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    Potential Blackburn takeover

    Who in their right mind would give Fat Sam £100m to spend on transfers? I'd be worried if I was a Rovers fan by this guy, it just doesn't add up.

    Interesting read all the same.

    As Telegraph Sport revealed two weeks ago, Ahsan Ali Syed, an Indian investment tycoon, is hoping to take control of Blackburn in the next month. A team of negotiators from his company Western Gulf Advisory arrived at the club yesterday hoping to secure agreement on a four-week exclusive negotiation period.

    Syed, 36, is the heir to a family fortune estimated at £5 billion controlled by WGA, which is based in Bahrain and the Swiss canton of Zug. Syed says he has targeted Blackburn because of his “passion” for the club and the English game, and is not seeking a quick return on his investment. “For me the investment in Blackburn is more of a passion than a way to make a quick return from the balance sheets,” he said. “I am not investing to make a return in two years and walk away, I am coming in as a fan to invest for the long term.”

    Syed, who has never been to Blackburn and declined to discuss his favourite players, said that if he was successful he would begin his reign by backing Allardyce with funds to consolidate the club’s Premier League status.
    “As part of our first five-year investment we will make £80 million-£100 million available to the manager. He has done a fantastic job for the club with constrained resources, but I am sure that if he is given a free hand with the resources we can provide then Big Sam has the potential to make wonders.”
    While Syed is confident that he will do a deal, claiming to have agreed proposed terms for a contract prior to yesterday’s meetings, there was no immediate confirmation from the club that he had exclusive access to the books ahead of a deal.

    Meetings between Syed’s team, including WGA’s finance director, and club chairman John Williams continued all day, with another potential Indian investor Saurin Shah insisting that he too hoped to begin due diligence this week. Syed said he had a long-term plan for the club focused on extending Blackburn’s global reach. His plan appears to be based on exploiting the Premier League’s growing popularity in India, where football is the fastest growing game.

    “We have a 15-year investment fund for the club, split into three five-year segments,” he added.” In the first we will strengthen and retain our Premier League status, invest in the academy for the production of young players, invest in the stadium, and focus on marketing in the Middle East, the Far East and the Indian subcontinent to increase Blackburn Rovers as a brand.” Syed’s focus on Blackburn has raised eyebrows in the game, with questions as to the true potential of a club that even in its mid-1990s title-winning pomp struggled to fill its stadium.

    But the Indian remains convinced that he can “write a great turnaround story”, and revealed that he had rejected the chance to launch a bid for Liverpool. “I was presented with a number of clubs as potential investments by my advisers, but Blackburn fitted my investment model best.” WGA is said to control around £5 billion of investments on behalf of the Syed family, which traces its wealth to moneylending and investment in the Hyderabad region more than 150 years ago. From informal “conservative” lending to families and individuals the family had investments in the East India Company, and WGA now controls all of the family’s wealth, to which Syed is the sole male heir.

    Syed said he believed he would pass the Premier League’s new owners and directors test. “All my investments and wealth are out in the open, but I will submit myself to whatever the Premier League require of me,” he said.
    Hello mert.

    #2
    Yep sounds dodgy as hell to me. I hate to see clubs getting ****ed up by conmen owners but what with that cunt Allardyce being there, I'd quite enjoy it
    Last edited by Shaggy; 17-08-10, 10:55 AM. Reason: typo
    Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

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      #3
      Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
      Yep sounds dodgy as hell to me. I hate to see clubs getting ****ed off by conmen owners but what with that cunt Allardyce being there, I'd quite enjoy it
      Makes it all worthwhile.
      "Its not about the long ball or the short ball, its about the right ball." Bob Paisley

      Comment


        #4
        I just love how the indian calls him 'Big Sam'

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by Willo View Post

          But the Indian remains convinced that he can “write a great turnaround story”, and revealed that he had rejected the chance to launch a bid for Liverpool. “I was presented with a number of clubs as potential investments by my advisers, but Blackburn fitted my investment model best.” WGA is said to control around £5 billion of investments on behalf of the Syed family, which traces its wealth to moneylending and investment in the Hyderabad region more than 150 years ago. From informal “conservative” lending to families and individuals the family had investments in the East India Company, and WGA now controls all of the family’s wealth, to which Syed is the sole male heir.


          You should fire your advisors
          Member #1 of the Luis Suarez fan club

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            #6
            The Indian businessman hoping to take over Blackburn Rovers has left a trail of unpaid debt in the UK.

            Records show Ahsan Ali Syed has failed to pay a county court judgement of £61,500. Other debts include £7,800 in unpaid rent and nearly £1,000 in unpaid council tax.

            Mr Ali is also listed as director of two UK companies which were dissolved for non-compliance.

            The businessman did not respond to the BBC's request for comment.

            Mr Ali lived in England between 2001 and 2005, saying he was here "enjoying family life".

            Companies House records show one of his earliest listed addresses was in Colchester, Essex. However, the owner of the property said that Mr Ali has had no connection with the address.

            Congestion charge
            Mr Ali did live in a rented flat in London's West End. The letting agent, Abdur Karim Ali, said Mr Ali "was a very good tenant, very quiet, until 2004 and he started delaying paying his rent."


            Ahsan Ali Syed left his London home in 2005, owing £7,800 in rent
            Mr Ali suddenly vacated the London apartment in May 2005 owing approximately £7,800 in unpaid rent.

            The letting agent said the man now hoping to buy Blackburn Rover's also left the flat littered with unopened mail and shredded documents.

            "It was in a very, very bad condition. Everything was turned upside down."

            Mr Ali did not leave a forwarding address, and the agent said he had hired solicitors to try and track down his former tenant, but they could not find him.

            The BBC has discovered that other parties were also seeking Mr Ali for unpaid debts.

            Registry Trust records show that Mr Ali is yet to settle a £61,500 "unsatisfied" - or unpaid - county court judgement made against him in 2007. Specific details of this judgement are not known.

            Other debts that appear to be outstanding include an unpaid London congestion charge fine. Bailiffs were also seeking Mr Ali for unpaid Council Tax totalling £932.25.

            Dissolved companies
            Mr Ali says he has assets of about $3bn (£1.9bn) and the website of his Bahrain based company, Western Gulf Advisory, says he "plays a role in the management and the boards of over 133 companies worldwide".

            Continue reading the main story
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            As far as Mr Ali's UK business interests, the BBC could only find records linking him to two companies in London.

            In 2001, he registered as a director of Grovebridge Investments. Five years later Companies House wrote to the company's directors, asking if it was still trading because no returns had been submitted.

            Grovebridge Investments Limited was struck off in September 2006.

            Mr Ali was also a director of All Star Foods, which was dissolved in 2004 - again because no returns were filed.

            According to information published by Mr Ali's company, Western Gulf Advisory, he purchased a Canadian company between 2003 and 2004, for C$565,000 (£352,000) and sold it 16 months later for C$8m.

            When asked about his Canadian interests, Mr Ali told the BBC that he had two Canada-based businesses: Western Gulf Petroleum and Western Gulf Investments, which were founded in 2004/5.

            Just as in Britain, official records show these companies were dissolved for failure to file returns.

            'Royal adviser'
            Earlier this week, the BBC revealed that Mr Ali's Bahrain based investment company, Western Gulf Advisory, was ordered to cease trading by the country's Ministry of Industry and Commerce.


            Mr Ali has pledged a £100m transfer pot to Rovers' boss Sam Allardyce
            While the company initially denied the claims, Mr Ali has since been quoted as saying that he is co-operating fully with the authorities in the Middle Eastern state.

            Mr Ali has stressed that it is not his Bahrain-based company that is leading the takeover bid, but his Swiss based firm, Western Gulf Advisory-AG and his takeover bid remains unaffected.

            According to his company website, Mr Ali has been self-employed since the age of 16, following in the footsteps of his family, which has 150 years' experience in private sector lending across Asia.

            His company CV says Mr Ali's expertise is highly recognised in the financial world and that he acts as adviser to royalty and many high net-worth individuals.

            Mr Ali has told the BBC he hails from Bhongir, a town with a population of 50,000, near Hyderabad in India. It is here, he says, his family owned 900 acres of farm land, making their money through agriculture.

            However, Joseph Antony who writes for The Hindu newspaper says that Mr Ali is seemingly an unknown figure in his hometown - surprising given his apparent wealth.

            Mr Antony made inquiries with the revenue authority in Nalgonda, the district to which Bhongir belongs.

            'Responsibility'
            He was told by the Collector and District Magistrate - the highest revenue authority in the district - that they had never heard of Ahsan Ali Syed.

            Continue reading the main story

            Start Quote

            The club's board of directors are acutely aware of the responsibility involved in passing the club to a new owner”

            Blackburn Rovers FC
            Sources in Bahrain suggest that he is similarly unheralded in Bahrain's financial circles.


            Reports suggest that Mr Ali plans to invest £300m at Blackburn Rovers, who have fallen on hard times since winning the Premier League in 1995.

            The club's success was bankrolled by local tycoon, Jack Walker. In recent years, Rovers have been financed by a trust set up by Mr Walker before his death in 2,000. The club is now rumoured to be £20m in debt.

            A number of overseas investors have shown an interest in buying Rovers, but Mr Ali's bid has made the greatest progress.

            His representatives are currently examining the football club's accounts, with a view to completing the buyout by the end of September.

            Over the past week, the BBC has submitted repeated requests for an interview with Mr Ali, but was told he was unavailable for comment. Western Gulf Advisory also failed to respond to a request for a written statement.

            A Blackburn Rovers Football Club spokesman said: "The club has been for sale for some time and, for it to remain competitive in one of the world's toughest sporting competitions, we accept that new investment is required.

            "Equally, the trustees of the late Jack Walker, who are being professionally advised, and the club's board of directors are acutely aware of the responsibility involved in passing the club to a new owner."

            Comment


              #7
              Oh dear. Just as well for the PL that their 'fit and proper persons' test doesnt actually hold any sway, cos it seems like no ****er involved with buying a PL club would actually pass the thing.

              Comment


                #8
                Must be a requirement that you have to be a Crook to purchase a football club

                Comment


                  #9
                  this is why we all have to be sceptical about people wanting to buy football clubs. Especially ones who do it through the press.

                  time and again people turn out to be chancers at best.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Marsh View Post
                    this is why we all have to be sceptical about people wanting to buy football clubs. Especially ones who do it through the press.

                    time and again people turn out to be chancers at best.
                    They do it to gain maximum media exposure by associating themselves to a world famous brand like LFC and the Fa Prem league

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                      #11
                      What ever could you possibly mean, Marsh?



                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by Craig_H View Post
                        What ever could you possibly mean, Marsh?



                        I don't find the knighton saga funny, it makes me sad. Just think where they could be if he'd been successful. I doubt they'd be sitting on 18 titles.
                        Always borrow money from a pessimist. He won’t expect it back. Oscar Wilde

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                          #13
                          It's a chicken and egg situation though Bob. If he'd been genuine and not a chancer - and then taken over, then who's to say he wouldnt have taken them onto success too?

                          The reason most of us would think not, is because he's a chancer - but of course, if his bid had been successful, it would've been because he was genuine and NOT a chancer.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            deary me, surely even Rovers will have the nous to say thanks but no thanks to this joker.


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