Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement

 
 
Wednesday, 9th July 2008

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Sinking Gretna lay off last 40 employees



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 20 May 2008
ALTHOUGH hopes linger that a Lazarus act could yet transpire, to all intents and purposes Gretna Football Club ceased to exist yesterday.
Administrators addressed the remaining 40 staff members of the financially stricken club at a local hotel yesterday and imparted the grim news that Saturday's deadline had passed without a satisfactory takeover deal being put together and, as a result, they were all being made redundant with immediate effect.

However, as has consistently been the case since the club filed for administration on 10 March, there remains a reluctance to bring the matter to complete closure. With no move for formal liquidation yet while the administrators remain in talks with a consortium fronted by Glasgow businessman Paul Davies, hope persists that Gretna could still take their place in the Scottish Football League next season, if a quick sale can be achieved and the club can be revived.

A statement from David Elliot of Sheffield-based administrators Wilson Field confirmed: "A prospective purchaser has contacted us this morning and confirmed that he is still in negotiations with the SFL with a view to obtaining entry into the First Division."

However, a Catch 22 situation later emerged to add to Gretna's woes. SFL president Brown McMaster told The Scotsman: "I believe the administrator has withdrawn that comment about 'negotiations' because the fact is we can't do anything until the potential buyer has satisfied the administrator. We did take a phone call from a potential buyer seeking clarification on some matters but we told them that until a deal was done with the administrator there was not much we can do.

"There is also the complication that Gretna are at present still members of the SPL, not the SFL. But we are trying to be helpful and if there is any chance of helping to ensure a football club survives we would do all we can."

It is safe to assume that any potential buyer would want to seek assurances that if a deal was put together to buy the club they would have somewhere to play next season. Following Gretna's relegation from the SPL they would need to be re-elected to the SFL at the organisation's AGM later this month. Normally this is a formality but in Gretna's case, for obvious reasons, it is not.

No new deadline has been set by the administrator and the Wilson Field statement added: "The staff and players have today been made redundant. The joint administrators thank all concerned for their support and wish everyone well in the future."

The 40 redundancies include the six players who remained under contract at the club when the season ended, caretaker manager Mick Wadsworth, coach Andy Smith and all remaining backroom staff. One of the employees laid off yesterday, security officer Ken Davies, is the father of interested buyer Paul.

A perfect illustration of the limbo the club still finds itself in was clear to anyone who attempted to log on to the official website yesterday. The site was gone but a single page with the club's badge and the name Gretna Football Club remained stoically in place, almost willing someone to breathe life back into a club which has served its small border community since 1946.

Gretna – already in a parlous position during a difficult first season in the SPL which saw them groundshare with Motherwell at Fir Park – were docked ten points on entering administration and relegated soon after. Former benefactor Brooks Mileson left the club with debts of nearly £4m but administrator Elliot revealed earlier in the month after a meeting with creditors that all a potential buyer would need to come up with is £850,000 to buy the sole asset, Raydale Park, get it up to SFL standards, and start funding the club again from scratch.

However, Wadsworth, who was also Gretna's director of football, gave a gloomy view of events. He said: "We're told there is still one interested party, but because there are no funds at the moment to carry on then everybody has been made redundant. So the assumption from that, for most of us, is that it's the end of the line regarding employment at Gretna."

If Gretna fold, Airdrie United will be promoted to the First Division and Stranraer will climb into the Second Division, forcing the SFL to seek another club from outside its ranks to join the Third Division.

Wadsworth admitted the announcement was a huge blow to the community.

"It's a shock I'm sure to the local people for whom the club is very, very important," he said.

Gretna chairman Ron McGregor, however, was more upbeat: "The negotiation is still in progress," he said. "We know the bidder who we have been talking to us is very, very keen to complete the deal."

McGregor also suggested talk of Gretna's death has been "greatly exaggerated".

Not for the first time, the question is for how long?

gretna's fall, page 68


The full article contains 832 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 19 May 2008 10:39 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Gretna FC
 
1

dma47,

DUNDEE 20/05/2008 07:07:34
Is it not time to bring this farce to a close for the sake of scotish footballs credibility.
2

deeks rearend,

20/05/2008 07:20:02
"scotish footballs credibility." now there`s a contradiction in terms
3

The RESURRECTIONISTS,

20/05/2008 07:54:20

TO ALL JAMBOS.

Watch and Learn Muchachos.....Watch and Learn !!
(It's YOUR turn next, ... Eh?)
4

Hibby Heapy,

20/05/2008 08:02:42
#2 I agree with you totally.

Time to put this sorry story to bed and pull the plug.

However you have to ask, where is Brooks Mileson now. Perhaps he's one of Mad Vlads new advisors! Your next.. and Clubcard points as well!

GGTTH
5

Nell,

The Preservation Hall 20/05/2008 08:48:16
Nos. 3 and 4:- Whats the story about? Answer:- Gretna.
Get a life you saddos!
6

Hysterical Jambow,

20/05/2008 08:51:16
3 & 4

Turn the record over, please!!!!!!!

How many times had Hibby's predicted our demise, think you had us going into administration on 2 or 3 dates during last season. Guess what........ It never happened!!

Is your club really that boring that all you can find to comment on is the hopefull demise of your bigger rival? Come to think of it it must be!. I struggle to recall the last time I bothered to read a story about Hibs, except when you sell of all your best players to the OF. But thats just comic!
7

Indie Rep Kid,

20/05/2008 09:23:44
#3 Good to see you've learnt how to spell your username correctly.

8

Prof,

20/05/2008 10:15:43
#6 that the Hobbo mentality - wee team, wee minds.

Man Utds debt -£750 m. Man Utd's turnover (for Hibbies that means sales not moving around in bed) -£200 m. What do Hobonomics say about Man Utd?
9

Hearts Daft,

Tynecastle 20/05/2008 10:18:42
Whatever happened to Brooks Mileson? Is he really ill or did he just get fed up? Maybe it was all a giant con from the start.
10

Nell,

The Preservation Hall 20/05/2008 10:30:34
No. 8:- Class description of "turnover" for our hibee friends.
11

AJ Fife,

20/05/2008 10:40:37
#8,

It would appear he was a chancer on an ego trip! With financial worries of mega proportions, nae wunner he smoked 300 fags a day!
12

AJ Fife,

20/05/2008 10:41:05
Sorry #8, that was for #9
13

dannybhoy,

20/05/2008 11:29:09
dont kid yourselves clubs in the epl could go the same way if they continue spending money @ the rate they are going
14

Montford's Jaicket,

Hanging around 20/05/2008 13:21:16
Looking on the positive side, now is the ideal opportunity for league reconstruction.
When Gretna fold, the SFL ought to invite the 10 interested teams to join; that would give them 39 member teams who should be divided into 3 x 13. Top 13 would be a national "Division 1" the others would split geographically (say north and south) to minimise their travel (I'm sure Stranraer relish trips to Peterhead) and at the end of the season the bottom 2 teams in Div 1 would be replaced by the champions of north and south and the bottom 20 would be re-organised again north and south if there were no obvious place for the bottom 2 in either pot. That would give them 12 x 2 games per season (1 home 1 away) and the "spare" Saturdays could be devoted to the Scottish Cup early rounds which would include more Junior teams. The eventual aim should be to get rid of the Junior set-up (and the SPL and SFL) so that the SFA are the sole body in charge of all football in Scotland. Trim the fat bureaucrats and their salaries and honorariums away, sell the surplus offices and use the proceeds to fund grass roots football. You know it makes sense! Fewer blazers - more tickets for real fans!
15

,

20/05/2008 20:57:17
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
16

morningsiderocks,

glenmoriston 20/05/2008 21:08:58
#15 - Remember Duff and Gray? Hearts legends the two of them. Those in glass houses......
17

,

20/05/2008 21:55:03
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
18

Youngie the hibee,

04/06/2008 18:26:59
#17
EMBARRASS, EMBARRASS, EMBARRASS..................

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 

Features

Featured Advertising



Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.