x

What difference does it make? Won't get fooled again...

It was a horrible wet Wednesday morning and on the six mile drive to work this morning I opted for a bit of self indulgence and escaped the Chelsea dirge on Talksport by listening to The Smiths "What difference does it make?" blissfully unaware of the poignancy Morrissey, Marr et als lyrics would have just three hours later.

Incidentally it was the Troy Tate remix I opted for, being something of a Smiths connissoseur. Another spooky Leeds related coincidence was I managed to squeeze in "Barbarism begins at home" before my short journey was completed.

Like the weather, it didn't bode well for Leeds mid morning. Lying 18th in the Championship, no wins in 7 league outings, crowds having regilarly fallen below 20,000 and six months of takeover speculation that fans were as sick of hearing about as Morrissey is over fast food chain restaurants.

On meeting my wife for lunch, when it was socially permitted I repeated the usual dinner time ritual repeated almost every day since late May, log on to my Internet on my phone in the faint hope that something takeover related had happened and f**k me it had, sort of!

The takeover had gone through, well it will do on December 21st but Ken Bates stays until the end of the season well actually beyond that as he takes up the role of club President effectively vacated by the sad passing of the 7th Earl of Harewood a year last July.

My mind drifted from the Smiths to the Who's song "Won't get fooled again" particularly the line "Meet the new boss...same as the old boss"

Had the Bahrani's managed to grasp the keys to ER from the grimy mitts of the old Chelsea git or as one guest on Talksport's Keys and Gray this lunchtime said, this was merely the start of a new saga?

I suppose you can look two ways at the fact it has taken nigh on half a year to get to where we are now. Does this indicate that potentially the working relationship between Chairman/President Ken and the Gulf Mob is potentially fraught with conflict and destined to end up in the hands of the lawyers? On the other hand, should we be praising the tenacity of Messers Haigh, Patel and co for their resilience in investing so much time in seeing the deal over the line?

Even LUST were quick to admit that retaining the services of Bates for a transitional period makes some sense, however David Haigh who despite his Cornish birthright, public school background and open support for the Tory party has managed to align himself successfully largely via Twitter to the ordinary fan will have his work cut out to win back the hearts and minds of the fans who have deserted the club in droves during the past three seasons.

Haigh can bang on about his ancestral roots, make alledged lad mag throwaway comparisons with Pammie Anderson but he and his cohorts inherit a broken club. On paper, the club have turned itself back from the abyss remarkably since the days of Ridsdale and the majority of fans, some grudgingly will credit Bates for this but at what cost?

Bates has frequently committed a sin of Ratner-esque proportions, famously referring to sections of the fans as "morons". A minor insult perhaps and a lot less offensive than some of the abuse Bates has endured from the stands, however no doubt like me you know stay away supporters who have stayed away because of Bates's policies of selling our best players or allowing them to leave free/on the cheap over stadium rebuilding.

No doubt, like my examples, the stay-aways you know are not rabble rousing, trouble-causing, fickle trotskyites. One friend is a retired airline pilot who saw his first Leeds game in the early 50's. The second is a plasterer by trade, a respectable married family man who as far as I recall has not even since the 2006 play-off final defeat.

Both are not short of a bob or two, however it is not the cost that is putting them off. No doubt Bates's aggressive pricing structure is partly responsible for the drop in crowds but these two fellers I know have boycotted the club because of Bates and Bates alone.

So as well as putting their money where their mouth is, GFH Capital also have their work cut out in a PR battle to convince those who have stayed away that they have both the capacity and vision to restore this club back to its former glories and are merely not another version of the Bates regime dressed up in different clothing.

No doubt like you dear reader, I wish them well!

What to read next:

The window that was (and wasn’t) – Preview
A January transfer window assessment dressed up as a Charlton match preview to save us doing that Lyndon Dykes/Charlie Kelman piece again, at least for a day.
Familiar faces lie in wait – Oppo Profile
QPR are riding high after Saturday’s win against Coventry but now face a Nathan Jones Charlton team being led from the front by Lyndon Dykes and Charlie Kelman - Louis Mendez (@LouisMend @CharltonLive) takes us through the Addicks’ bid for Championship survival so far.
Bolder gets a huge win on the board for Big Mick - History
Ahead of the visit to Charlton in on Friday, we’re looking back to another memorable televised trip to The Valley when Mick Harford secured a big victory as caretaker manager.
Bell in charge of Friday night Charlton trip - Referee
Young Sheffield official James Bell is in charge this Friday night as the R’s head across town to Charlton live on Sky.
The antidote – Report
QPR banished memories of Wrexham and avenged their 7-1 loss at Coventry City earlier in the season in fine style on Saturday, beating Frank Lampard’s table toppers at Loftus Road casting a promotion that looked absolutely certain at one point into further doubt.
Queens Park Rangers 2 - 1 Coventry City - Photo Gallery
Pictures from Ian Randall at Loftus Road where QPR avenged their early season humiliation with a 2-1 victory against league leaders Coventry.
Queens Park Rangers 2 - 1 Coventry City - Player Ratings and Reports
If you saw the match, please give us your player ratings and a mini match report.
Second take – Preview
The low point of QPR’s season came nice and early this year with the 7-1 shellacking at Coventry in August, so is the return fixture at Loftus Road tomorrow a chance for revenge or another hiding in waiting?
Title procession or Covvy wobble? – Oppo Focus
Coventry set off on a free scoring title charge that included a 7-1 win against QPR in the first meeting, but it’s become more nervous lately without a win in six away games and Boro just three points back – Dominic Jerrams (@SideSammy) takes us through it.
Taarabt genius gets R’s title charge back on track – History
We’re back to this week in 2011 for History this week, only this time it’s QPR rather than Coventry on top of the Championship and Adel Taarabt is at his full throated best to get Rangers over the line.