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Ownership of QPR 18:30 - Nov 9 with 7697 viewsTopCat34

I know they "keep us running", but I'm afraid incompetence of this level shouldn't be tolerated especially when ST holders are paying 700+ for the privilege.

There's one long running theme of massive underachievement at QPR in recent years and it's he owners we have. They need to go. They are not fit for purpose and they cannot be trusted to put people in place. If Nourry is sacked is the direction ever going to improve? They've had 10 years to learn how to do it. You think by now you'd have learned something.

I think sacking Marti would be a death knell for this ownership. You can't keep papering over failure.
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Ownership of QPR on 18:54 - Nov 20 with 1205 viewsGaryBannister86

Ownership of QPR on 18:49 - Nov 20 by daveB

I'm not for a second saying Wright was any good he was a disaster but we neded that investment when we were on the up

All we did every year was weaken the team and it came back to bite us in the end
Thompson was the right owner at the wrong tine, he comes in after Flavio I actually think he'd have done well

Blackburn of course spent a lot but on players we could have got, likes of Sherwood, Ripley and Tim Flowers were all gettable if we wanted to do it. Andy Cole when he was at Bristol City was another we could have taken a chance on

It wasn't the Premier League we see today or even the one of the 2000's, the opportunity was there for us and we didn't go for it. Was never going to take fortunes to do it, we were so close to a very good side just needed some depth to the squad and a bit more quality in midfield alongside Wilkins


Ah yes getting back to the football - one quality midfielder alongside Super Ray in his pomp and I am convinced we would have won something. Holloway was dreadful, whatever the misty-eyed romantics say, and Barker was OK but nowhere near top class. Imagine another good midfielder in there........argh.
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Ownership of QPR on 19:50 - Nov 20 with 1064 viewsTK1

Ownership of QPR on 18:49 - Nov 20 by daveB

I'm not for a second saying Wright was any good he was a disaster but we neded that investment when we were on the up

All we did every year was weaken the team and it came back to bite us in the end
Thompson was the right owner at the wrong tine, he comes in after Flavio I actually think he'd have done well

Blackburn of course spent a lot but on players we could have got, likes of Sherwood, Ripley and Tim Flowers were all gettable if we wanted to do it. Andy Cole when he was at Bristol City was another we could have taken a chance on

It wasn't the Premier League we see today or even the one of the 2000's, the opportunity was there for us and we didn't go for it. Was never going to take fortunes to do it, we were so close to a very good side just needed some depth to the squad and a bit more quality in midfield alongside Wilkins


But Wilkins was given the Les money and bought those two midfielders needed: they just happened to be Osborn and Zelic. They still cost £2.5 million! He also spent 1.25 million on Hateley, of course.

He spent £5 million quid that summer and they were all duds. Ironic that the one year we spent significant money we were relegated.Wilkins was a good man, great captain, one of my favourite players, may have been a good coach, but he shouldn't have been given that money with the ownership in flux.

It was less about investment and money, it was always about the people doing the recruitment. Same as now, really.

Re Cole: obviously, with hindsight, you'd spend £500k on Andy Cole in 1992 if you could go back in time. But he'd played one game for Arsenal. Went down a division to get games at Bristol C, played for six months, scored loads and Newcastle bought him. I listened to a podcast with him and he said he had other offers but knew someone at Brizzle and was guaranteed games. QPR came fifth that season with Les Ferdinand, Bradley Allen (who had a great season), Gary Penrice, Dennis Bailey, even Garry Thompson. Devon White too! 20 year-old Andy Cole may not have got those games he needed had he joined, and probably wouldn't have signed for that reason...

Ifs, buts and maybes.

Enjoyable debate, everyone. Totally kiboshed my work deadline.
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Ownership of QPR on 22:59 - Nov 20 with 895 viewsdaveB

Ownership of QPR on 19:50 - Nov 20 by TK1

But Wilkins was given the Les money and bought those two midfielders needed: they just happened to be Osborn and Zelic. They still cost £2.5 million! He also spent 1.25 million on Hateley, of course.

He spent £5 million quid that summer and they were all duds. Ironic that the one year we spent significant money we were relegated.Wilkins was a good man, great captain, one of my favourite players, may have been a good coach, but he shouldn't have been given that money with the ownership in flux.

It was less about investment and money, it was always about the people doing the recruitment. Same as now, really.

Re Cole: obviously, with hindsight, you'd spend £500k on Andy Cole in 1992 if you could go back in time. But he'd played one game for Arsenal. Went down a division to get games at Bristol C, played for six months, scored loads and Newcastle bought him. I listened to a podcast with him and he said he had other offers but knew someone at Brizzle and was guaranteed games. QPR came fifth that season with Les Ferdinand, Bradley Allen (who had a great season), Gary Penrice, Dennis Bailey, even Garry Thompson. Devon White too! 20 year-old Andy Cole may not have got those games he needed had he joined, and probably wouldn't have signed for that reason...

Ifs, buts and maybes.

Enjoyable debate, everyone. Totally kiboshed my work deadline.


all of this is with hindsight of course but when we did spend the money it was just money we had brought in, they never pushed the boat out when it was needed.

By the time we spent on those players the team had already been broken up. We'd lost Peacock, Wilson, Ferdinand, Sinton etc and Wilkins was pretty much done as a player and didn't play much that season, Mcdonald was injured as was Bradley Allen for a lot of that season

The signings we made were crap and we know all too well from the last 10 years it doesn't matter how much you spend its how well you spend it

I do agree it was all about the people making the signings and look if we had spent and got those players it could have still gone wrong, we tend to find a way to mess it up but it will always feel a missed opportunity to me

Just imagine if after 1992/93 we sign a good goalkeeper, a midfield partner for Wilkins and a back up for Les. It just could have been so much better and then the loss of Les wouldn't have been the final straw.

I've gone back and forward on those protests over the years, i was part of it stood outside shouting we want thompson out, when it went tits up under Wright I thought I was wrong to do that and now 30 years on I think the fans were right to do it as thats how we felt at the time, we could all sense we were close to doing something and it felt like we were being asset stripped.

Ultimately though Thompson left a year or so after the protests had died down after we'd been relegated.
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Ownership of QPR on 23:18 - Nov 20 with 866 viewsPunteR

Ownership of QPR on 10:39 - Nov 10 by Ned_Kennedys

So if we ‘hound out’ the owners who is going to take over a business that loses huge money every month?
If the owners decide to walk away what does that mean to QPR?
And the suggestion that a new owner would somehow work out a way to turn a profit on QPR is fanciful as well: how many clubs actually make money?

Clearly there are major issues with the recruitment in the summer but if instead of Madsen and Celar we’d bought a 15 goal a season centre forward and instead of loaning Ashby we’d gone for Hayden then things would be different now and we’d all be bemoaning our terrible luck with injuries as the main reason for our bad start to the season. Not sure how the owners can be blamed above Nourry, Belk and Cifuentes for the poor quality of the signings.
[Post edited 10 Nov 12:59]


Sorry but these owners are shit. Look at our stats. F**k em off. Its our club .
I'll still be supporting and going to games whatever league we're in and if we just stop existing, well that's what it will be.
I hate it that we've become so dependant on these clowns like a bunch of crackheads needing some gammy legged pimp to look after them.
Ive tried to be patient, pragmatic etc, mainly for the purpose of balance in these discussions on LFW but in reality i'm sick of them all.
Dont get me wrong, i love QPR, our fans, Loftus road, our badge ,colours and everything we've all grown up with about QPR. But i'm sick of these Malaysian owners, the multi billionaire Mittal's and whoever else is sitting in that boardroom smoking cigars absolutely clueless.
Yeh Nourry has to go, of course.
I called out Tony Fernandes early doors and got absolute pelters on here. Sadly its always been about the money, and the "what would we do without them" attitude that has nullified us as fans to do anything about it.
Embarrassing really, but thats modern football. Most clubs these days have a shameful look the other way response to the dodgy money that circulates the game, so its sadly no surprise we would rather have some sugar daddy looking after us, rather then except our reality.
These owners don't loose any sleep about the amount of money they pump into our club btw. We're just another expense to off set their humungous tax bill.

This post is a rant. I might feel different tomorrow, but tonight Matthew , im gonna be Punty McPunt face talking cobblers on a QPR message board.

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Ownership of QPR on 23:34 - Nov 20 with 822 viewsPeterHucker

Ownership of QPR on 22:59 - Nov 20 by daveB

all of this is with hindsight of course but when we did spend the money it was just money we had brought in, they never pushed the boat out when it was needed.

By the time we spent on those players the team had already been broken up. We'd lost Peacock, Wilson, Ferdinand, Sinton etc and Wilkins was pretty much done as a player and didn't play much that season, Mcdonald was injured as was Bradley Allen for a lot of that season

The signings we made were crap and we know all too well from the last 10 years it doesn't matter how much you spend its how well you spend it

I do agree it was all about the people making the signings and look if we had spent and got those players it could have still gone wrong, we tend to find a way to mess it up but it will always feel a missed opportunity to me

Just imagine if after 1992/93 we sign a good goalkeeper, a midfield partner for Wilkins and a back up for Les. It just could have been so much better and then the loss of Les wouldn't have been the final straw.

I've gone back and forward on those protests over the years, i was part of it stood outside shouting we want thompson out, when it went tits up under Wright I thought I was wrong to do that and now 30 years on I think the fans were right to do it as thats how we felt at the time, we could all sense we were close to doing something and it felt like we were being asset stripped.

Ultimately though Thompson left a year or so after the protests had died down after we'd been relegated.


I was there protesting against Thompson too, but when you look at how badly the owners have run the club since 2011 it makes you realise how the system, as much as it frustrated us, was actually working back then.

As mentioned earlier in the thread Sinton, Parker, Ferdinand, Sinclair, Peacock, Impey all bought from clubs in the divisions below. All sold on for a handsome profit. Some of which went into balancing the books and some of which was re-invested in more players from the lower divisions.
Impey, Ferdinand, Peacock would hardly have been on anyone's radar before joining us so there must have been something going right with our recruitment back then.

The big problem was that when it went wrong (spending the Les Ferdinand money) it went REALLY wrong & we were relegated.

But I still think we were really unlucky with some of those signings. They could have worked out.

Simon Osborn a very decent midfielder, as is proven by how well he did at his next club Wolves.

As for Ned Zelic, anyone remember the midweek home defeat to Wimbledon when he came on as a sub? We lost the game comfortably but that wasn't much to do with Zelic. He looked more than capable in that match.
He had a fairly good career in Germany both before and after his short spell with us.
Is it Thompson's fault he couldn't settle? Is it Ray's fault? The other players? (there have been persistent stories of them not making him very welcome) Zelic himself's fault? Who knows but, like Osborn, I think it unlucky rather than a terrible signing.

I won't try to defend the signing of Hateley though. He was a very good target man in his Pompey / Milan days. But a past it old crock by the time we got him. That one really was a terrible signing but I'd wager that signing was more like Super Ray's decision than the owners.

Look what happened when the next owner Chris Wright took over. Took his eye off the ball in terms of keeping the books balanced & then left us in administration while he ran away with the training ground!

Thompson quite right to identify in that interview that his PR and his communication with the fans was well below the standard required but in terms of keeping the club running without making massive losses then he did a competent job.

Fast forward to November 2024 and we are losing more money every month than mid-90s QPR lost in a year.
And what are we getting in return for that? Not a club that's holding its own in the Premier League, that's for sure. We are a million miles from that.
[Post edited 20 Nov 23:36]
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Ownership of QPR on 23:55 - Nov 20 with 793 viewsconnell10

Ownership of QPR on 23:34 - Nov 20 by PeterHucker

I was there protesting against Thompson too, but when you look at how badly the owners have run the club since 2011 it makes you realise how the system, as much as it frustrated us, was actually working back then.

As mentioned earlier in the thread Sinton, Parker, Ferdinand, Sinclair, Peacock, Impey all bought from clubs in the divisions below. All sold on for a handsome profit. Some of which went into balancing the books and some of which was re-invested in more players from the lower divisions.
Impey, Ferdinand, Peacock would hardly have been on anyone's radar before joining us so there must have been something going right with our recruitment back then.

The big problem was that when it went wrong (spending the Les Ferdinand money) it went REALLY wrong & we were relegated.

But I still think we were really unlucky with some of those signings. They could have worked out.

Simon Osborn a very decent midfielder, as is proven by how well he did at his next club Wolves.

As for Ned Zelic, anyone remember the midweek home defeat to Wimbledon when he came on as a sub? We lost the game comfortably but that wasn't much to do with Zelic. He looked more than capable in that match.
He had a fairly good career in Germany both before and after his short spell with us.
Is it Thompson's fault he couldn't settle? Is it Ray's fault? The other players? (there have been persistent stories of them not making him very welcome) Zelic himself's fault? Who knows but, like Osborn, I think it unlucky rather than a terrible signing.

I won't try to defend the signing of Hateley though. He was a very good target man in his Pompey / Milan days. But a past it old crock by the time we got him. That one really was a terrible signing but I'd wager that signing was more like Super Ray's decision than the owners.

Look what happened when the next owner Chris Wright took over. Took his eye off the ball in terms of keeping the books balanced & then left us in administration while he ran away with the training ground!

Thompson quite right to identify in that interview that his PR and his communication with the fans was well below the standard required but in terms of keeping the club running without making massive losses then he did a competent job.

Fast forward to November 2024 and we are losing more money every month than mid-90s QPR lost in a year.
And what are we getting in return for that? Not a club that's holding its own in the Premier League, that's for sure. We are a million miles from that.
[Post edited 20 Nov 23:36]


Thompson was bloody awful , I love how things are always made to look better through the prism of years.

AND WHEN I DREAM , I DREAM ABOUT YOU AND WHEN I SCREAM I SCREAM ABOUT YOU!!!!!
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Ownership of QPR on 08:02 - Nov 21 with 606 viewsdaveB

Ownership of QPR on 23:34 - Nov 20 by PeterHucker

I was there protesting against Thompson too, but when you look at how badly the owners have run the club since 2011 it makes you realise how the system, as much as it frustrated us, was actually working back then.

As mentioned earlier in the thread Sinton, Parker, Ferdinand, Sinclair, Peacock, Impey all bought from clubs in the divisions below. All sold on for a handsome profit. Some of which went into balancing the books and some of which was re-invested in more players from the lower divisions.
Impey, Ferdinand, Peacock would hardly have been on anyone's radar before joining us so there must have been something going right with our recruitment back then.

The big problem was that when it went wrong (spending the Les Ferdinand money) it went REALLY wrong & we were relegated.

But I still think we were really unlucky with some of those signings. They could have worked out.

Simon Osborn a very decent midfielder, as is proven by how well he did at his next club Wolves.

As for Ned Zelic, anyone remember the midweek home defeat to Wimbledon when he came on as a sub? We lost the game comfortably but that wasn't much to do with Zelic. He looked more than capable in that match.
He had a fairly good career in Germany both before and after his short spell with us.
Is it Thompson's fault he couldn't settle? Is it Ray's fault? The other players? (there have been persistent stories of them not making him very welcome) Zelic himself's fault? Who knows but, like Osborn, I think it unlucky rather than a terrible signing.

I won't try to defend the signing of Hateley though. He was a very good target man in his Pompey / Milan days. But a past it old crock by the time we got him. That one really was a terrible signing but I'd wager that signing was more like Super Ray's decision than the owners.

Look what happened when the next owner Chris Wright took over. Took his eye off the ball in terms of keeping the books balanced & then left us in administration while he ran away with the training ground!

Thompson quite right to identify in that interview that his PR and his communication with the fans was well below the standard required but in terms of keeping the club running without making massive losses then he did a competent job.

Fast forward to November 2024 and we are losing more money every month than mid-90s QPR lost in a year.
And what are we getting in return for that? Not a club that's holding its own in the Premier League, that's for sure. We are a million miles from that.
[Post edited 20 Nov 23:36]


even under Wright they did spend quite well at first, Spencer was brilliant and Peacock very good but they appointed the wrong manager time and time again and what should have been a 100 point championship winning squad finished mid table.
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Ownership of QPR on 13:02 - Nov 21 with 431 viewsdavman

Ownership of QPR on 16:06 - Nov 20 by TK1

"It could and should have been a lot better": mate, other than one season in 1975/76, it's never been as good before or since, and it will never be as good again. But somehow it still wasn't good enough for you. That's tragic. That was my favourite QPR era.

Who did you want to invest? It wasn't the fans, was it? Because we couldn't fill a 19k ground. We had to sell players to invest.

Other than Marcus Gayle, QPR would not have been in with the remotest shot of signing Walker, Townsend, G Peacock or Beardsley then because they were joining much bigger clubs. It's also why players needed to be sold: generally, players want to play for the biggest clubs. It's why Peacock, Ferdinand, Sinton etc left too. They asked to play for a bigger clubs. I mean, you say we could've convinced Peter Beardsley to chose QPR over Newcastle?!

Anyway, well done everyone. We chased out Richard Thompson, got in Chris Wright who showed "some ambition", invested money neither we nor he had and broke the club, probably for good.

(All this is just to say, history should always teach us to be careful what we wish for).


Cannot believe this post had any down vote at all. It is spot on. Yes, we were close to greatness, but why should the owners have ploughed more money into us at that point? Not like the riches on offer today were there for them back then

They balanced the books.

Boring, but we stayed at that level for 14 years and my god we were respected and liked throughout.

I'd still settle for owners balancing the books like that. If only this were the same club.

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Ownership of QPR on 13:08 - Nov 21 with 416 viewsdaveB

Ownership of QPR on 13:02 - Nov 21 by davman

Cannot believe this post had any down vote at all. It is spot on. Yes, we were close to greatness, but why should the owners have ploughed more money into us at that point? Not like the riches on offer today were there for them back then

They balanced the books.

Boring, but we stayed at that level for 14 years and my god we were respected and liked throughout.

I'd still settle for owners balancing the books like that. If only this were the same club.


Long term though balancing the books was the wrong thing to do which I know sounds mad but within a few years we were in division two and in administration so selling those players never really benefited us that much.

We were on the brink of the game going mad. I'm not saying they should have put the club at risk but a few additions around then rather than selling every year and we could have achieved so much more and set the club up for the next 20 years

Honestly if Quantum Leap was real and I was Sam Beckett I would be begging to leap into Richard Thompson in 1991 and run QPR for a few years with the knowledge of what happened. And when I'd done that and QPR were sorted I'd start leaping to fulfil the pervy fantasies. Sorry that went in a bizarre direction, it's been a long week
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Ownership of QPR on 14:11 - Nov 21 with 320 viewsGaryHaddock

Ownership of QPR on 13:08 - Nov 21 by daveB

Long term though balancing the books was the wrong thing to do which I know sounds mad but within a few years we were in division two and in administration so selling those players never really benefited us that much.

We were on the brink of the game going mad. I'm not saying they should have put the club at risk but a few additions around then rather than selling every year and we could have achieved so much more and set the club up for the next 20 years

Honestly if Quantum Leap was real and I was Sam Beckett I would be begging to leap into Richard Thompson in 1991 and run QPR for a few years with the knowledge of what happened. And when I'd done that and QPR were sorted I'd start leaping to fulfil the pervy fantasies. Sorry that went in a bizarre direction, it's been a long week


Can’t let that last bit go.

Give us an example!
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Ownership of QPR on 14:27 - Nov 21 with 283 viewsstantheman10

Ownership of QPR on 10:54 - Nov 10 by Wegerles_Stairs

They've been consistently useless for 13 long years.

They've taken us from the Premier League to the brink of League 1.

They've allowed us to be overtaken by multiple teams, including Brentford, Bournemouth and Fulham.

They clearly have neither the desire nor acumen to run the club properly and therefore delegate responsibility to people who lack the necessary experience and knowledge.

At what point do you suggest we have had enough of them? 2037?
[Post edited 10 Nov 10:55]


I'm looking forward to you coming up with a name for this billionaire QPR supporter who is going to come and take us over.
Cloud cuckoo land
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Ownership of QPR on 14:49 - Nov 21 with 237 viewsTK1

Ownership of QPR on 13:08 - Nov 21 by daveB

Long term though balancing the books was the wrong thing to do which I know sounds mad but within a few years we were in division two and in administration so selling those players never really benefited us that much.

We were on the brink of the game going mad. I'm not saying they should have put the club at risk but a few additions around then rather than selling every year and we could have achieved so much more and set the club up for the next 20 years

Honestly if Quantum Leap was real and I was Sam Beckett I would be begging to leap into Richard Thompson in 1991 and run QPR for a few years with the knowledge of what happened. And when I'd done that and QPR were sorted I'd start leaping to fulfil the pervy fantasies. Sorry that went in a bizarre direction, it's been a long week


Dave, come on.

We were in administration and Division 2 because Chris Wright did exactly you're saying you wish Richard Thompson did. He spent money on players we couldn't afford, then we couldn't sell (because they weren't worth what we had paid), signed every remotely promising youth player on long contracts, threw good money (ours, not his) repeatedly after bad, etc etc. He put the club at risk. that's why we missed boom time! Fulham did OK coming up while we imploded under Wright. RT oversaw consecutive top twelve finishes with a bottom three attendance. Not perfect, but prudent and successful. They were the QPR glory years, not a missed opportunity.

The only chance for QPR since the late 70s has been to do what Thompson did, what Gregory did: buy wisely, sell when at their peak (and fans demand you don't), then reinvest. You have to be good at it and we were, for decades: C Allen, Fenwick, Sinton, Ferdinand, Peacock etc.

If you buy Darren Peacock for £200k and sell him four years later for £2.75 million you are not asset stripping any more than selling Eze for £20 million is. It's economic management of an otherwise loss-making business. We should have been celebrating rather than sitting in. It's the only way for QPR, then, now, always. We tried a sugar daddy and it nearly broke us again.

We should remember the facts of our history and choose protests wisely (FPR, Winkleman: both vital). Because history suggests that whatever comes after Ruben Gnanalingam is likely to be considerably less benevolent.
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Ownership of QPR on 15:02 - Nov 21 with 197 viewsPlanetHonneywood

Ownership of QPR on 14:49 - Nov 21 by TK1

Dave, come on.

We were in administration and Division 2 because Chris Wright did exactly you're saying you wish Richard Thompson did. He spent money on players we couldn't afford, then we couldn't sell (because they weren't worth what we had paid), signed every remotely promising youth player on long contracts, threw good money (ours, not his) repeatedly after bad, etc etc. He put the club at risk. that's why we missed boom time! Fulham did OK coming up while we imploded under Wright. RT oversaw consecutive top twelve finishes with a bottom three attendance. Not perfect, but prudent and successful. They were the QPR glory years, not a missed opportunity.

The only chance for QPR since the late 70s has been to do what Thompson did, what Gregory did: buy wisely, sell when at their peak (and fans demand you don't), then reinvest. You have to be good at it and we were, for decades: C Allen, Fenwick, Sinton, Ferdinand, Peacock etc.

If you buy Darren Peacock for £200k and sell him four years later for £2.75 million you are not asset stripping any more than selling Eze for £20 million is. It's economic management of an otherwise loss-making business. We should have been celebrating rather than sitting in. It's the only way for QPR, then, now, always. We tried a sugar daddy and it nearly broke us again.

We should remember the facts of our history and choose protests wisely (FPR, Winkleman: both vital). Because history suggests that whatever comes after Ruben Gnanalingam is likely to be considerably less benevolent.


Well, the reality is: when we have done it that way, and done it professionally and competently, we've arguably enjoyed our more successful times and, more particularly, our less embarrassing periods.

Simple fact is: we've been run and have employed too many crooks, clowns and charlatans for decades now, and the culture of incompetence is deeply ingrained as a result. It's hard to see a positive way forward with the current circus in charge and as I have repeatedly said, in the absence of a competent sugar daddy walking through the door, then it'll likely have to be killed before it can be reborn again.

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Ownership of QPR on 15:15 - Nov 21 with 181 viewsCamberleyR

Ownership of QPR on 18:27 - Nov 12 by Benny_the_Ball

Because their valuation is too high.

To make the club an attractive proposition Ruben has to first accept that it is numerous owner mistakes that have resulted in the club bleeding money. No one else is to blame for the ridiculous over-spending in the PL and subsequent FFP fine that this attracted. We're still paying for this excess today. Once the owners understand and accept this, lower the valuation to take into account the operating losses any potential buyer would inherit.
[Post edited 20 Nov 19:41]


As I understand it the FFP fine relates back to Redknapp giving us a wage bill of £75m and wages to turnover of 195% enabling us just to finish fourth in the play-off final season and not the subsequent splurge on wasters like Caulker & Sandro the following season.

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Ownership of QPR on 18:19 - Nov 21 with 41 viewsdaveB

Ownership of QPR on 14:49 - Nov 21 by TK1

Dave, come on.

We were in administration and Division 2 because Chris Wright did exactly you're saying you wish Richard Thompson did. He spent money on players we couldn't afford, then we couldn't sell (because they weren't worth what we had paid), signed every remotely promising youth player on long contracts, threw good money (ours, not his) repeatedly after bad, etc etc. He put the club at risk. that's why we missed boom time! Fulham did OK coming up while we imploded under Wright. RT oversaw consecutive top twelve finishes with a bottom three attendance. Not perfect, but prudent and successful. They were the QPR glory years, not a missed opportunity.

The only chance for QPR since the late 70s has been to do what Thompson did, what Gregory did: buy wisely, sell when at their peak (and fans demand you don't), then reinvest. You have to be good at it and we were, for decades: C Allen, Fenwick, Sinton, Ferdinand, Peacock etc.

If you buy Darren Peacock for £200k and sell him four years later for £2.75 million you are not asset stripping any more than selling Eze for £20 million is. It's economic management of an otherwise loss-making business. We should have been celebrating rather than sitting in. It's the only way for QPR, then, now, always. We tried a sugar daddy and it nearly broke us again.

We should remember the facts of our history and choose protests wisely (FPR, Winkleman: both vital). Because history suggests that whatever comes after Ruben Gnanalingam is likely to be considerably less benevolent.


Wright did it in the Championship rather than when we had a brilliant team to build on , thats the major difference.

They were the glory years but they could have lasted a lot longer and been a lot better.
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