denislawsbackheel
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 28 May 2008
- Messages
- 26,095
- Team supported
- We went to Rotherham…
Shame they didn’t have a buy back clause for Bebe.
Obviously learnt more from the GPC than we thought............Redcafe has a thread about ole's agent mate
Apparently his old business partner is the agent for josh king and their new striker is also linked to him.
Also caused issues at Cardiff signing players from this agent
https://www.redcafe.net/threads/ole-gunnar-solskjaer-and-jim-solbakken.453215/
Its weird it’s like the scum and the scousers made a pact to not give each other shit in the media! Scousers supposed to be the rags biggest rivals going to win the league with record points and no rag media laying into them!?
PART 2
9) Many of the families donated shirts, medals and other memorabilia to the club museum but when they wanted to see them again they were told they’d have to pay the entrance fee to the museum.
10) The club had underinsured the players for just over half the £200,000 they were valued at. When the reduced insurance payout was received the club only distributed half to the families of the lost players and kept the other half itself.
11) In 1997 UEFA invited the survivors to the Champions League final between Juventus and Dortmund. At a press conference Bobby Charlton, a club director since 1984, said “Every day of my life I think of the crash and the lads who died there”. Harry Gregg’s response was “Aye I thought. ‘If that’s what you believe then why the fuck have you done nothing for some of the others all this time?’”
12) The United board weren’t enthusiastic about the suggestion from ex-players to hold a 40th anniversary benefit match and only agreed on the basis that it would be combined with, and play second fiddle to, a farewell match for Cantona. Harry Gregg was outraged. “The opposition was supposed to be Red Star, Real Madrid or Bayern Munich. No one else was mentioned and Joe Public bought tickets on the strength of that. Then I read in the paper that Eric Cantona was coming. Diabolical.” The match was played between a United XI and a European XI. “As many had feared, it turned into the Eric Cantona show.”
13) Three weeks after the match the testimonial committee received an invoice from Cantona’s agent for £90,055.01 (yes, an extra penny) to cover Cantona’s ‘expenses’. These expenses covered the hire of a private jet to ferry in Cantona and his entourage of family and friends and included a bill from the Mottram Hall Hotel for £15,869.94. Cantona stayed 3 nights but his entourage stayed for up to 5 nights. The club paid this invoice, not from their bulging coffers, but from the benefit match proceeds.
14) 51 Capodimonte figures were presented to those who played in the game and others involved. They cost £5,560 and the cost was again taken out of the match proceeds. The club also took out £15,000 to cover the cost of ticket refunds for the originally scheduled match 5 months earlier despite the match having been postponed by the club. They also took a ‘refund’ of £15,018 to cover the cost of printing programmes, posters and stationery for the match. In 1998 United’s turnover was £87.9 million, the biggest in world football. Not only didn’t they put a penny into the benefit fund but they took £125,633.01 out of it.
15) The survivors and dependants each received £47,283.89, barely half what was given to pay for multi- millionaire Cantona’s extravagance. The whole idea was to give some financial support to the survivors and families of the victims and it was questioned why Bobby Charlton and Busby’s two children should receive a share. The independently wealthy Charlton could have put his share back in the pot but he didn’t. In addition, by 1998 Eddie Colman had no surviving family and it was felt his share should also go back in the pot but the committee arbitrarily decided to give it to an unrelated charity.
But tell a rag any of this and most of them simply call bullshit because it doesn’t fit in with the cosy narrative they’ve been spoon fed for the last 60 years. Vile club.
Excellent post + 1 but I would disagree with your final line and the mention of 60 years. I was born in 1958 and grew up in Urmston, right next door to Stretford and the swamp. We knew about the disaster but nobody ever did anything, 1968 was not a 10 year anniversary it was of course all about the European Cup win. 1978 came and went as did 1988. I don't know when the club realised there was money to be made out of the disaster but it was at least 30 years after. As you say RIP to all those that died including one of our own but fuck United and their greedy nasty horrible ways.