Showing posts with label cafc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cafc. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 May 2016

Article on Duchatelet's influence at St Truiden





John Chapman the Belgium football writer (look for him on twitter under @BelgoFoot, he is worth a follow) has been a good source of information on the goings on in the Duchatelet network.

While Duchatelet has now sold Standard Liege John still provides information on St Truiden.  The latest snippet is a report from Sport Foot Magazine.  You can read the original article here:-

http://sportmagazine.levif.be/sport/foot-national/duchatelet-a-discute-avec-des-coaches-pour-saint-trond/article-normal-501551.html

If your language skills are a little rusty and you use Chrome as a your browser you can "right click" on the article to translate it into English, otherwise copy and paste into Google Translate.

The gist of the article is that it appears that Mr Duchatelet has a strong say in the running of the club despite St Truiden being owned by Mr Duchatelet's partner and him having no formal position at the club.

There are rules in the Belgium league that prevent the ownership of more than one football club so previously when he owned Standard Liege he could not be involved in the ownership or running of St Truiden.  However, now that Standard has been sold he could legitimately take over the reigns at St Truiden with a formal shareholding or directorship.

If the report is true then to flatly deny such influence when there is no formal connection with the club is frankly disingenuous and a barrier to any sensible minded person taking up any role with responsibility at the club.

The fact that Roland is doing this should be no surprise to Charlton fans.  Despite repeated assurances by the directors to the contrary we have seen the impact of Roland's meddling at the Valley.  The more this goes on, the greater the lack of credibility in the eyes of anyone looking at Charlton.  Given the alleged actions at St Truiden I doubt very much that any decent manager would want to join the club even if their contract gave specific assurances.  Perception is everything Roland!


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Friday, 29 April 2016

Financial Fair Play – All change as Charlton are relegated to League One

As well as the obvious drop in income that the club will suffer as a result of being relegated to League One it also has to contend with a different set of rules for Financial Fair Play (FPP).

Unhelpfully the link to the Football League regulations has disappeared from its website and they have not responded to my request for the regulations or to restore the link so the following is my interpretation of the rules from various other sources.

This season in the Championship, under FPP, clubs were permitted a maximum loss of £13m (or £5m if the owner did not inject more equity) over one season.

However, in League One, clubs are subject to a Salary Cost Management Protocol (SCMP) where player salaries are capped at 60% of Turnover plus 100% of Football Fortune Income.

Fan Anger will reduce Turnover
Only wages of players are including non contracted and loan players.  Management, youth players (under 20 and who have come through the club's youth programme)  and other non playing staff are not included.  The salaries of players loaned out to other clubs are not included for the duration of the loan.

As a newly relegated club Charlton can also exclude some players from the wage bill if they were signed pre-September on a contract longer than three seasons.  I believe that this exemption covers Bauer, Sarr and Bergdich but not Ba, Cellobas or Kashi who only signed three year contracts.

The definition of Turnover includes match day income, commercial/sponsorship income as well as revenue from TV rights.  As a newly demoted club this figure rises to 75% for Charlton for the first season.  If the club is demoted to League two then the turnover figure drops to 55%.

Football Fortune Income is variable or one off income which includes financial donations and equity from the owner, transfer income (on a cash basis) and cup match income.

The overall effect it to ensure that clubs have enough money in the bank after covering players’ salaries to ensure that they should be able to break even while still allowing them to spend windfall monies on player salaries.

The sanctions for breaking the rules is a player transfer embargo.

How does this impact on Charlton we might ask?  Using the annual accounts to June 2015 staff turnover was 96%.  This figure includes all training and football management as well as 45 administration, commercial and stadium staff so is on the high side for SCMP but is a good proxy and clearly will need to come down.  If turnover and wages were to remain as they stand then the owner would have to inject approximately a further £3.3m as equity or a donation in order to meet the criteria above.  

Clearly turnover will be heavily down across the board.  Broadcasting income will be virtually non existent and I suspect ticket income will also be down heavily.  I for one will not be renewing my season ticket under the current owner's regime.  So as things currently stand it would be a good estimate to assume that for the 2016/17 season player salaries are higher than turnover.  In practice I believe that the losses at the club will be larger than this year and greater than the amount required to meet the Turnover rule above.

The good news for Charlton fans is that loans and other debt are specifically excluded from Turnover and Football Fortune Income calculations as it would defeat the object and just mean that the club gets further and further into debt.  Roland Duchâtelet will therefore have to fund the club properly through equity injections or a gift instead of a series of loans from his holding company Staprix NV.

Or he could just sell up and go..........


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Friday, 11 March 2016

A short analysis of Charlton Athletic's Financial Accounts

As flagged yesterday, the financial report and accounts for Charlton Athletic for the year ending June 2015 are now available at Companies House.


The group consists of three entities:-

1. Baton 2010 Limited, the holding company
2. Charlton Athletic Football Company Limited, the company that operates the football club
3. Charlton Athletic Holdings Limited which is a property holding company


I use Baton 2010 Limited to give a proper overall view of the club’s finances as it encompasses the results of all the subsidiaries and includes all of Charlton’s activities.  This was the original vehicle set up by Richard Murray to rescue the club.

General Comments
The loss for the year was £4.4m (compared to £5.9m last year) rather than the widely reported £3.78m which only accounts for the football subsidiary.

Turnover was down in all areas, despite a small increase in crowd attendance.  The outsourcing of the catering to Delaware North explains most of the drop in match day income.  The deal is similar to the Nike deal with the superstore in that the club does not take the risk of purchasing and selling foodstuffs but takes an agreed percentage of turnover.  This results in a reduction in both turnover and costs but hopefully an improved profitability.

Staff & Player Costs
The cost of player salaries remained flat at around the £10.2m mark

Noticeably the number of non-football staff fell from 60 to 45 and the temporary match day staff has fallen from 306 to 112.   The fall in the latter number is probably due to the catering being outsourced to Delaware North.  I would expect this figure to fall even further next year as the automated entry system no longer requires the gate booths to be manned.

The book value of the squad remained flat.  Bauer and Ba were acquired in June (other players were purchased after the financial year end) but their cost was offset by player amortization in the profit and loss account.

The club benefitted from player sales to the tune of £4.4m.  This was mainly from the sale of Gomez and Poyet.   As these two players came from the academy and so would have been carried the books at zero cost so the entire transfer fee would be accounted for as profit.  As expected, it looks like the club sold Morrison for a pittance but surprisingly it looks like they managed to make a little bit of money of Lepoint too.

The club continues its policy of applying add on fees for players sold (based on appearances, call ups to the England squad etc).  This contingent revenue increased by £2m over the year.  However, the club also looks like it is trying to reduce the upfront costs of players it acquires by agreeing to pay contingent fees too as these roughly rose by £1.3m.  As they are contingent we do not know if and when these might be received or paid.  Poyet’s current form would seem to rule out further payments from his sale, although I suspect we will see more money from the Gomez deal once he is fit again.

There are no directors’ fees shown in the accounts.  The only director probably taking a salary is Katrien Meire and it’s probably coming from Staprix or another part of Duchatelet’s organisation.  It is reasonable to expect her to take a salary even though we might question her experience for the role but this move takes out a level of transparency that we would expect.

Club Financing
As we all know, the club is mainly financed by its parent company Staprix NV which is Roland Duchatelet’s holding company.  However, rather than putting money in as equity it has been lent to the club at a rate of 3%. These loans increased during the year from £28.5m to £38m.  This covers the club’s losses, capital investment and repayment of some of the bank debt.

Interest of £955,000 was charged on these loans during the year.  While the rate is a very reasonable commercial rate it misses the point in that it is paying the owner.  If this was equity then it is unlikely that a dividend would be paid out owing to the losses incurred by the club.  This makes Staprix a creditor rather than a shareholder which puts Duchatelet’s money on par with the milk bill.

The only reason I can think for this is that interest is tax deductible and the money is being recycled anyway in additional loans.  However, you can only claim the tax back if you actually pay tax in the first place and the company needs to be profitable first before it can offset this.

The Future
The focus on next year’ accounts (to June 2016) will be on player costs and turnover.  We brought in a number of players in the summer and a lot of players on short term loans and contracts in January.  This, combined with new contracts for Gudmundsson in the summer and more recently for Lookman are bound to increase the wage bill.  This will probably be partially offset by the sale of Lookman to a Premier League club.

I expect turnover to be down on the basis of falling attendances as results on the pitch failed to live up to expectations.  It will be interesting to see the impact of the Charlton Card campaign too.  The rumours are that Delaware North are not happy with how things have turned out on their contract.



#support the team not the regime



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Thursday, 10 March 2016

Charlton Athletic Accounts to June 2015 are now out

For those of you interested the financial report and accounts for Charlton Athletic for the year ending June 2015 are now available at Companies House.  There are three companies in the group:-

1. Baton 2010 Limited, the holding company
2. Charlton Athletic Football Company Limited, the company that operates the football club
3. Charlton Athletic Holdings Limited which is a property holding company

On an initial glance there is nothing glaring in the accounts except that income fell across the board and the club is still financed by loans charged at 3% from Roland Duchatelet's holding company Staprix NV.

I hope to provide a more complete breakdown of the club's finances once I've had a chance to study them in more depth.

#support the team not the regime



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Monday, 13 April 2015

Charlton Athletic: Player of the Season



Nominations are open for player of the year are currently being taken by Charlton.

There are plenty of contenders including new arrivals such as Tony Watt, stalwarts such as Stephen Henderson and Tal Ben Haim, to a trio of academy players that have broken into the first team including Joe Gomez and Jordan Cousins.  They all have their merits, but for me there is only one player that makes the grade and that player is Johann Berg Gudmundsson.

Having made 40 starting line ups and 4 substitute appearances (pre-Bolton) he has been consistently selected by both Bob Peeters and Guy Luzon.  A natural right winger he has often swapped sides with Frederick Bulot during periods of the game and in my mind would make a good makeshift striker.  His work rate on the pitch is second to none.

He is a consistent goal scorer, having notched up as many goals as Vetokele this season, 11 in all competitions and is much improved compared to the 13 at his former side AZ Alkmaar over four seasons.
However, Vetokele cost good money and so there is an expectation that he would deliver the goals, but we picked him Gudmundsson on a free transfer (thanks I understand to the scouting of Karel Fraeye, Jose Riga’s former assistant) which makes him a bargain signing.

See here for a selection of Johann’s goals this season:-

Admittedly one man doesn’t make a team and Chris Solly has combined well with him, in a number of cases drawing players away from the pacey wing man to create shooting space.

His scoring also comes from a variety of situations.  A specialist from free kicks he is also a solid penalty taker when Yoni Buyens is not available, but also has the confidence to hit accurate balls from a distance in free play, resulting in some stunning goals from his trusted left foot over the season.  This reliance on the left foot is perhaps also a weakness with good goal scoring opportunities closed by opposition defenders as the extra touch is taken to touch the ball on to his better side.

So for these reasons, Johann gets my vote.  In the meantime, with rumours of interest from Premier League teams, I just hope that summer contract talks will open soon and we don’t see him going away like last year’s player of the year! Oh, and isn’t it time we had a song for our Icelandic International?

Sunday, 1 September 2013

Yann puts the smile back on Charlton Fans' Faces

The bright sunny afternoon was in sharp contrast to last week’s washout against Doncaster and it was good to see a full ninety minutes of football.

The day started with tracking down Joe Hall who was responsible for putting together the Valley Talk fanzine to get my copy. I put together a short piece on football club finances and I hope you enjoyed it. As you can tell from my amateurish efforts, I blog for my own amusement and its good practice at putting together short pieces in a quick time frame, Joe on the other hand is a professional and there are also some excellent pieces from a number of bloggers and writers that you might recognise. I particularly enjoyed his interview with Shaun Bartlett and the Chris Powell quote on the back cover, which sums us up perfectly. I hope you managed to grab a copy but if you didn’t then you can pick up a copy from valleytalk.bigcartel.com

Before the game I commented on twitter at the positive vibes and messages of support coming from Charlton fans to get behind the squad, not to boo the board and above all be patient. So it was timely and appropriate that Daniel Webster (@ramblingaddick) had a good piece on the subject in Valley Talk

With the exception of the 3-5-2 formation it was a typical Charlton game with the boy’s taking the lead through a scrappy build up to Morrison’s headed goal (they all count!) to take the lead, Yann’s usual goal against his old team, then holding on for dear life to cling on to the three points despite the Foxes being down to ten men. Even Christ Powell was cringing at times with his hands against his face. I was surprised to see that we had 58% of the possession as Leicester seemed to keep the ball for long periods in midfield without making any impact.

Wiggins and Morrison both had much better games which will be good confidence boosters for them. Personally, I think that Evina is the better player in this formation but Wiggins was looking much more comfortable in this role during the second half as he created a number of opportunistic crosses for the team. It goes without saying that Kermorgant needed no motivation for the game and made the most of it. He’s a real bogey man for the Leicester crowd and as Chris Powell said he’s going to tell Yann that there are 23 other teams called Leicester!

Again, Church worked hard and deserves his place, although he was getting frustrated towards the end but continued to track back when necessary. Stephens has skill but still seems to be a little nonchalant and spatially unaware as the ball comes to him for the first touch. Pigott and Cousins took their chances when they came on, settling down quickly unfazed by the crowds and certainly making an impact during their short stint as substitutes.

While the second yellow for Leicester number 8, James’ inappropriate protests was a stupid one to concede, I feel a little sorry for Leicester as the officials made a number of errors in the second half including a clear goal kick when Church headed off the post. I have a feeling that the assistant on the East stand touchline was struggling with the sunlight and this will only get worse as the sun sinks lower coming into autumn. This can easily be rectified if the assistants swap sides but I am sure that there is a rule that prevents this common sense solution.

Overall, three points thoroughly deserved and having chased down the Foxes all afternoon it only seemed appropriate to finish of the day with a small bottle of Tally-ho from Adnams. I’d not seen it before and thought it was a stout but at 7.2% it’s more akin to a barley wine. One was enough to help savour the much needed victory.

Friday, 30 August 2013

Charlton: Pizza the action or pie’ning for a change ?


First many thanks to Charlton Casualty and fellow Charlton fans that read my Charlton to Greenwich pub crawl article and gave me a few more places to visit on my trek back from the Valley.  I’ve been sworn to secrecy on the actual venues but can confirm that the ones I have visited so far have been excellent and look forward to visiting the others over the next few weeks.

Well for once I can’t moan about the quality of the play on the field against Huddersfield in the Capital One Cup.  Chris Powell took the plunge and switched to his 5-3-2 formation with marauding wing backs that worked so well in pre-season and it looks like we were unlucky not to come away with something.  From various accounts Joe Pigott again played in an unselfish manner and set up Marvin Sordell to allow him to get off the mark.  I hope the game has provided the manager with some food for thought for Saturday's tough encounter against Leicester.  While I expect to see Kermorgant and Church return up front, I wouldn't be surprised to see some changes further back in the field.  However today  I have a different gripe to raise.

I see that Charlton fans have the chance to vote on how we get a half price pizza from the League’s official pizza sponsor.  Personally I’m more concerned about the pies at the Valley.  Rumours abound that our very own Breton, Yann Kermorgant has been tucking in and carrying a bit more weight around him than he should but if it’s true I don’t think the pies are to blame.  I’m not sure what the fayre is like at the John Smith's stadium (I suspect the names says it all and Al Gordon's excellent blog piece on the match sums it up perfectly for me algordoncafc.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/the-capital-one-at-john-smiths.html) but the Valley appears to actually be abandoning our pies in favour of what I understand is called a slice!  Sorry guys but we want a pie with proper walls of pastry and a deep filling.  I’m assuming that this is one of those ploys where the price stays the same and the contents shrink.

There’s nothing wrong with the food and drink at Charlton.  It’s just that with the advent of real street food and the explosion of news London breweries offering craft beer, the staple offering of slices together with Fosters and John Smith's Smooth really doesn’t cut the mustard any more.  Having seen the fast food offerings at Truck Stop London and the Real Street Food Festival, London has a lot to offer by way of quality local food and drink and I think we should be taking advantage of it.

To make matters worse, Crystal Palace have jumped on the band wagon and revamped their range of pies and now get to enjoy our local Goddard’s Pies in with steak and ale pie using beer from the first commercial brewery in Croydon, The Cronx.  For once I am extremely jealous of the Nigels.  Many of us enjoy a decent pie and mash from Goddards in Greenwich (www.pieshop.co.uk), and when combined with locally produced real ale this must be heaven in a pastry shell!

Leyton Orient have had their skin in the game for even longer with a fantastic bar in the Matchroom Stadium that has won numerous CAMRA awards for their fine real ale offering.  Their latest line up includes local ales from East London Brewery and Hackney Brewery.
So what can we at Charlton do to up the game and provide some decent locally produced food to its fans?
On the beer front, many of you will know that I have written about various local breweries including the Kernel in Bermondsey and Meantime Brewery in the Greenwich area.  As mainly kegged craft beers these should keep longer than some of the real ale offerings.  There is also the Brick Brewery a new micro brewery in Peckham Rye, which I have to admit I have only recently discovered and know very little about.
However, the Kernel is too near our other South London rivals and appear to be targeting a premium market, although Bromley football club appear to be well stocked up on a good selection from their range according to an article on their website*

Meantime would be a good commercial partner for Charlton.  The brand is well known over London and they have a good range so there is something for everyone.  Without getting too esoteric, I’d personally recommend their London Lager and Pale Ale as standard replacements for the current big brewery offerings at the Valley.

However, there is a new player in town in the form of Woolwich’s first and only brewery.  James at Hop Stuff Brewery has been extremely busy over the last few months promoting the company and recently raised £58,000 on crowd funding site Crowdcube.  He’s also appeared in the Greenwich Visitor and made a presentation to South East London CAMRA on his efforts (hopstuffbrewery.wordpress.com)

Full scale production is a little way off with full scale production kicking off in the autumn but they have ambitious plans and having this local producer at the Valley would be a coup and there would be plenty of scope for a special Charlton own label (thinking caps on please chaps but keep it clean and positive).

In terms of food one is pushed to find a more authentic product than Goddard's pies but if I was to compile a wish list of goodies I would like to see Heaps in Greenwich produce a decent sausage roll for match days with one of their award winning recipes.

Of course, I am writing this as a foodie that likes his real ale and I have no concept of the commercial realities of catering at a major sporting event but it would be good to see a nod to local produce with a bit of thought into the ingredients.  Now, does anyone in South East London produce an alternative to Mars Bars?

Article reference

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Charlton Fans worship at the Church


Pre-match Entertainment
Tuesday evenings at the Valley usually start with a relaxing pint at the Anchor & Hope, watching the planes descending into City airport and wondering how Powell will mix up the team from the usual match day squad.  They usually also end in a humiliating defeat to lower league opposition such as our opponents that night Oxford United in the Capital One Cup.

I was pleased to see Joe Pigott making the starting line up.  Having seen him play in a number of pre-season matches, he deserved his first team place and made the most of it with a calm and assured manner on the pitch.  He started alongside Simon Church who also made the most of his Valley debut with two goals in the 4-0 win.

The 700 odd Oxford fans were in fine form chanting “We're gonna win 4-1” when Church banged in the first goal from close range.  This was a reference to the game on Saturday when they conceded the first goal to Portsmouth only to win by the same score line.  Incidentally, Portsmouth were playing our own victors on Saturday, Bournemouth.

Church scored one more before being substituted but should have made it a hat-trick when Pigott, who could have taken the shot, unselfishly passed over the ball to him only for it to be shot wide!  Pigott’s unselfish act was acknowledged by Powell who gave a big thumbs up to the debutant.

Cook and Evina played well down the left hand side combining neatly when going forward and proved themselves a match for regulars Harriott and Wiggins in that direction.  However, the Oxford right wing proved a strong match for them and it took a number of heroics from Leon Cort to save their blushes.

My only criticism was that the team at times tried too hard.  Danny Green’s crosses were viciously hard on ball, meaning that many of his lobs were well wide of the mark, although I suspect that he was actually trying to score, which he eventually did with a freakish daisy cutter of a free kick.  Others were trying to anticipate runs into the area by fellow players which would have been spectacular if they had come off.  However, against this opposition there was time to wait and pass with a more certain outcome.
Celebrations as Piggott scores

It was pleasing to see Pigott get on the scores sheet after being given the opportunity to convert the late penalty won by fellow academy player Jordan Cousins who came on in the last few minutes.
Despite the 5,000 crowd, the covered end choir in the North block made the most of the game with loud renditions of old favourites during the second half.  Let’s hope we can keep it up when Middlesbrough visit the Valley on Saturday who have now lost both their first two games.


Also of note that evening was Yann Kermorgant’s Cantona’esque hair style.  While Yann's place is pretty much assured, with four recognised strikers now in the team, the competition for a starting berth is heating up and he’ll be hoping to ensure that he keeps banging them in like Eric.   

Bring on the Smoggies, the Valley is waiting !