by Ten Bobsworth »
20 Dec 2023 16:35
Franchise FC Ten Bobsworth Snowflake Royal I don't know about anyone else, but personally I don't feel the need to watch a 20 minute Youtube video to have context on an issue I've been watching happen for 6 years.
I probably have enough material to write a book on the financial history of Bolton Wanderers but it doesn't mean I know everything. There are always new things to learn and things worth checking out.
Phil Parkinson and Andy Townsend confirmed what I had thought beforehand but the idea (if that's what they really thought) that it would have been a simple task for Ken Anderson to have sold in the summer of 2018 seems to me more than a little doubtful. I would fully agree with them that it would have been an optimum time but getting it over the line was dependent more on the chargeholder's (not to mention Holdsworth's) requirements than Anderson's.
Anderson eventually settled for £237K in 2019 much of which, if not all, he would likely have owed to people he had relied on to keep the show on the road whilst the club was on life support. Indeed the Administrators leaked to the media that a deal had been done to sell the club before they had even bothered to check with Ken Anderson and his legal advisors whether they had agreed it. Plainly they hadn't.
But the video was also interesting in the way that it contrasted starkly in content and tone with the hysterical hogwash of McGuire K and, his new found friend, 'the Chief Football Writer' at the Bolton News.
If an administrator had been appointed they have the power to do what they like without recourse to anyone, so quite why they’d need to check with anyone is a little odd (or misinformed possibly)
You are right about administrators. They have wide powers which, on the evidence of this case, they sometimes use in 'questionable' ways. Ken Anderson was a secured creditor in two respects. In September 2018, he borrowed £5m from Eddie Davies to repay a loan taken out by Dean Holdsworth in March 2016 and secured on the assets of the club.
The loan (Blumarble Capital) was repayable by the end of the March 2016 with default interest at 24% p.a. Only Holdsworth had signed the documents. Holdsworth claimed that he had been let down by an unnamed backer who allegedly dropped out at the last minute.
There followed two and a half years of toing and froing over the validity of the security but Blumarble (actually a small finance company) could not be held off any longer. They needed their money back and were about to foreclose when Anderson persuaded Davies to advance the funds to repay Blumarble (with interest negotiated down to a modest level).
Anderson's lawyers took out a debenture to secure the £5m and any other monies that Anderson had provided or would provide to the club. Over the next few months Anderson advanced another £1.5m to keep the club afloat. That money almost certainly was also Davies money.
When the Administrators drew up their Statement of Affairs, they included the £1.5m as being owed and secured to Anderson but omitted the £5m. In effect claiming that the £5m was owed to nobody. It had completely disappeared as if by magic.
Anderson's response was to appoint Administrators to the hotel which was also covered by Anderson's legal charge. In short, whatever they had planned, the club Admins were going nowhere without recognising Anderson's perfectly proper legal charge.
There are many things that Kieran Maguire and his followers overlooked. Anderson for months, exhorted by Maguire and others, had been pilloried in all the media and social media yet the creditors at the time of the appointment of the Administrators (according to their figures) were less than they had been two years previously. That was quite impossible and had arisen by virtue of the Administrators excluding the £5m Blumarble settlement from the Statement of Affairs.
As previously explained, the total losses of Bolton Wanderers over the last two years of Anderson's tenure were about £5m, possibly the lowest of any club playing in the Championship in 2017/18 and 2018/19.