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: 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.The evidence must have been compelling to support MON's case for constructive dismissal, so the Villa legal team would have suggested an out of court settlement. At least that saved on the legal fees I suppose.
we still lost the likes of milner, carew, shorey, harewood, davies, sidewell? all big earners
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.
Robin Russell, Villa's chief financial officer, said: "The board is confident that the actions taken since the end of the 2010-11 financial year have galvanised the longer-term sustainability of the club and have given us a better financial platform on which to build for future success."Or to put that another way, "we're skint and you'd better get used to it".full text in the Guardian here