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Rangers administration: Craig Whyte blasted after sale of historic Arsenal shares

Paul Gascoigne in action during Nigel Winterburn's testimonial at Highbury

Paul Gascoigne in action during Nigel Winterburn's testimonial at Highbury

CRAIG Whyte has managed to enrage fans of another club after selling off a historic share holding in Arsenal held by Rangers since the beginning of the last century.

Fans of both sides have united to register their dismay at the sale of 16 shares acquired by the Ibrox club in 1910, with one member of the Arsenal Supporters Trust yesterday accusing Whyte of destroying the history between the clubs for his own personal gain.

It emerged yesterday that Whtye had sold the shares for £230,000 shortly before the Ibrox club went into administration. The sum was not paid into the Rangers bank account, Instead, it remained lodged in one of his companies, Pritchard Stockbrokers in Bournemouth. Pritchard’s assets have now been frozen on the orders of the Financial Services Authority.

For Rangers supporters, the sale of the shares, coupled with the uncertainty over whether the Ibrox club will ever see the sum gathered, is yet another betrayal of the club’s past by someone who has already mortgaged off Rangers’ future courtesy of the notorious season-ticket deal with Ticketus. For Arsenal fans, as well as cutting a bond between the clubs, the move also impacts on an ownership bid being prepared by the Uzbekistan-born billionaire Alisher Usmanov, who is understood to have bought Rangers’ stake in Arsenal for around £15,000 per share.In the view of both the Rangers and Arsenal fans, they were not Whyte’s to sell. For supporters of the English club, the outrage was compounded by the swiftness, and secrecy, with which the deal was done. Arsenal shares are at a premium and are traded infrequently on PLUS, a specialist market.

Whyte chose not to offer the shares to the Arsenal Supporters Trust or the Arsenal Fanshare group, which would have at least ensured that the historic stake came back under supporter-control. Instead Whyte struck a deal with Usmanov, who is now just a fraction away from amassing the 30 per cent share stake which permits him to a place on the Arsenal board and also grants him access to important financial data.

Although small in number, the sale of the shares that were once owned by Rangers could have a significant bearing on Arsenal’s future, with Stan Kroenke, the club’s majority shareholder, under pressure to increase investment. Arsene Wenger’s side look likely to complete a seventh successive season without a trophy. Usmanov has been regarded as persona non grata by the current Arsenal board, but, having agreed a deal with Whyte, he is now just an estimated 50 shares short of reaching the magic 30 per cent mark.

“Every single share is one share closer to 30 per cent, when we might see some pressure brought to bear [on Kroenke],” said Nigel Phillips, of the Arsenal Supporters Trust. Usmanov is reported to be in favour of ending Wenger’s 16 year reign as manager.

“From the Arsenal supporters’ point of view, we are disappointed not to have had the chance to try and buy them, having made representations to both the previous ownership, under David Murray, and having registered an interest with the administrators last week,” he added.

Martha Silcott, an Arsenal Fanshare board member, contacted representatives from Duff and Phelps last week, just hours after she heard Rangers had gone into administration. “I wanted to know whether the shares were still in the possession of the club,” she said. “I said: look, I know you will be leafing through a pile of paperwork, but I wanted to let them know that we [the Arsenal Fanshare group] exist, and we would be interested in buying the shares, if they were ever to be sold.”

The administrators told Silcott that they would be back in touch once they had managed to get a sufficient handle on the finances. But Silcott hadn’t heard back by the time she was stopped dead in her tracks yesterday, when a fellow Arsenal fan phoned to inform her of the sale.

“I was walking through St Pancras Station, and I just froze,” she said yesterday. “I felt sick to the pit of my stomach. It is so disrespectful. It is not as if he (Whyte) didn’t have options.” Indeed, not only does the sale build up Usmanov’s holding in the club through his Red & White consortium, it ends one of the longest associations in football. As recorded in The Scotsman in 2006, Rangers acquired two shares in the London club in 1910. George Morrell is the person who is believed to have facilitated the exchange. Morrell had worked at Rangers before becoming manager at Woolwich Arsenal, as they were then known, in 1908. The clubs played a friendly between each other in April of that year in Glasgow and the English side, who were then based in south London and on the brink of liquidation themselves, later transferred two shares to Rangers in what is believed to have been a thank you gesture. When there was a share split in 1991, both these shares grew into a stake of eight shares each.

Knowledge of Rangers’ share holding in Arsenal only became public knowledge six years ago, after Phillips contacted then Rangers owner Sir David Murray and David Joliffe, the club’s financial director, to ask why they were not listed in Rangers’ accounts. It had become an issue due to the recent rise in value of the shares. Only 62,217 have ever been issued, with the London club now valued at £1.1 billion. “I got a copy of the shareholders’ register from pre-computer days, an old printed paper, it was over 150 pages long,” recalled Phillips yesterday, when asked how he came to learn of the existence of the shares. “I went through and it and there was an entry saying Glasgow Rangers.”

It is not unique for one football club to own shares in another club. Indeed, Fergus McCann was surprised to learn that Celtic owned some shares in Rangers when he took over the Parkhead club in 1994, and swiftly sold them on.

But the Rangers stake in Arsenal was a symbolic one, as much as anything. “It is a great pity,” said Robert McElroy, the Rangers historian. “It’s a part of the heritage of two clubs.”

His view was supported by Silcott, who seethed at the actions of Whyte yesterday.

“This is about a lot more than money,” she said. “It’s about history and the close relationship between two clubs. In one fell swoop, it has been swept aside for personal again. It goes against everything the shares stand for.”

A solid metal cannon, a gift from Arsenal to mark Rangers’ centenary in 1973, is said to reside in the Ibrox club’s Blue Room. Someone had better go and check that it is still there.


Comments

There are 23 comments to this article

Page 1 of 2


23

ChrisMcC

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 03:20 PM

16 - Allthe9s- Why would "hun" be banned? All it means is Rangers supporter. As an example, the Alfie Conn song from the late '70s "he used to be a hun but he's alright now ...". Did this mean "he used to be a protestant but he's changed to a catholicmuslimjew"? No! What's meant, obviously, is "he used to play for Rangers ...". Nice try, AT9s but epic fail!



22

IMHO

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 02:14 PM

#16 - go on then, explain what the problem is with 'huns'. Next you will be telling us we can't call celtic 'the soapdodgers'.



21

trueblue

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 02:09 PM

themanwithnobrains yeah very funny not listen muppet i was born and raised in glasgow and proud of it but like anyone if you go looking for trouble which applies anywhere youll find it needless to say i was never in any botehr polis or other wise so id question your upbringing



20

Murdock

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 02:05 PM

Oh the dignity of it all...



19

jerrymanders

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 12:22 PM

#5, #6 "Arsenal" fans, "Arsenal" fans - in much the same way it was "Chelsea" fans that caused all the riots in Madchester, lol. Minty and Whytey Boy have sold your club down the river.



18

Swords Man

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 09:56 AM

Song moment..Just for Craigy boay....Tennessee Ernie Ford's 'Sixteen Tons' ..'Another day older and deeper in debt.....'



17

TommyTommy

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 09:38 AM

If Whyte has pocketed that money then it is theft in anyones book.



16

Allthe9s

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 09:06 AM

I also note that the powers that be have reported Rangers for calling Brines a "f*nian" ... I wonder if the Killie fans are being reported for the use of the term "h*ns" ... the Celtic fans also chanted throughout the game on Sunday using the banned term "h*ns" ... if this is the way forward then it must apply tae all banned songs and include all clubs ...



15

Allthe9s

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 09:01 AM

As things unfold it seems like CW has bought the club with the fans money and asset stripped them with the sale of the Arsenal shares and Jelavic the obvious ones ... how many other dodgy deals has this bloke done behind the scenes that we are yet tae hear about ... I would hope that CW is stripped of the ownership and as a secured creditor as a result of fraud and failing in the terms of the sale ... it looks like crimes have been committed and I hope that he also faces criminal charges ... SDM really has a lot tae answer for ... I won't boycott Rangers as together we stand ... divided we fall ...



14

Lochinvar

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 08:58 AM

An how exactly are we spelling "Craig Whyte" then Mr Scotsman headline writer?



13

sonofcosmos

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 08:39 AM

Have the media not learned their lesson...rangers are in administration....dave king came over in september 2011 a concerned King is preparing to fly to Glasgow in a quest to salvage what is left of a £20m investment he made under the David Murray regime. " i think he is a concerned creditor rather than a saviour...although with his colourful tax dealing past he fits the bill lol x



12

themanwith2brains

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 08:17 AM

plus forget the lies from spl or fatty salmond , thy are doing nowt to the 2 glesga clubs whose fans in the tens of thousand shout abuse week in week out, plus the media including this paper turn a blind eye



11

themanwith2brains

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 08:15 AM

i hope gers go down tubes , how good will it be ,that you only need to go to glesga twice a season and get your heid kicked in, and thats just the polis, never mind the scum fans lol,



10

Baldrick

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 08:00 AM

Good on you , 1, 8 and 9. Let's keep our foot on the throat. Why there is no enquiry into the sectarian business is nothing short of astonishing. That's why I delight in the mess Rangers are in. The sooner they've gone, the better. The sooner Celtic follow them, better still.



9

vladhibs

Thursday, February 23, 2012 at 07:10 AM

take your medicine, open wide



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