Coventry City: Sky Blues step up groundshare plan
- Published
Coventry City have revealed they are in groundshare talks with three rival Midlands clubs while they move ahead with plans for a new stadium.
Sky Blues chief executive Tim Fisher told a fans forum that the League One club are working closely on the proposal with the Football League.
"There are three clubs we're in talks with," he said. "We're sharpening the pencil on final numbers."
Nothing can happen, however, until the club is taken out of administration.
"We've kept the Football League absolutely appraised of where we are," said Fisher.
"But whatever, the Football League will not allow any groundshare to be agreed or sanctioned until this football club is out of administration.
"That is the key to all of this, getting out of administration."
City, who have been in administration since a High Court hearing in March, reached the deadline set for any party interested in taking over the troubled club to make an offer on Friday.
So far, administrator Paul Appleton has been approached by an Asian consortium and a group headed by American tycoon Preston Haskell IV.
The two parties are bidding to buy Coventry City FC Limited, the division of the club that Appleton and the Football League believe holds the Golden Share.
After being put into administration, the club was automatically deducted 10 points by the League, costing them any chance of promotion.
However, current owners Sisu argue that Coventry City Holdings Ltd, which is not in administration, holds the club's assets, including staff contracts and the Golden Share.
Fisher, who remains insistent that the club is not for sale and that Sisu have a long-term vision for the club, met with jeers from supporters in the room for the forum at a local hotel.
Having faced questions for more than an hour from supporters angry at the plans to leave the Ricoh and groundshare for three seasons, he admitted it was a major commercial risk.
He believes that the club are likely to attract at best only 6,000, less than half of last season's average home gate, to follow them elsewhere and at worst, only 3,000.
Fisher revealed the three league clubs who have been spoken to are all within a 30-mile radius of Coventry.
And he told supporters that, unless they are put on a sustainable basis by owning their own stadium, there is a real risk that the club will spiral down and down.
He also warned that the longer City stay in administration, the greater the risk is that the club "will be impaired permanently" and that there was a real danger they could "turn into a Portsmouth".
Additional reporting by Nick Clitheroe (BBC Midlands Today) and Clive Eakin (BBC Coventry & Warwickshire).
- Published31 May 2013
- Published30 May 2013
- Published28 May 2013
- Published25 May 2013
- Published16 May 2013
- Published3 May 2013
- Published28 March 2013