None taken, and given the Club have already turned that specific point down, I’m not under any illusion that it’s currently likely.
That said, I think it’s important to sketch out what the Fan Advisory Board should look like in an ideal world - particularly given the concept is here to stay given the Premier League’s support. Even Spurs, with all their fans’ frustration about the club’s management, are able to get that point right.
Right in principle, but I think people on the forum here, and probably more widely, confuse roles when it comes to talking about Khaldoon and Wilson, for example.
A few thoughts, for what it's worth.
Khaldoon is a non-executive director and Chairman of the Board (the
real board). And, as such, isn't at all the right person to be dealing with fans about ticket prices, or any operational issue. Which is why I tried to make the point before that open letters to him won't make the slightest difference. Firstly, because it isn't his responsibility and, secondly, because I doubt it will even register with him and, anyway, it wouldn't get past Soriano's secretary, let alone Khaldoon's.
@Damocles is right, Khaldoon meets Trump and other world leaders, he won't have much time for ticket prices. I doubt he is even aware there is a problem because Soriano will be feeding the Board carefully chosen surveys that show how wonderful everything is. It's what management consultants are good at.
You mentioned Levy. He, on the other hand, is executive Chairman of Spurs and so is finally responsible for ticket prices which is, presumably, why he has to turn up.
Wilson, though, is nowhere near
the board. So he can't be your board level representative on ticketing. He is an executive, under Soriano, so he may be on an "executive board", ie management committee. But he isn't board level. He may even be very good at what he does, but he won't fart if Soriano tells him not to.
@Prestwich_Blue has spoken before about the problems with the governance aspects of not having any executives on the board and, maybe, this is one area where that has practical consequences.
In a nutshell, you are stuck with Soriano and his executive team unless you can find a way to get a message through to Khaldoon that the ticketing strategy is weakening the bond between fans and owner, which is something he should care about as a representative of the owner. Fire-bombing may be going a little far, but if we can't get some direct action to the attention of Khaldoon, you really are just stuck with Soriano, imho.