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    Correspondence with Broughton (from Anfield Road)

    Broughton responds to criticism of Rafa’s departure
    Posted on June 11th, 2010 by Jim Boardman

    The Chairman and the Managing DirectorThe following email has been sitting in the Anfield Road inbox for a day-and-a-half now. As the hours have ticked by the sense of bemusement at what it contains has grown.

    In the wake of the board’s decision last week to get rid of manager Rafael Benítez whilst retaining the services of the (temporary) managing director Christian Purslow, it was felt necessary to vent some anger at the man whose name was on the announcement. That man being the new Chairman, Martin Broughton.

    The email pointed out that if Rafa Benítez had been considered a failure, surely Christian Purslow was one too? Wasn’t his main task, the main point he was hired, to find some new investment for the club? People who’ve spoken to him will recall how Purslow bigged himself up as some kind of saviour from the owners and their own failings.

    Yet Purslow is known to have completely ignored a genuine, firm, proposal to finance the new stadium. Maybe there’s a good reason why the kind of person with access to funding for a £300m stadium isn’t even worth meeting up with when urgently looking for £100m investment in the club.

    If the email had been sent a day or two later it may not have been written with quite the same tone. The anger was at Christian Purslow still being in his job as much as the departure of Benítez. The email was sent with thoughts about leaks from “senior sources” fresh in the mind. The email was sent because there would have been enough evidence of those leaks and that failure for Broughton to act and to end that temporary appointment.

    He had the power, yet the line coming from the club was that he was only there to sell the club. The senior source was very insistent that his new boss wasn’t really his boss, just there to sell the club.

    And that begged the question – was the chairman just there to sell the club, or did he have the power to do far more? He certainly seemed to be involved in the removal of Benítez, so why was Purslow still there?

    The subject of the note captured the emotions of the moment: “Thank you for killing my club”.

    And the note called, in no uncertain terms, for Broughton to resign and to take Purslow with him.

    No reply was expected.

    There was no obligation for the Chairman to reply, but to give him his due he did reply. It took him a week, but he’s said to only work one day per week for the club so that’s not an unreasonable timeframe.

    He completely ignored the criticism of Purslow, perhaps because he couldn’t find a way to defend that criticism. But he wanted to defend his involvement in the removal of the manager, explaining that although his “principle remit” was to find those new owners, he was still Chairman.

    So that justified his involvement and closed any doubt as to how much of a part he can play in the running of the club. If it’s important enough, he can get involved. If it’s a board matter, he’s the Chairman; it’s his job to lead the board.

    But when it came to justifying the decision to let the manager go his justification was a bigger surprise than actually getting a reply.

    The expectation might have been for him to list the number of games lost, the points dropped or league positions moved downwards. Maybe a mention of large parts of the squad being unhappy with the manager (which it now turns out is not as likely to have been the case as some previously claimed) or even a vague mention of how all parties involved had discussed the situation and reluctantly decided it would be better for all concerned to part company.

    But no, it was none of those reasons.

    He wrote: “I’m sorry you think like that but you are entitled to your opinion. I note your opinion doesn’t seem to be shared by the media.”

    Pardon?

    So forget results, performances, transfer spend or (in this club’s case) transfer profit. Forget team spirit, supporter feelings and ticket sales. None of that is as important as checking those back pages.

    Does that include the stories including the obvious briefings against the manager from “senior figures inside the boardroom”?

    Is this how Liverpool Football Club now hires and fires its managers? It checks the media for their view?

    It analyses the views of all those ex-players, many of them paid to be outspoken or asked leading questions to get them to answer a certain way?

    Does it exclude the articles by writers who support this club and have always known how it works? Not the ones with axes to grind or revenge to be served, the good ones. Does it include the articles by those journalists who had clearly been briefed by “senior sources” against the manager?

    There’s not a great deal to add to that really.

    Except for this: Listen to those ex-players now. Some of them agree with you that Rafa had to go. Some of them don’t. But they all want you to choose Kenny Dalglish as the next manager. Very few of them can see a reason to put Roy Hodgson or Martin O’Neill above the man who really does know how this club works.

    The one man, as it happens, who might just help you to sell this club – assuming you want to sell it.

    The only man who can really bring unity back to the supporters. The only candidate to have won the league. The man who has a lot of unfinished business to get on with.

    The man who knows how to deal with the media. Ask Kelvin McKenzie about that one. Actually don’t, because nobody from this club should speak to Kelvin McKenzie, and he knows this. Kenny told him.

    You’re better with Kenny on your side than against you.

    He might even teach you how to make better use of the media.

    The email from Martin Broughton, email addresses removed for obvious reasons.

    From:
    Date: 10 June 2010 12:40
    Subject: Re: Thank you for killing my club
    To: Jim Boardman < >

    Jim,

    I’m sorry you think like that but you are entitled to your opinion.

    I note your opinion doesn’t seem to be shared by the media.

    You may also recall that I am Chairman with the principle remit of finding a new and suitable owner for the club. I am nevertheless Chairman and I’m surprised you don’t seem to think that releasing the manager from his contract is a Board matter.

    Martin Broughton


    What a dirt bag, this Broughton!!!!

    #2
    If that is real, it is absolutely dumbfounding.

    Comment


      #3
      they've read an awful lot into about four sentences here. still, i hate him.
      dave of mutilation

      Comment


        #4
        'Religion is killing each other over who has the best imaginary friend'

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by little dave hedgehog View Post
          they've read an awful lot into about four sentences here. still, i hate him.
          True, but it's an awfully naive thing for someone of his experience to say. Which is why I'm not convinced it's real.

          Comment


            #6
            He cant criticise purslow. Also sacking and hiring a manager is a board matter so a chairman yes he should be involved. His primary job is to find or help find a buyer but he is chariman.

            I understand all that. Its not what we where told ie just looking for a buyer. In that case Purslow should have been leading on this.

            However the unexpected answer is the media bit. It makes no sense the media where anti rafa when we where making european cup finals and when we where top of the league.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Marsh View Post
              He cant criticise purslow. Also sacking and hiring a manager is a board matter so a chairman yes he should be involved. His primary job is to find or help find a buyer but he is chariman.

              I understand all that. Its not what we where told ie just looking for a buyer. In that case Purslow should have been leading on this.

              However the unexpected answer is the media bit. It makes no sense the media where anti rafa when we where making european cup finals and when we where top of the league.
              Just to clarify, that's the bit I'm referring to.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Reece View Post
                If that is real, it is absolutely dumbfounding.
                Shocking - if true.

                I'm sure one the forum members will soon be here to defend Broughton

                Another MASSIVE game

                Comment


                  #9
                  I fail to see where Broughton said he sacked Benitez because the media didn't like Rafa.

                  He simply said the person who sent him the note was entitled to his opinion, but it is not an opinion to his knowledge that is shared by the majority and he then used the mdeia as an example. Anyways, as far as I could see, over 90% of the media were saying Rafa had to go, and tbh, when it is that high a percentage in sport, they are seldom wrong.
                  Forwards.......

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by darkstar View Post
                    Broughton responds to criticism of Rafa’s departure
                    Posted on June 11th, 2010 by Jim Boardman

                    The Chairman and the Managing DirectorThe following email has been sitting in the Anfield Road inbox for a day-and-a-half now. As the hours have ticked by the sense of bemusement at what it contains has grown.

                    In the wake of the board’s decision last week to get rid of manager Rafael Benítez whilst retaining the services of the (temporary) managing director Christian Purslow, it was felt necessary to vent some anger at the man whose name was on the announcement. That man being the new Chairman, Martin Broughton.

                    The email pointed out that if Rafa Benítez had been considered a failure, surely Christian Purslow was one too? Wasn’t his main task, the main point he was hired, to find some new investment for the club? People who’ve spoken to him will recall how Purslow bigged himself up as some kind of saviour from the owners and their own failings.

                    Yet Purslow is known to have completely ignored a genuine, firm, proposal to finance the new stadium. Maybe there’s a good reason why the kind of person with access to funding for a £300m stadium isn’t even worth meeting up with when urgently looking for £100m investment in the club.

                    If the email had been sent a day or two later it may not have been written with quite the same tone. The anger was at Christian Purslow still being in his job as much as the departure of Benítez. The email was sent with thoughts about leaks from “senior sources” fresh in the mind. The email was sent because there would have been enough evidence of those leaks and that failure for Broughton to act and to end that temporary appointment.

                    He had the power, yet the line coming from the club was that he was only there to sell the club. The senior source was very insistent that his new boss wasn’t really his boss, just there to sell the club.

                    And that begged the question – was the chairman just there to sell the club, or did he have the power to do far more? He certainly seemed to be involved in the removal of Benítez, so why was Purslow still there?

                    The subject of the note captured the emotions of the moment: “Thank you for killing my club”.

                    And the note called, in no uncertain terms, for Broughton to resign and to take Purslow with him.

                    No reply was expected.

                    There was no obligation for the Chairman to reply, but to give him his due he did reply. It took him a week, but he’s said to only work one day per week for the club so that’s not an unreasonable timeframe.

                    He completely ignored the criticism of Purslow, perhaps because he couldn’t find a way to defend that criticism. But he wanted to defend his involvement in the removal of the manager, explaining that although his “principle remit” was to find those new owners, he was still Chairman.

                    So that justified his involvement and closed any doubt as to how much of a part he can play in the running of the club. If it’s important enough, he can get involved. If it’s a board matter, he’s the Chairman; it’s his job to lead the board.

                    But when it came to justifying the decision to let the manager go his justification was a bigger surprise than actually getting a reply.

                    The expectation might have been for him to list the number of games lost, the points dropped or league positions moved downwards. Maybe a mention of large parts of the squad being unhappy with the manager (which it now turns out is not as likely to have been the case as some previously claimed) or even a vague mention of how all parties involved had discussed the situation and reluctantly decided it would be better for all concerned to part company.

                    But no, it was none of those reasons.

                    He wrote: “I’m sorry you think like that but you are entitled to your opinion. I note your opinion doesn’t seem to be shared by the media.”

                    Pardon?

                    So forget results, performances, transfer spend or (in this club’s case) transfer profit. Forget team spirit, supporter feelings and ticket sales. None of that is as important as checking those back pages.

                    Does that include the stories including the obvious briefings against the manager from “senior figures inside the boardroom”?

                    Is this how Liverpool Football Club now hires and fires its managers? It checks the media for their view?

                    It analyses the views of all those ex-players, many of them paid to be outspoken or asked leading questions to get them to answer a certain way?

                    Does it exclude the articles by writers who support this club and have always known how it works? Not the ones with axes to grind or revenge to be served, the good ones. Does it include the articles by those journalists who had clearly been briefed by “senior sources” against the manager?

                    There’s not a great deal to add to that really.

                    Except for this: Listen to those ex-players now. Some of them agree with you that Rafa had to go. Some of them don’t. But they all want you to choose Kenny Dalglish as the next manager. Very few of them can see a reason to put Roy Hodgson or Martin O’Neill above the man who really does know how this club works.

                    The one man, as it happens, who might just help you to sell this club – assuming you want to sell it.

                    The only man who can really bring unity back to the supporters. The only candidate to have won the league. The man who has a lot of unfinished business to get on with.

                    The man who knows how to deal with the media. Ask Kelvin McKenzie about that one. Actually don’t, because nobody from this club should speak to Kelvin McKenzie, and he knows this. Kenny told him.

                    You’re better with Kenny on your side than against you.

                    He might even teach you how to make better use of the media.

                    The email from Martin Broughton, email addresses removed for obvious reasons.

                    From:
                    Date: 10 June 2010 12:40
                    Subject: Re: Thank you for killing my club
                    To: Jim Boardman < >

                    Jim,

                    I’m sorry you think like that but you are entitled to your opinion.

                    I note your opinion doesn’t seem to be shared by the media.

                    You may also recall that I am Chairman with the principle remit of finding a new and suitable owner for the club. I am nevertheless Chairman and I’m surprised you don’t seem to think that releasing the manager from his contract is a Board matter.

                    Martin Broughton


                    What a dirt bag, this Broughton!!!!
                    Not only has this man helped get rid of a good Man and a good Manager(given a paltry Tranfer kitty every season whilst in charge and, who had to sell players in order to purchace others), he also has put our great Club back 5years imo

                    I really fear the worst for Club whilst the two grave diggers are in charge and, by not selling the Club to very wealthy owners(from what i've read) just for the simple reason the pair of them are greedy cunts, i can't see any potential improvment in our situation any day soon.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by RedSince1964 View Post
                      Not only has this man helped get rid of a good Man and a good Manager(given a paltry Tranfer kitty every season whilst in charge and, who had to sell players in order to purchace others), he also has put our great Club back 5years imo

                      I really fear the worst for Club whilst the two grave diggers are in charge and, by not selling the Club to very wealthy owners(from what i've read) just for the simple reason the pair of them are greedy cunts, i can't see any potential improvment in our situation any day soon.


                      My take on it – they got rid of Rafa because he had (negotiated) too much power (in his contract, which was given to him, last year, by the current {clowns}owners)

                      Why else did they sack him? To bring in a new/better manager? Roy Hodgson??

                      Rafa (probably) had the power to veto players being sold. I’d imagine that, right now, there are big offers on the table for Torres, Gerrard and Mascherano and Cunt and Cunter are rubbing their hands at the prospect of making £100m by selling three of our top players.
                      Another MASSIVE game

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Although we all know that Chelski cunt didn't made the decision. It was obviously the yanks, they make the big decisions

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by Rigadon View Post


                          My take on it – they got rid of Rafa because he had (negotiated) too much power (in his contract, which was given to him, last year, by the current {clowns}owners)

                          Why else did they sack him? To bring in a new/better manager? Roy Hodgson??

                          Rafa (probably) had the power to veto players being sold. I’d imagine that, right now, there are big offers on the table for Torres, Gerrard and Mascherano and Cunt and Cunter are rubbing their hands at the prospect of making £100m by selling three of our top players.
                          Gr8t reply squire

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by -V- View Post
                            Although we all know that Chelski cunt didn't made the decision. It was obviously the yanks, they make the big decisions
                            Correct V but, the toerag probably put his two pennies worth in i imagine mate

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Im sure he did. I can't help but feel that he has no interest in LFC succeeding and will probably try to sell Torres to 'his' club

                              Comment

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