Here
we go again, with the reported interview with Duchatelet by BBC Late Kick Off
London and the South East. The intro says Charlton supporters “must accept that
their leading players could be sold to Standard Liege in the future”. I don’t
accept. Before just (again) accusing the guy of being ignorant, let’s go
through each quote in turn from the piece on the BBC site.
“This
club (Charlton) also needs to make money”. Well, if we are owned by someone not
ready to invest in the club, that goes without saying, whether we are in the
Championship or lower leagues. It appears to be our misfortune to have been
bought by someone who views achieving a breakeven position in the shortest
possible time as the immediate priority, rather than avoiding relegation and
implementing a plan geared around progress – which whether Duchatelet likes it
or not in the Championship involves funding losses (of varying degrees). This
was the inference from the transfer window moves.
“It
is not to be excluded that some players will be sold to Standard Liege and play
Champions League”. Combine this with the quote from SL’s sports manager
Jean-Francois de Sart: “the objective is to share the players. When a player
not good enough for the (SL) first team needs some experience he can go to
Charlton. When we have a big talent of Charlton he can come also to Standard
Liege”. The latter quote perhaps not surprisingly, given the interests of that
guy, amounts to viewing Charlton as an SL reserve team/feeder club. The former
one, from Duchatelet, comes close. His related later quote is: “If you have
five children (ie five football clubs) what is the priority between your
children? They are all your priority. I think that is the right attitude”. You
arrogant, ignorant fool. You do not have ‘five children’, you own (directly or
indirectly) five football clubs, each with supporters with their interests,
goals, ambitions etc. If we areyou’re your ‘children’, what parent decides to
have children in the expectation of making money from them? At what age are
they expected to break-even?
Back
to the quotes. “We (Charlton) will be a very realistic club in terms of what we
spend. The aim is very quickly to break even, so the fans should expect us to
sell players once in a while”. Believe it or not, Roland, there are some of us
who supported the club through us offloading Paul Elliot to pay wages, Robert
Lee to keep us going, and many more (up to and including Jonjo Shelvey and Carl
Jenkinson). Please do not assume we are stupid or unrealistic. Children can be
sometimes of course. Selling players in the best, wider interests of the club
is accepted. Selling players to another of your children, in order to help that
child (to the detriment of Charlton, including the enjoyment of watching
Charlton), is not.
The
sentiments expressed by Duchatelet display the same sort of ignorance and/or
indifference to the interests (goals, ambitions etc) of supporters that rang
through from the weekend interview by Cardiff owner Vincent Tan. He managed to further
undermine his standing through exaggeration and distortion. I can’t quote
exactly but he stated that he saved the club. Wrong. He perhaps ensured that
they didn’t go into administration, didn’t get relegated; that isn’t the same
thing as Cardiff FC in whatever form would not have ceased to exist if he hadn’t
bought them. He said he got them promoted. Fair claim, given the investment
made. But then went on to effectively ask for an apology from what he claims is
a minority of Cardiff supporters and to threaten to walk away if he gets hacked
off. This seems to an outsider (I don’t wish to claim insight into Cardiff
supporters’ wishes) to be based on fans actually disagreeing with him over
issues that are important to supporters, which for Tan clearly amounts to said
supporters not accepting ‘reality’ in that he owns the club and can implement
any change he wants to, with reference to no-one.
A
decent starting point for Duchatelet would be to accept that he doesn’t know
what it means to be a supporter of a football team. Why should he? He might try
talking to some if he is interested in learning. We might make jibes at Palace
supporters for example, but deep down we know that they care about their club
in the same way that we do ours. And it is our club, in a very real sense. We
are (no longer) equity holders in Charlton, but we are stakeholders, or at the
least an interested party, for reasons that should be obvious to anyone who
knows anything about football. To ignore that fact is silly.
To
outline in part, I can of course accept Charlton selling players such as
Cousins or Poyet, if and when the need arises and if and when the time for them
is right (including if and when they decide they wish to further their careers
elsewhere). Outside the Premiership that’s just a necessary evil. But while
they wear the Charlton shirt they are assets of the club. My desire to cheer
them on is based on my emotional bond with my team/club. If they start to be
scooped up as and when to bolster a Standard Liege Champions League campaign,
to no benefit for Charlton, it is a world of difference (and does revive my
previous fear that perhaps the so far anonymous Peter the Pole signed for us on
the promise that he might get shunted over to SL if the need/opportunity
arose).
Perhaps
it’s best summed up by something an older (then) guy said at Selhurst Park
before a game against Liverpool in the first season of our spell in the top
flight under Lennie Lawrence. He just turned around and said ‘I’ve been waiting
30 years for this game and because it’s here it means nothing’. Too true.
Duchatelet’s interests may develop in a fashion that ends with us being the
focal point, given the riches of the Premiership. But Roland, I can watch
Premiership football any time I want to. Some things are more important.
Not
accepting can only amount to one thing when I don’t own the club, which is to
withdraw my support, the money that I spend on (and at) Charlton. It is
something that, for the first time in many years, for me arises as a
possibility depending on how things work out. I will always be an Addick and if
my worst fears come to pass it would amount to a case of following from a
distance and waiting for the Duchatelet regime to end, which it will sooner or
later.
In
the meantime, depressingly, the Tintinometer is downgraded once more to a 3,
especially given the delay in the conclusion of a new contract for Sir Chris. When
the announcement was made of talks being underway I commented that I hoped he
would be made an offer that reflected his true worth, not the value
corresponding to the world according to Duchatelet. We are back to uncertainty
on that front and it isn’t good.
5 comments:
I have been saying this on Teamtalk ever since the clown took over.
We have now got an owner who would rather relegate Charlton than spend any money. Mark my works Poyert and Solly will be shipped off to SL once we have been relegated. The man is a complete idiot and his strastegy cannot possibly be good for Charlton.
I totally agree with your views (which are mine) I am not going to any matches as I do not wish to put a single penny in Roland's pockets. The sooner he is gone the better.He really knows NOTHING about football.
So disillusioned. We have no future other than as a feeder club . For me Charlton as a club no longer exist.
Breaking even in the Championship and getting promoted is surely impossible. Players wages would have to be very low and then the squad wouldn't be very good. With our new owner, I think we have to accept that we're never going to be promoted and will probably be going back to Division One. He's living in cloud cuckoo land.
Thanks for the comments guys. I hope our pessimism proves unfounded. But I fear that breaking even in the Championship and avoiding relegation is close to impossible.
This may all change in time, if you believe in the fair play rules. Just have to wait and see how quickly 'as quick as possible' proves to be; but it surely points to players out of contract walking away and selling more come the summer, whatever division we are in.
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