Reading this article makes what's going on at Pompey look sane :
From
www.twohundredpercent.netSince we last reported from Chester City, much has happened and nothing has
changed. At the same time, owner Stephen Vaughan was due to have ceded all
control in the club by the middle of December having been disqualified as a
company director after an investigation by the Insolvency Service's
Disqualification Investigation Team over alleged carousel fraud. Casual
observers may have been forgiven, however, for continuing to hold the impression
that not a great deal has changed at The Deva Stadium over the last month or so.
Over the last couple of weeks, however, things have started to become farcical
there.
First of all came the arrival of Morell Maison, fresh from his disastrous spell
at Halesowen Town, which left the Southern League club teetering on the brink of
closure, banned from FA competitions this year after they failed to pay
Maisdtone United and Durham City gate receipts from matches against them last
year in the FA Cup and the FA Trophy (which left a particularly bitter taste in
the case of Durham, who had to release all of their players during the summer
after the withdrawal of a sponsor, leaving them gamely but distastrously
battling away at the bottom of the UniBond League Premier Division with a youth
team) and boycotted by their own supporters.
Maison didn't seem particularly clear on what his role at the club actually was.
His official title seems to be "Director Of Football", but according to
subsequent press interviews he still hasn't met the players yet. The question of
why a club would be taking on a Director of Football when the players hadn't
been paid for two months wasn't, unsurprisingly, answered by the club itself.
Maison started his time at the club with an interview on BBC London's Non-League
Show on the 4th of January. He stated - at first - that the club was still under
the ownership of both Stephen Vaughan Junior and Senior (news that may have been
of interest to the FA as well as the Insolvency Service) before amending this
statement to say that Vaughan Senior hadn't been involved in his appointment. He
then went on to state that he wasn't being paid for his position and that he
wouldn't be getting involved in issues on the playing side of the football club.
He contradicted himself on one of these statements within the body of the
interview (claiming to have signed two players on loan from Mansfield Town), and
the truth behind the other started to come out in the next few days.
By the end of the week, the truth was starting to emerge, as rumours began to
circulate that Maison had paid GBP75,000 for a share in the club, though details
remain sketchy over whether this has actually taken place or what he may have
paid for. It would have been interesting to hear his interview at the bank for
that particular loan. At the same time, manager Jim Harvey gave up the ghost and
left the club. Reports on BBC Radio Merseyside again linked Vaughan Senior with
the running of the club, stating that it was he that had told Harvey that he had
no future at the club. At the same time, Cambridge United were have reported to
have reported the club over non-payment for loan players that the Chester took
from them during the first half of this season.
It seems that these are the straws that are finally breaking the camel's back.
There is now open talk on the club's forum, Devachat, of a breakaway club with
the major sticking point between supporters now being whether they should go now
in order to be prepared for the start of next season or wait to see if or when
the club goes bust in order to secure a lease on The Deva Stadium. It seems
unlikely that they will get a lease on what they would regard as their home
until the old club has finally vacated it, unless the local council step in and
evict Chester City. Whether they would be able to do this legally would depend
on the terms of the lease. Meanwhile, it now seems likely that everything will
be done in order for Chester to complete their fixtures this season. It has been
mentioned that the survival of the club for this season is likely to be ensured,
but where they go at the end of the season is very much open to question. The
Football Conference has a deal that it brokered with the Football League for two
promotion and relegation places, and it doesn't wish to jeopardise them. At the
end of the season, though, with relegation seeming a near certainty, what
exactly will happen?
Even allowing for the absurd and flagrant abuses of the rules that they have
already piled up this season and the extent to which they have got away with it,
it seems scarcely credible that the club will not have the book thrown at it
once 2009/10 is out of the way. The issues of ownership, non-payment of football
debts and the manner in which it started the season would seem to indicate that
expulsion from the Conference is likely and that the club would have to start
next season in the UniBond League Premier Division at best. There is precedent
for this, in the case of Boston United a couple of years ago. Boston, a club of
a similar size to Chester, remain in the middle of the UniBond League - proof,
as if it were needed, that the long-haul back to the Football League is
something that has to be worked for rather than a series of rights of accession.
Even if it didn't, relegation from the Blue Square Premier at the end of this
season is already almost inevitable - the club would need around forty-five to
fifty points from their remaining matches to have anything like a realistic
chance of avoiding relegation. Players seem to be leaving on an almost daily
basis, and the club will be unlikely to make much revenue from match days if a
full boycott. Ultimately, however, the charade of anybody at the club actually
giving a damn about the supporters of the club vanished a long time ago. It is
now the football authorities that the club's owners have to persuade. They have
played them off for mugs several times before - will they be able to get away
with it yet again?
And in the comments section of the blog, was this gem: Facebook can be a useful
site to keep in touch with friends etc, but also a wonderful repository of
gubbins. Ladies & gents, I give you the Morell Maison fan page:
www.facebook.com/group.php?v=wall&gid=3789940128As a Cambridge United fan, I'm still amazed we let Mark Beasley go on loan to
Chester, as anyone with half a brain can work out that the club have no money.
At our fans forum, any worries about the loan were brushed off with a "we are
football creditor, don't worry" response. I wish no ill to the fans of Chester,
but if this is another nail in the coffin of Stephen Vaughn FC, then so be it.
AFC Chester is only option.