Aston Villa has cost Randy Lerner $100,000 a day - Forbes.http://onforb.es/1YQ0lTd
the main problem is what we are now perceived to be worthi can see randolph never selling as he isnt going to get anything he like what he perceives to be a good pricevery dark days ahead
Quote from: Jimbo on March 14, 2016, 08:14:56 AMAston Villa has cost Randy Lerner $100,000 a day - Forbes.http://onforb.es/1YQ0lTdThe only news in that was that we were £24M in debt when Doug sold as opposed to the debt free that is often cited. Adds some credence to the "we hadn't got a pot to piss in" and Petrov's signing could have pushed us into administration without him acting as guarantor.Quite impressive to spend over £250 million from there and end up actually worse off. If it was anybody else you'd piss yourself laughing.
Quote from: Villa in Denmark on March 14, 2016, 01:20:26 PMQuote from: Jimbo on March 14, 2016, 08:14:56 AMAston Villa has cost Randy Lerner $100,000 a day - Forbes.http://onforb.es/1YQ0lTdThe only news in that was that we were £24M in debt when Doug sold as opposed to the debt free that is often cited. Adds some credence to the "we hadn't got a pot to piss in" and Petrov's signing could have pushed us into administration without him acting as guarantor.Quite impressive to spend over £250 million from there and end up actually worse off. If it was anybody else you'd piss yourself laughing.Crazy isn't it. If someone had told me when Randy bought us that he'd spend that much money in 10 years and with MON at the helm, I'd have expected a few runs at the title and a cup or three. Even if the landscape changed with Man City we should have been well set up for sustained success or at the very least a top 6 or 7 side. I still think back to leading 4-1 at Spurs or 2-0 vs Stoke as massive defining moments. How Spurs have maintain the trajectory we should have been on. And ironically how after this weekend, Spurs' Moscow moment wasn't to be and their Europa League gamble paid off and they maintained their title ambitions. Off course it helped they played us. Randy should never be criticised for the level of his investment, but roundly lambasted for how he wasted pretty much every penny of it. Randy Lerner is Tom Hanks in The Money Pit. Aston Villa is his crumbling house.
Quote from: Toronto Villa on March 14, 2016, 04:39:00 PMQuote from: Villa in Denmark on March 14, 2016, 01:20:26 PMQuote from: Jimbo on March 14, 2016, 08:14:56 AMAston Villa has cost Randy Lerner $100,000 a day - Forbes.http://onforb.es/1YQ0lTdThe only news in that was that we were £24M in debt when Doug sold as opposed to the debt free that is often cited. Adds some credence to the "we hadn't got a pot to piss in" and Petrov's signing could have pushed us into administration without him acting as guarantor.Quite impressive to spend over £250 million from there and end up actually worse off. If it was anybody else you'd piss yourself laughing.Crazy isn't it. If someone had told me when Randy bought us that he'd spend that much money in 10 years and with MON at the helm, I'd have expected a few runs at the title and a cup or three. Even if the landscape changed with Man City we should have been well set up for sustained success or at the very least a top 6 or 7 side. I still think back to leading 4-1 at Spurs or 2-0 vs Stoke as massive defining moments. How Spurs have maintain the trajectory we should have been on. And ironically how after this weekend, Spurs' Moscow moment wasn't to be and their Europa League gamble paid off and they maintained their title ambitions. Off course it helped they played us. Randy should never be criticised for the level of his investment, but roundly lambasted for how he wasted pretty much every penny of it. Randy Lerner is Tom Hanks in The Money Pit. Aston Villa is his crumbling house.I think the difference being that spurs have been prepared to play the long game and maintain that level and progressively try to build adding new players and youngsters to the squad, being there or thereabouts until they got into the top 4. Randy had a dash at it, went for the short term dash for Champs League with O'neill, realised that nothing sustainable had been built when O'neill walked and then lost his nerve when he realised he was starting again and the amount of money it was going to cost. Plus Man City happening
Can we thank Hollis for that? Or is that too soon?