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Statement from the Board of Directors
of Weymouth Football Club
Sunday 7th June 2009
In line with its policy of being open and honest with supporters,
shareholders and stakeholders, the club wishes to update everyone
about its current situation.
As a new board of directors, we believe we have done exceptionally
well to get this far over the last few months. Frankly, the
club was a mess and some of the deals it had entered into
beggared belief as it ran up debts of more than £500,000
in little over a year.
On the plus side, we inherited share money of around £38,000
and as a board put in about £40,000 ourselves. This
kept us going to the end of the season and paid off certain
serious debts that threatened to close us down, along with
staff wages owing for two months.
A large part of the money also went towards the first instalment
of paying those 10 ex-players who left the club and had not
received their wages for January and February. It was not
their fault, but they were on contracts that the club should
never have agreed and which were never going to be sustainable.
We then started making plans for a new, more affordable campaign.
We hired a new manager and his assistant and asked them to
recruit a part-time squad for next season for a wage bill
of about a third of last seasons budget.
So far Matty Hale and Andy Tillson have worked wonders in
starting to assemble a team of bargains who will be hungry,
enthusiastic and competitive.
It is all part of a business plan that is very manageable
for next season, involving us paying off creditors and breaking
even. We have been gratified that sponsors are willing to
come back to us and give us another chance as they see a new
regime more open to their needs.
The problem is not the longer term but the here and now. Over
the summer, the club is experiencing cash-flow problems that
it is seeking to address but life has been made very difficult
for us, sadly, in the past week.
One big issue is that Barclays Bank have decided to foreclose
on us, requiring that we pay off our overdraft with them very
soon. This has come as a serious and unexpected blow just
at a time when we hoped our creditors were giving us some
leeway, with the Inland Revenue having agreed a payment plan.
On top of that, the former chairman Malcolm Curtis is demanding
repayment of certain of the money he believes he is owed by
the club and is threatening us with legal action.
This has placed us in a difficult position. We are in this
situation because of decisions taken by Mr Curtis and his
chief executive Gary Calder and have been endeavouring to
put the wrongs right.
It therefore seems ironic, we believe, that Mr Curtis, having
allowed this situation to happen, now then expects an instant
solution to his benefit.
This at a time when the clubs traditional source of
summer income, such as speedway and car boot sales, now go
to him. In addition, he has franchised out the bars and catering.
The new board has always wanted to do the honourable thing
and pay the clubs creditors, rather than default. We
also do not want to have to have to suffer any punishment,
from points deduction to expulsion from the Blue Square Conference,
should we be forced into any insolvency action.
We are working tirelessly to find new sponsors and investors
to avoid such action and have had countless meetings over
countless hours to keep the club afloat thus far. The meetings
will continue this week.
One problem is that due to the previous chairman having sold
himself the land surrounding the Wessex Stadium, we no longer
have any collateral to borrow against. Indeed, we are looking
at legal action to recover monies we believe the club might
well be owed from previous officers in charge.
In the meantime, we will keep seeking help as we try to raise
the money that will keep the wolves from the door this summer.
It is not helping that certain concerns who owe the club money
are not paying their own debts.
One initiative we hope to put in place is the launch of a
new mobile phone texting helpline in the next week which should
yield us some revenue as we hope people respond with donations.
We also hope that those people who a month or two back were
willing to save the club and pledged to buy shares, but have
since not followed through their support, will now step forward.
The club will survive and will start next season no matter
what, we are sure. We must, however, quickly find the necessary
funds to continue to repair the damage suffered by the club.
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