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Thursday, 2nd September 2010

When a 'little' means such a lot

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Published Date: 23 January 2009
If one man can achieve so much by apparently doing so little, Sheffield Wednesday are on the fast track to the Premier League, paradise and beyond.
Actually, 'little' is not quite fair. There are smiles on faces everywhere you look . . . Hillsborough is bathed in hope and optimism. . . everyone is pulling in the same direction with manager and players relishing the feel-good factor.

If that is doing little, there'll be absolutely no stopping Lee Strafford when he is doing a lot.

Less than three weeks with a new chairman and Sheffield Wednesday have got body and soul back together. That's more than enough for now - all accomplished on the fundamental restoration of unity between club and fans.

In time, of course, everyone will want to see some flesh on the bones of the new regime through a delivery of promised investment. But Strafford and chief executive Nick Parker have already earned a generous dollop of time, faith and patience - simply by re-engaging with supporters and restoring a sense of pride in the club.

It's simple and it works. Whatever the financial complexities to come - no Hillsborough takeover could ever be straightforward - Strafford is rapidly emerging as the right man at the right time. Just as, in my view, Dave Allen was the right chairman in his time. And before I get howled down by some people, there is no mischief or hidden agenda here.

I'd simply be grateful to be allowed what I hope will be my final word on a subject that has left me in the crossfire and, incidentally, still banned from Elland Road by Leeds chairman Ken Bates more than three years after a certain, well chronicled episode. Time for us all to move on, I think.

There's no going back now and rightly so. But history will recall that when Allen joined the board in 2000, the club was lumbered with large, unsustainable salaries that made further losses inevitable. He stepped up as a tough chairman in tough times following a further drop to League One. . . and left a respectably placed Championship outfit in 2007 having put a sinking ship on an even keel.

Although the rancorous atmosphere surrounding Hillsborough made a regime change right for all concerned (Allen did the right things but not always in the right way), Strafford made his move because he felt the club had bottomed out. As a result, he and Parker have inherited a much more stable base than the meltdown scenario following Wednesday's relegation from the Premier League.

And that is not to denigrate them. Quite the opposite. More power to them in recognising the optimum moment to clear the air.

Cue a change of tack and a unison with fans that is long overdue and much needed. With perfect timing, Strafford recognised that drawing a line under the infighting was equally - if not more - pressing than hooking investors. Your correspondent now draws the same line with thanks for hearing me out!

With no political baggage to carry, Strafford made a key change in the management of the club before approaching the task with vigour and enterprise. It is a well-intentioned initiative that deserves to succeed.

Yes, it is a honeymoon period. Certainly, there is cash to deliver in due course. But there has been enough positive intent - not least the smart move to gain the endorsement and support of Howard Wilkinson - to be hugely encouraged.

Recent history is always relevant as a link to the present and future, which is why I make no apologies for referring to it. But the past is the past. Here's to the future.

What do you think? Add your comments below.


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  • Last Updated: 26 January 2009 11:06 AM
  • Source: Telegraph
  • Location: SHEFFIELD, SOUTH YORKSHIRE
 
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swafty,

sunny bradford. 23/01/2009 10:33:44
What an absolute load of rubbish.

Biggs says that we were in a good position when Allen left, but hadn't the debt increased significantly, werent the fans and the club pulling in different directions, weren't fans being abused called scum and cretins, Yes to all the above.

Move on Mr Biggs, Strafford and co are the best thing to happen at S6 in its recent history, he has not taken over because the club has bottomed out, as it has not and is now not likely too, how did this story get past the editor, its a joke.
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Informed Owl,

Realism Street 23/01/2009 10:34:05
Congratulations to Mr Biggs for once again prostrating himself at the altar of our former chairman and doing his best Arlen Spector impersonation by twisting physics and logic to justify his predetermined conclusion.

Mr Allen will walk away from our great club considerably richer than when he arrived once he can finally sell his shares and have his loans repaid, even as the business he was in charge of floundered and doubled it's own debts. Coupled with this we saw the worst supporter/board relations perhaps in the club's entire history, woeful underachievement financially compared with clubs in similar circumstances, a catalogue of embarrassments (remember the Owls Away Card, season ticket photo IDs, legal action against supporters, banning orders for those not following Mr Biggs' sycophantic example, public rants against all and sundry including Ken Bates, John Hemmingham, Darryl Keys, Ian Appleyard, Paul Sturrock, Wednesdayite, SWFC shareholders, internet forum members, club sponsors...?), chronic failure to deliver investment, plummeting attendances, the second lowest league position in our 142 years of competition, complaints from other clubs about unsettling their players with bluster of signings that never materialised, the training ground sale farce, civil war with the club's second largest shareholder and the tawdry attempt to browbeat them into giving up their shares so that they could be sold on for profit and so on.

If you don't believe me, already Messrs Strafford, Parker and Laws have delivered comments into the public record that, if you're prepared to read between the lines (and I suspect Mr Biggs is not), are about as critcial of the way the club was being operated as the circumstances will realistically allow without the threat of starting more unseemly slanging matches.

Even this much touted 'stability' belies the underlying facts. Study the accounts closely and you may notice that our profits of the last two years would have seen the £1
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Informed Owl,

Realism Street 23/01/2009 10:41:32
(continued from above)

Even this much touted 'stability' belies the underlying facts. Study the accounts closely and you may notice that our profits of the last two years would have seen the £1+ annual losses continuing had it not been for the sales of £6m in playing assets and thus the perilously close call we had in just avoiding the catastrophe of a second Allen-era plunge into the third tier of the league. Is this model really one likely to have delivered long-term success and prosperity? Does it really represent financial stability and evidence that the board were effective and proactive?

I have every confidence that Mr Allen's legacy will be one of failure and contempt. Mr Biggs may attempt to use his privileged position to stem this tide but this will only result in his own ridicule. Should the new directors deliver any level of success, this process will only be accelerated. And the blindfolds will start to be lifted from those who thought they were being loyal to what they perceived as 'the club' by defending what was happening. But to be fair, they were largely trusting of a local media that was much too selective in what it reported and only too helpful to the SWFC board.

Viva la revolucion.
4

Dave Glossop,

23/01/2009 12:32:47
Mr Biggs,

I'm not a political fan, as your flippant remark on Football heaven suggested that some of us were. However, before Mr Allen you could argue that the most political Wednesday fans became was the occasional "Sack the Board" chant.

Your article chooses to ignore the fact that when MR Allen took over we were £12 million in debt. The high wage earners were allowed to see out there contracts and a systematic destruction of the relationship between club and fans.

When Stafford took over the Club some would say the club was in free fall and you suggest that Mr Allen steadied the decline prior to his departure. I don't see how this is the case?

I fail to see any positives from a regime that did so much damage, some it repairable. I suggest you look at the World Wide damage the clubs reputation took when it decided to sue fans for bar room banter. I believe that this episode is even discussed among the academia in Legal training.

I ask agenda, what agenda?
5

Weshallovercome,

23/01/2009 14:02:45
What a pathetic attempt at a wind-up, Biggs.....again it seems you're trying to fuel the fires of supporters unrest.

You and your editor should be ashamed of yourselves for publishing such utter tripe.

....and for once I agree with Bates.



p.s. well said Informed Owl....but sadly it wont stop the like of Biggs mis-informing the Wednesdayite fanbase.

6

Chessy Owl,

Chesterfield 23/01/2009 19:27:34
Way off the mark Mr Biggs. You've missed, or perhaps chosen to miss, the whole atmosphere amongst Wednesday fans. Extra finance would ofcourse be welcome but the club is already on the up - extra cash would just speed the process.
7

,

27/01/2009 03:55:20
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason: Removed at editor's discretion.
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