Quote from: Ger Regan on April 11, 2012, 07:30:52 PMQuote from: Villanation on April 11, 2012, 07:18:45 PMNot sure about the story but one thing is for sure, judgement passed in favour of one, to the cost of the other, and although both parties said it was amicable it seemed to me that MON came out feeling fully vindicated, even to the point of congratulating his legal team on the great job they had done.As you say we simply don't know what went on, the arbitration board did and they made there decision based on the evidence put in front of them, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to realise that if MON had been 100% wrong he would have been found in breach of contract on top of which Villa could have gone after him for massive damages in view of the critical time he left, as far as I'm aware this did not happen, so why didn't it happen because I seem to remember massive vitriol being spewed out by the top dogs at the club like that general bloke and Lerners No2 he really waded into MON getting huge fan support behind them, if they felt that strongly why wouldn't you go after him.The rumour I heard was this (and I stress rumour) MON demanded a severance pay based on the fact that he had been shown the door, the board in turn demanded compensation, it went to arbitration and MON got the money, you make your own minds up as to who won and why.One slight flaw in that theory, there was no tribunal decision.So it went to Arbitration and they made no decision, which caused MON to emerge from the hearing thanking his legal team for doing nothing.Lets assume nothing was done and at the very very least the board did not find in favour of either, MON won, so why is everybody blaming MON, they are both right and both wrong, think you will find its not the case though, MON got a payout from this, simply that, and in any litigation that's the measure of right and wrong in the eyes of civil law.
Quote from: Villanation on April 11, 2012, 07:18:45 PMNot sure about the story but one thing is for sure, judgement passed in favour of one, to the cost of the other, and although both parties said it was amicable it seemed to me that MON came out feeling fully vindicated, even to the point of congratulating his legal team on the great job they had done.As you say we simply don't know what went on, the arbitration board did and they made there decision based on the evidence put in front of them, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to realise that if MON had been 100% wrong he would have been found in breach of contract on top of which Villa could have gone after him for massive damages in view of the critical time he left, as far as I'm aware this did not happen, so why didn't it happen because I seem to remember massive vitriol being spewed out by the top dogs at the club like that general bloke and Lerners No2 he really waded into MON getting huge fan support behind them, if they felt that strongly why wouldn't you go after him.The rumour I heard was this (and I stress rumour) MON demanded a severance pay based on the fact that he had been shown the door, the board in turn demanded compensation, it went to arbitration and MON got the money, you make your own minds up as to who won and why.One slight flaw in that theory, there was no tribunal decision.
Not sure about the story but one thing is for sure, judgement passed in favour of one, to the cost of the other, and although both parties said it was amicable it seemed to me that MON came out feeling fully vindicated, even to the point of congratulating his legal team on the great job they had done.As you say we simply don't know what went on, the arbitration board did and they made there decision based on the evidence put in front of them, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to realise that if MON had been 100% wrong he would have been found in breach of contract on top of which Villa could have gone after him for massive damages in view of the critical time he left, as far as I'm aware this did not happen, so why didn't it happen because I seem to remember massive vitriol being spewed out by the top dogs at the club like that general bloke and Lerners No2 he really waded into MON getting huge fan support behind them, if they felt that strongly why wouldn't you go after him.The rumour I heard was this (and I stress rumour) MON demanded a severance pay based on the fact that he had been shown the door, the board in turn demanded compensation, it went to arbitration and MON got the money, you make your own minds up as to who won and why.
Poison dwarf. Judas. Pube-head.It's O'Neill, by the way.
Quote from: Villanation on April 11, 2012, 07:38:35 PMQuote from: Ger Regan on April 11, 2012, 07:30:52 PMQuote from: Villanation on April 11, 2012, 07:18:45 PMNot sure about the story but one thing is for sure, judgement passed in favour of one, to the cost of the other, and although both parties said it was amicable it seemed to me that MON came out feeling fully vindicated, even to the point of congratulating his legal team on the great job they had done.As you say we simply don't know what went on, the arbitration board did and they made there decision based on the evidence put in front of them, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to realise that if MON had been 100% wrong he would have been found in breach of contract on top of which Villa could have gone after him for massive damages in view of the critical time he left, as far as I'm aware this did not happen, so why didn't it happen because I seem to remember massive vitriol being spewed out by the top dogs at the club like that general bloke and Lerners No2 he really waded into MON getting huge fan support behind them, if they felt that strongly why wouldn't you go after him.The rumour I heard was this (and I stress rumour) MON demanded a severance pay based on the fact that he had been shown the door, the board in turn demanded compensation, it went to arbitration and MON got the money, you make your own minds up as to who won and why.One slight flaw in that theory, there was no tribunal decision.So it went to Arbitration and they made no decision, which caused MON to emerge from the hearing thanking his legal team for doing nothing.Lets assume nothing was done and at the very very least the board did not find in favour of either, MON won, so why is everybody blaming MON, they are both right and both wrong, think you will find its not the case though, MON got a payout from this, simply that, and in any litigation that's the measure of right and wrong in the eyes of civil law. The assumption is correct. They didn't find in favour of either. They settled before the tribunal needed to adjudge. The rest of your post is utter nonsense.
If RL and his advisors believed that they were in the right, why did they settle?Its pretty obvious he had them over a barrell with thier trousers around thier ankles.One party wrote a note of every meeting and conversation he had, the other parties did not.All RL got out of MON was a vow of silence.When a man with experience meets a man with money, the man with experience gets money, the man with money gets an experience.
Quote from: hawkeye on April 11, 2012, 09:07:50 PMIf RL and his advisors believed that they were in the right, why did they settle?Its pretty obvious he had them over a barrell with thier trousers around thier ankles.One party wrote a note of every meeting and conversation he had, the other parties did not.All RL got out of MON was a vow of silence.When a man with experience meets a man with money, the man with experience gets money, the man with money gets an experience.Allow me to commend you on that irrespective of this thread that is priceless, and......noted.
Was Harewood that bad a signing? Yes he was shit but £4m wasn't a particularly big fee for an established PL striker. He didn't work out, it happens.
Quote from: PeterWithe on April 11, 2012, 08:04:24 PMWas Harewood that bad a signing? Yes he was shit but £4m wasn't a particularly big fee for an established PL striker. He didn't work out, it happens.It was if you think that the likes of Roque Santa Cruz was signing for Blackburn a week later and then going on score 20 odd goals that season.