Remember This - 20 years ago - Leeds set £30m target for mass summer sales, March 2002
Michael Walker and John Cassy, The Guardian
The scale of the financial implications of Leeds United's underachievement this
season became clear yesterday when the chairman Peter Ridsdale announced that they
had lost almost £14m in this financial year and that they would have to sell
£30m-worth of players this summer in order to reduce their debt by £15m to
£20m.
Leeds are
believed to have received a bid of £30m for Rio Ferdinand alone but would not
countenance selling their captain, so the mooted sale of Mark Viduka to Roma
should account for half the £30m.
Internazionale
and Juventus have offered a similar sum for Olivier Dacourt but his season has
been affected by injury and the likelihood of him not making France's World Cup
squad will affect his value. Despite all the speculation surrounding Harry
Kewell, Leeds have not received one bid for the Australian.
The ease or
difficulty of reaching the £30m figure then depends to a degree on how Leeds
finish this season. Were they to secure a Champions League place, their players
would end their season on a high note and values would rise correspondingly.
However, if Elland
Road experiences another downturn, the marketability of fringe players such as
Stephen McPhail and Robbie Keane will decrease. The manager David O'Leary will
also want to bring in at least two new faces, so Ridsdale's estimate that up to
six players may leave the club could be correct.
He said:
"One of the transfers will probably be more than £10m with three or four
more smaller deals made up of squad players who are not regular first-teamers.
The amount left for the manager to spend will depend on European
qualification."
The situation
has been forced on Leeds as they try to reduce long-term borrowings that have
risen to more than £85m after a £90m spending spree that has brought no
silverware. An indication of how results-driven the economics are is that when
they topped the Premiership in September, Leeds's shares were worth 14p. Yesterday
they fell to 7p.
Ridsdale was
speaking after Leeds unveiled a £13.8m full-year loss which served to compound
fears in the City that the stock market-listed club has borrowed too much in
its quest for success on the pitch. Leeds have had the squad independently
valued at £198m but the City values the entire club at just £25m.
But Ridsdale
remains bullish. "There are a lot of people waiting for Leeds to have a
hiccup," he said, "but we're committed to a strategy of building one
of Europe's biggest clubs and all our shareholders support us. We have no
concerns about either our cash or debt levels."
A sign of
Ridsdale's confidence, or concern, is that along with his fellow director Allan
Leighton he is preparing to buy out one significant investor in the club, the
bank UBS Warburgs, who own 11%. At yesterday's prices that would cost around
£3m.
Explaining
the yearly loss, Ridsdale said the uncertainty surrounding the Lee
Bowyer-Jonathan Woodgate trial and the injuries to Lucas Radebe and Michael
Bridges had forced Leeds to carry more players on their wage bill than they had
originally wanted. "We didn't know who was going to be available to the
manager," he said. "It was not an ideal situation."
Ridsdale also
insisted that plans to move to a new stadium and fund it by selling naming
rights were unaffected by the impending player sales. He said: "We're in
discussions with three multinationals over naming rights and already have one
indicative offer."