His heart was obviously in the right place, and the fact he often dipped into his own pocket for the sake of the club shows the depth of feeling. However, he didn't have the acumen to see back in the late nineties the changing face of English football. He was too soft and too slow to react to take advantage of the clubs standing in the game.
His final failure was his inability to spot the cloud on the horizon what was the Credit Crunch, I've not doubt that the Hicks & Gillette partnership looked good on paper, and that the old Americans talked a good game. However he gambled the on nature of how these guys do business, and the only way Liverpool would finance the stadium with the American's is with huge loans from large international organisations/banks. Well we all know what happened to the levels of credit
Is he to blame? Probably not, there were some voices out there saying the good times wouldn't last - but who was listening? Too few it seems.
Perhaps this latest news just coincides with Parry leaving his post.
His final failure was his inability to spot the cloud on the horizon what was the Credit Crunch, I've not doubt that the Hicks & Gillette partnership looked good on paper, and that the old Americans talked a good game. However he gambled the on nature of how these guys do business, and the only way Liverpool would finance the stadium with the American's is with huge loans from large international organisations/banks. Well we all know what happened to the levels of credit
Is he to blame? Probably not, there were some voices out there saying the good times wouldn't last - but who was listening? Too few it seems.Perhaps this latest news just coincides with Parry leaving his post.


Comment