets (European qualification/ cup final/ cup semi) we can only speculate. He also quit early August - mirroring the time he joined us in 2006. So maybe his rolling contract had just started. Whereas if he'd walked in July he'd have been entitled to nowt. Whatever it was, there seems there was enough ambiguity for the club to believe they could get away with not paying it. Or maybe they didn't. Perhaps all they ever wanted to do was not pay him the full whack he was requesting, and arbitration helped them in this regard. Regardless, if he had been truly wronged in the Curbishley sense -players sold from under him and all the rest of it- and if he knew he was on solid ground, why not proceed with the claim? Surely -in that instance- it would have been better to have it all out there, indisputable - as a matter of public record?
Still dont get the pay off, if MON walked without justification then there would be no pay off, this was an out of court settlement which meant they new they were going to lose and or the damage they would have sustaind at a hearing would have been worse.
Quote from: KevinGage on February 28, 2012, 09:38:09 PMQuote from: hawkeye on February 28, 2012, 08:14:21 PMStill dont get the pay off, if MON walked without justification then there would be no pay off, this was an out of court settlement which meant they new they were going to lose and or the damage they would have sustaind at a hearing would have been worse.It seems pretty obvious to me.They were caught flat footed when he bailed (to the extent that Lerner, having been in the UK for a few days prior, quickly had to fly back) and the thought of paying the little twerp anything was like salt in the axe wound. Even if he was entitled to it.Whether that money was due to him because of image rights, meeting targets (European qualification/ cup final/ cup semi) we can only speculate. He also quit early August - mirroring the time he joined us in 2006. So maybe his rolling contract had just started. Whereas if he'd walked in July he'd have been entitled to nowt. Whatever it was, there seems there was enough ambiguity for the club to believe they could get away with not paying it. Or maybe they didn't. Perhaps all they ever wanted to do was not pay him the full whack he was requesting, and arbitration helped them in this regard. Regardless, if he had been truly wronged in the Curbishley sense -players sold from under him and all the rest of it- and if he knew he was on solid ground, why not proceed with the claim? Surely -in that instance- it would have been better to have it all out there, indisputable - as a matter of public record? The only people that did not want it as public record were Faulkner and Lerner and that is why they signed the cheque. There can be no doubt now that the handling of the MON era was based on complete and utter incompetance on thier part.
Why do football managers have such contracts? In what other jobs does sacking for gross incompetence result in compensation?
The very mention of O'Neill has the rose-tinted spectacles being dusted down again.
Quote from: glasses on February 28, 2012, 09:26:39 PMFaulkner was at the club when Villa played Litex in the Uefa Cup in 2008. He was employed by the club, but not CEO at that time. In a meeting with someone I know, he told them his job was to speak with players agents and arrange contracts. He told them he was a Director of Football. He was apparently a very nice bloke. He also stated that he was Randy's right hand man, and they were very close. These things I have been toldI personally think that the issue O'Neill had was with Faulkner, not Randy and not Villa as a whole. I think that there was a massive breakdown in their relationship, leading to O'Neill walking.Arranging player contracts? So would it be his fault that we have suffered from so much overpaid dross.
Faulkner was at the club when Villa played Litex in the Uefa Cup in 2008. He was employed by the club, but not CEO at that time. In a meeting with someone I know, he told them his job was to speak with players agents and arrange contracts. He told them he was a Director of Football. He was apparently a very nice bloke. He also stated that he was Randy's right hand man, and they were very close. These things I have been toldI personally think that the issue O'Neill had was with Faulkner, not Randy and not Villa as a whole. I think that there was a massive breakdown in their relationship, leading to O'Neill walking.
MON was backed into a corner and felt he had no option but to walk,