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| Merger
Off 3rd May 2001 - Report by Dave Thomas |
A horrible day. QPR fans woke up to the breaking news that, 14 years
on from the last proposed merger, another was on the cards. This time
it wasn't Fulham, but Wimbledon. Different club, same reaction.
So, first, a press release - in which we state our opposition to the
proposed merger and promise to fight it all the way. We do so in the
belief that the overwhelming majority of QPR fans will be opposed
to such an idea. "Working to protect the identity of and future of
Queens Park Rangers". That is the platform on which we launched QPR
1st. Here then is our first big test. We are an organisation just
three weeks into existence, still sifting through close to 2,000 registrations
and putting in place a truly democratic 'one member, one vote' set-up.
In that time, we have had a thousand people turn up to a public meeting
and provide overwhelming support for the idea of setting up a supporters
trust.
We have backing from the government, from the FA, the Football League,
and the PFA. We receive support from the council, from the Mayor,
from the local MP, and from the Shepherds Bush business community.
We now have the voting power of over two million shares pledged. Of
course, that is insignificant compared to Chris Wright's majority
shareholding, but as a meaningful lobby of small shareholders, it
is a hugely significant figure.
So the wording of the press release, then. We promise to fight any
merger. It is our unshakeable belief that it is something the overwhelming
majority of QPR fans are opposed to and state as much. Predictably,
from some, there is criticism that we don't represent the views of
ALL the fans - not something, to the best of our belief and knowledge,
we have ever done. There are those who in favour of a merger, we accept
that. And indeed respect their views.
But we're a democratic organisation, and the messages of support from
people registering support for QPR 1st merely confirm our unshakeable
belief that the majority of QPR fans oppose a merger. It is all very
well arguing that, if looked at unemotionally, the merger is a good
business proposition. Which of course it is. But you can't conveniently
take the emotional aspect out of the equation. Choosing to support
a football club is not a cold decision. It's one that comes from the
heart, and is pursued via an emotional roller-coaster. That's the
appeal, the very essence of supporting a club. Those of us who came
to the fore to take QPR 1st forward - not just for our own benefit,
but for all QPR fans who share our beliefs and visions - bleed blue
and white. If you love something - truly love something, even if it
is only a football club - then you'll not only nurture it, you'll
fight tooth and nail to protect it. We are QPR. We are not QPR incorporating
anyone else.
The amount of vitriol that comes our way because of that stance is
astonishing. There are ridiculous suggestions that we knew about the
merger three weeks ago, although nothing to explain why we would wish
to keep that to ourselves. We are accused of everything from being
"unrepresentative" (don't think so!) to being a cosy little clique
with all sorts of hidden agendas (not so). What an insult that is
to those who have pledged support for QPR 1st, numbers which are rising
rapidly every day. In fact so vitriolic is it at times, that you would
be forgiven for thinking it was almost orchestrated. At least we always
put our proper names to, for example, postings on the Internet. It's
interesting that so much of the criticism of QPR 1st comes from anonymous
sources. Fine, democracy means that those who support the merger are
entitled to form their own collective voice. Let them come to Molineux
on Sunday and canvass support.
So the wording of the press release contains no prevarication. As
a responsible organisation, of course we have to listen to the proposals
with an open mind. But they are splashed all over the newspapers,
and in turn reproduced on the Internet. There's nothing in the proposals
to make us believe the majority of QPR fans will view this merger
any differently to the one in 1987, or significantly oppose it any
less.
The merger story in the Sun can, we decide, be looked at from one
of three perspectives. Firstly, that it is the route Chris Wright
and the administrators are set on. In which case, it is something
that will inevitably be fought by fans of both clubs. Secondly, it
is a story deliberately leaked to the press and designed to create
a smokescreen whereby the fear of merger tempts a firm bid to the
table. So far, we are told, there have been 30 or so expressions of
interest in buying QPR but no firm bid tabled. Nothing like a good
scare story to propel potential buyers into action. Thirdly, it is
a classic negotiating tactic - present a worst case scenario, then
downgrade it to something not quite so unpalatable, but something
which in itself would have met opposition. A groundshare perhaps?
A sell-off of Loftus Road and QPR groundsharing somewhere else? A
move to a new stadium? It's all guesswork, but the meeting with Chris
Wright this evening will present an opportunity to sort out some fact
from fiction. Or not as the case may be.
The meeting with Chris Wright and representatives from QPR 1st, had
been agreed a week or more beforehand. The objective of it was to
obtain first-hand information about his plans and intentions for QPR.
It was also to convey the aims and objectives of a supporters trust
and take the first step in what we hope will eventually lead to a
'listening club' - not one that merely pays lip service to the notion
that the fan-base should be an inclusive part of the way the club
is run, not peripheral to it. But of course the merger was now the
key issue to address.
Would the story coming out in the papers (a coincidence or timely?)
and the protests which had gone on all day, both outside Loftus Road
and at the FA, scupper the meeting. We assembled, nine of us from
the Interim Commitee, there representing QPR 1st, but equally drawn
from across the broad spectrum of QPR support, incorporating the LSA,
shareholders, webmasters, and A Kick Up The R's. Even up to the last
minute we were waiting to confirm the location of the meeting. As
it transpired, Nick Blackburn and Chris Wright came to us, not us
to them
Nick Blackburn arrived first, and proceeded to tell us about the thinking
behind the proposed merger. It seems it was first mooted at Selhurst
Park after the 5-0 defeat by Wimbledon. He describes it as an idea
discussed "half-heartedly" and as a "bit of a joke". They are not
words, we are quick to point out, that are particularly appropriate
to the future of our football club. It seems the idea was then discussed
further at QPR board level and a more formal approach made to Wimbledon.
Nick Blackburn said that the QPR board felt that, due to the financial
difficulties facing the club, it was a proposal that merited a further
look.
He asked us if we saw any merit in the merger or if the whole thing
was the worst idea in the world? The latter, we informed him. Even
if a merger meant come August we would be able to watch a team "wearing
hoops" at Loftus Road, but with 'Wimbledon' incorporated into the
club name, playing Manchester City in front of 20,000 fans, rather
than QPR playing Bristol City in front of 8,000? Especially not if
meant a team wearing hoops at Loftus Road, but with Wimbledon incorporated
into the club name, playing Manchester City in front of 20,000 fans,
we assured him. QPR then, QPR now, QPR always, to steal a line. We
would rather watch QPR at the bottom of Division Three having retained
our own identity, than watch some hybrid, mongrel club at any level.
The continual use of the word 'hybrid' began to annoy Nick Blackburn
after a while, we felt. Hybrid, mongrel, or whatever - what guarantee
was there that the new amalgamated club would be successful. There
were, we reminded him, alternative ways to fill a stadium. That was
one of the ways in which QPR 1st could contribute. (Dare we suggest
that a full stadium week in, week out is the wish of every QPR fan,
or do we need to acknowledge that there are perhaps some fans who
only want a half-full stadium?)
Chris Wright arrived not too long after. He sat down, and invited
us to fire questions at him, anything we wanted to know. He would
answer as honestly as could, he assured us. Tell us the precise situation
QPR are in now, we invited.
He began by explaining the injuries which had blighted our season
and eventually led to relegation. No, he wasn't happy with the performances,
but impending relegation and the consequential worsening financial
difficulties, whereby the club were potentially trading insolvently,
forced the club into administration. Chris Wright is an engaging speaker
in the surrounds of a less formal setting such as this, but there
is still a feeling that you give him a cue and the well-rehearsed
lines come out one after another. The product of a man who has been
interviewed a thousand times, and forgiveable for that alone. There
was nothing he said that any of us hadn't heard before. Until of course
the point when he got to the merger.
He reiterated Nick Blackburn's views that it was merely an idea, one
in fact that he himself had decided three days beforehand was a non-starter.
Even so, he believed that many Football League clubs were looking
at the possibility of merger - many Football League club's CHAIRMAN
he agreed, after interjection on our part - and used the two Sheffield
clubs as an illustration of how two medium sized clubs could merge
to compete as one powerful one in a 50,000 stadium. The assumption
that it would be a FULL stadium was one that didn't go unchallenged.
Nor did Nick Blackburn's earlier suggestion that Loftus Road would
be heaving with 20,000 punters desperate to see Quimbledon, or whatever
the name was. More like a tenth of that, we suggested. And no support
away from home.
It was always, he assured us, the club's intention to seeking the
views of season ticket holders, shareholders and members, and the
merger would only proceed if there was a significant majority against
the idea. It would all have depended on the results of a ballot. And
of the way it was worded, we interjected. It would have been a straightforward
poll, he responded, and if the verdict had been anti-merger then he
saw no way that QPR could go down that route.
We expressed shock that someone who is a fan, and around in 1987,
should even begin to entertain a merger - a horrible word to QPR fans.
Had the protests today come as a surprise to Chris Wright? No, they
hadn't. Was he aware that whilst we might be sitting around the table
in a calm manner, there were many, many very angry fans out there,
some of whom were planning further protests both at Wolves on Sunday,
and also at Loftus Road on Sunday? He didn't doubt it.
He was now talking in the past tense, we pointed out. Did this mean
that no ballot would take place? The story breaking in the Sun, he
felt, had scuppered any rational debate on the merits of the merger,
so no it was not an option that the club would now persue. In any
case the strength of feeling demonstrated at the ground, on the messageboards,
and around the table here this evening had confirmed his own private
feelings that a merger is not the way forward.
So what is the way forward? He confirmed that he would continue to
fund the club until October, but of course a buyer may well come in
tomorrow. And after October if no firm bid is recieved? What contingency
plans did he have? None, was the short answer. But he stated he would
not allow QPR to go bust. What conditions did he place on the sale?
For example, would he consider selling Loftus Road separately to QPR?
He promised he would do everything in his power to keep the two together.
What about the Wasps deal, which included Twyford Avenue as well?
It seems he had kept Wasps out of the administration process as league
rules meant any rugby club in administration would immediately be
kicked out the league. The reason for buying the two was to reduce
the debt linked to QPR, and therefore make it a more attractive proposition
to any potential bidder. Would he agree to a clause whereby any bidder
wanting to buy Wasps as part of the package could buy them and the
training ground for the same price Chris Wright had paid. No, on balance,
that wasn't something he was prepared to agree to. What about conditions
of sale? What criteria, apart from bidders having the money, would
he place on any sale? Again he thought it inappropriate to impose
conditions on any sale but stated that he would ensure himself that
any bid was the right deal for QPR. Did that include the City consortium
who had made their interest public earlier that afternoon? They and
anyone else who put in a firm bid, he stated.
Chris Wright wasn't the only person who had lost money with the collapse
of the share price. He was though in a better position to shoulder
the loss than many. What was his feelings on that? He was very sorry,
of course, but football shares had performed poorly everywhere and
we weren't the only club to suffer. What about accusations that he
was really only interested in Wasps all along and that he has no interest
in what happens to QPR? It was something he denied totally. Why had
he used the incident at the Fulham game to step down as chairman and
leave the club effectively rudderless? You are a rich businessman
with diverse interests, we pointed out, surely you have not got where
you are today without developing a thick skin? Anything but, he said,
I am a very sensitive person, not thick-skinned at all. I take criticism
very hard. I am used to dealing with singers, DJ's, actors - creative
people. My skills lay in nurturing talent. But, yes, he agreed, the
one thing QPR needed then, and needs now, is a 'hands-on' chairman.
But it can no longer be himself. He had, we reminded him, actually
got very little flak from the fans, certainly in comparison with chairmen
at other clubs.
We talked about the concept of a supporters trust and what in-put
one can have into the running of a football club. Both Chris Wright
and Nick Blackburn stated they were receptive to the idea, and that
they would be prepared to meet with QPR 1st on a regular basis. For
now, on a weekly basis, we pitched? Fortnightly would be more realistic,
given his full diary, responded Chris Wright. With that, and hour
and a quarter after arriving, he was gone. Off to the BBC to give
an interview to Radio Five.
The verdict of the meeting with him? He had given us a clear, unequivocal
undertaking that there would be no merger with Wimbledon or any other
club. He also stated that he would continue to do the best for QPR
but it is always hard to pin someone down to hard specifics if they
don't want to be pinned down. And the impression, as it always is
with Chris Wright, is that he doesn't want to be pinned down. But
the 'no merger' agreement was unequivocal enough - and all we can
do is take that at face value. For now. No-one is under any illusions
that there is a bigger game being played here. All we can really do
is ensure to the best of our limited abilities that QPR fans are not
treated as a pawn in all this, but as a major player whose views about
the future of our club are paramount.
As we left the meeting and went home, Chris Wright was on Radio Five,
saying much the same as he'd said to us. Merger had never been a serious
issue, and he himself had big reservations about it. It would never
have gone through without the backing of the fans anyway - and, no,
it was "extremely unlikely" a ballot would now take place. No mention
that the majority verdict had already been given anyway. All part
of the game, of course, and one only just begun.
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