Simon Sadler's statement | Vital Football

Simon Sadler's statement

UAE Seasider

Vital Football Hero

Firstly, I’d like to congratulate Neil and his team for their exciting victory over Wigan Athletic on Saturday. We worked hard, were well organized and entertained as we deservedly grabbed the three points. We’ve seen a Neil Critchley team grow and gel before and I am confident that we are again on the right track. I am excited to see how this season pans out.
I write today though because over recent weeks and months my commitment to our Club has, from some parts, been brought into question. As a reminder, I stepped in to buy Blackpool Football Club in 2019 because I wanted to secure its survival for future generations of fans. I insisted as a part of the sale process that I would only buy the full 96.2% of the Club and not the 76.2% that was originally available. I did this to ensure that the Club was free of its previous owners and so that we, as a fanbase, could unite under single ownership. To achieve this and to ensure that I, rather than any of the other three less credible bidders acquired the Club, I paid a full price for what in reality was a very distressed asset that had suffered years of chronic under-investment. Then, as now, my motives were not financial.
Since then, I have ploughed a further GBP18m of my family’s money into the Club. In this financial year alone, I expect to provide an additional GBP5m, this before any contribution to any large infrastructure projects. It’s this level of commitment that keeps Blackpool Football Club operational. It’s this investment that has given us a likely top six playing budget, and enables us to pay, for Kyle Joseph, the highest known transfer fee this year in League One. It’s this money that has helped us to bring in established pro’s like Oliver Norburn, Matthew Pennington, Richard O’Donnell and Jordan Rhodes, whilst also sign younger players such as Kyle, Tashan Oakley-Boothe, Albie Morgan and Kylian Kouassi - players who will hopefully develop into our stars of the future. It’s this that has allowed us to loan highly rated youngsters like Jensen Weir and Karamoko Dembele. I doubt that there is another owner or ownership group in League One that will make as large a financial contribution this season as the GBP5m that I will likely inject.
“But where’s the Critchley/Bowler/Yates money gone?” is the recent refrain. It’s certainly not been spent on wedding venues or woolly mammoths! These incoming transfer fee payments are staggered over time but the monies so far received have contributed to the spend on the playing squad. Player trading and reinvesting a majority of the income from player sales back into the playing squad is a vital part of our strategy and combined with my personal investment helps us to pay meaningful transfer fees, source high quality loan players and most importantly support a significantly higher wage bill than when we were last in this division. This has resulted in a transfer window and an assembled squad that the football professionals within the Club are more than happy with. I can also further assure you all that with David Downes in-situ we will use future windows as an opportunity to further improve the squad as we did every window when Neil was last with us.
When I first bought the Club I said that I ultimately wanted it to operate in a manner in which it was able to sustain itself. The owner-funded model of our community football clubs is a dangerous one. Using Saturday’s opponents Wigan as an example, they have had severe financial difficulties recently under two sets of overseas owners until finding what I hope for them will be long-term stability under their new local owner who I’m sure understands the value and importance of the Club to the town. Other local clubs such as Bury have not been so lucky as they had no benefactor step in to save them when they encountered financial difficulties. There is clearly a trade-off between sustainability and ambition and as custodian my aim is for the Club to survive and thrive over time. The amount of cash that I continue to inject into our Club clearly demonstrates though that I am funding us at the ambitious rather than the sustainable end of the spectrum. It is a shame that all of this is not better understood across the entirety of our fanbase.
I recognise that being the custodian of Blackpool Football Club is not just a financial responsibility. A lot of the big decisions roll up to me and I know that I will be judged on their outcomes. Unfortunately, outcomes cannot be guaranteed but I can say that all decisions are taken with the best interests of the football club at heart, although it is inevitable that mistakes will sometimes be made. I relish and embrace this responsibility that comes with being the owner of the Club and expect to be so for many years to come. In saying that, I only want what is best for the town and the Club. If there is anyone out there who has the means to fund the Club and believes that they are a more suitable custodian of Blackpool Football Club than I, then they should make themselves known and I will hear them out.
Finally, I hope that we can all agree that it’s time for us to put the disappointments of last season firmly behind us and to look forward. I hope that for the rest of the season we can all get behind the team and you can roar us to success as you did on Saturday. When on song, no fans top Blackpool fans and nowhere beats a packed Bloomfield Road.
On behalf of the Club, I thank you for your ongoing support.

UTMP

Simon
 

Firstly, I’d like to congratulate Neil and his team for their exciting victory over Wigan Athletic on Saturday. We worked hard, were well organized and entertained as we deservedly grabbed the three points. We’ve seen a Neil Critchley team grow and gel before and I am confident that we are again on the right track. I am excited to see how this season pans out.
I write today though because over recent weeks and months my commitment to our Club has, from some parts, been brought into question. As a reminder, I stepped in to buy Blackpool Football Club in 2019 because I wanted to secure its survival for future generations of fans. I insisted as a part of the sale process that I would only buy the full 96.2% of the Club and not the 76.2% that was originally available. I did this to ensure that the Club was free of its previous owners and so that we, as a fanbase, could unite under single ownership. To achieve this and to ensure that I, rather than any of the other three less credible bidders acquired the Club, I paid a full price for what in reality was a very distressed asset that had suffered years of chronic under-investment. Then, as now, my motives were not financial.
Since then, I have ploughed a further GBP18m of my family’s money into the Club. In this financial year alone, I expect to provide an additional GBP5m, this before any contribution to any large infrastructure projects. It’s this level of commitment that keeps Blackpool Football Club operational. It’s this investment that has given us a likely top six playing budget, and enables us to pay, for Kyle Joseph, the highest known transfer fee this year in League One. It’s this money that has helped us to bring in established pro’s like Oliver Norburn, Matthew Pennington, Richard O’Donnell and Jordan Rhodes, whilst also sign younger players such as Kyle, Tashan Oakley-Boothe, Albie Morgan and Kylian Kouassi - players who will hopefully develop into our stars of the future. It’s this that has allowed us to loan highly rated youngsters like Jensen Weir and Karamoko Dembele. I doubt that there is another owner or ownership group in League One that will make as large a financial contribution this season as the GBP5m that I will likely inject.
“But where’s the Critchley/Bowler/Yates money gone?” is the recent refrain. It’s certainly not been spent on wedding venues or woolly mammoths! These incoming transfer fee payments are staggered over time but the monies so far received have contributed to the spend on the playing squad. Player trading and reinvesting a majority of the income from player sales back into the playing squad is a vital part of our strategy and combined with my personal investment helps us to pay meaningful transfer fees, source high quality loan players and most importantly support a significantly higher wage bill than when we were last in this division. This has resulted in a transfer window and an assembled squad that the football professionals within the Club are more than happy with. I can also further assure you all that with David Downes in-situ we will use future windows as an opportunity to further improve the squad as we did every window when Neil was last with us.
When I first bought the Club I said that I ultimately wanted it to operate in a manner in which it was able to sustain itself. The owner-funded model of our community football clubs is a dangerous one. Using Saturday’s opponents Wigan as an example, they have had severe financial difficulties recently under two sets of overseas owners until finding what I hope for them will be long-term stability under their new local owner who I’m sure understands the value and importance of the Club to the town. Other local clubs such as Bury have not been so lucky as they had no benefactor step in to save them when they encountered financial difficulties. There is clearly a trade-off between sustainability and ambition and as custodian my aim is for the Club to survive and thrive over time. The amount of cash that I continue to inject into our Club clearly demonstrates though that I am funding us at the ambitious rather than the sustainable end of the spectrum. It is a shame that all of this is not better understood across the entirety of our fanbase.
I recognise that being the custodian of Blackpool Football Club is not just a financial responsibility. A lot of the big decisions roll up to me and I know that I will be judged on their outcomes. Unfortunately, outcomes cannot be guaranteed but I can say that all decisions are taken with the best interests of the football club at heart, although it is inevitable that mistakes will sometimes be made. I relish and embrace this responsibility that comes with being the owner of the Club and expect to be so for many years to come. In saying that, I only want what is best for the town and the Club. If there is anyone out there who has the means to fund the Club and believes that they are a more suitable custodian of Blackpool Football Club than I, then they should make themselves known and I will hear them out.
Finally, I hope that we can all agree that it’s time for us to put the disappointments of last season firmly behind us and to look forward. I hope that for the rest of the season we can all get behind the team and you can roar us to success as you did on Saturday. When on song, no fans top Blackpool fans and nowhere beats a packed Bloomfield Road.
On behalf of the Club, I thank you for your ongoing support.

UTMP

Simon
Hoping. for a successful season and at least top six finish.
 
I suppose if I've learned anything over my many decades it would be this: as a leader in any capacity, you should share as much information, as soon as you can, with your customers, employees, and other stakeholders.

And I know, there is a lot of information that leaders can't share for various reasons such as legal, fiduciary, and privacy concerns as examples.

But if leaders don't share what they can, things start to happen. Those same customers, employees, and stakeholders start to make things up - they start to tell themselves and others a bunch of stories. You need look no further than the last few days at BFC with the transfer window. And those stories were making people angrier and angrier. Why aren't they doing this or that? Why did they let Rob Apter go? and on and on.

I was pleased to see Simon Sadler's' announcement today. He erased a lot of those stories and provided perspective upon what it means to own and run an EFL club; that's something that most, if not all of us, couldn't or wouldn't be able to do.

As an alternative, what Sadler might have done is perhaps get some of his information out earlier. And in the future, I would like to see these 'fireside chats' become a regular thing. As simple working titles, "Thought you'd like to know", "You have a right to know this", and "Here's an update" might work.

I know that Blackpool Football Club is 'ours' and 'the town's' but without excellent stewardship, we have all experienced what that can and has done to us in the past!

We're lucky. Simon Sadler is our excellent steward.

Oh, and as he said, "If there is anyone out there who has the means to fund the Club and believes that they are a more suitable custodian of Blackpool Football Club than I, then they should make themselves known and I will hear them out".

I don't expect a queue.
 
So eloquently put Sask. I like the idea of a 'Here's an Update' or something similar. Maybe on a monthly basis Simon?

Another crucial aspect of leadership is being open and honest and sharing things with your team (the team being us - the fans in this case). Share the good things but don't hide the bad things. Change can be good if managed correctly and if there's people around you that can't accept change, then stop the bus and let them off.
 
So eloquently put Sask. I like the idea of a 'Here's an Update' or something similar. Maybe on a monthly basis Simon?

Another crucial aspect of leadership is being open and honest and sharing things with your team (the team being us - the fans in this case). Share the good things but don't hide the bad things. Change can be good if managed correctly and if there's people around you that can't accept change, then stop the bus and let them off.
Spot on Bob!
 
It’s this level of commitment that keeps Blackpool Football Club operational. It’s this investment that has given us a likely top six playing budget, and enables us to pay, for Kyle Joseph, the highest known transfer fee this year in League One.

A statement which can't be substantiated as the club declared the fee "undisclosed"
 
He waits untill we win a game and then gives it the biggun. Perhaps division 3 is Sadlers level, I don't see relegation in any part of progress despite his pontificating. No good throwing money at bad ideas because theres been enough of them already. Its time he got it right.
 
I think we have to give SS a little bit of a break here.

He is at heart a Pool fan who like the rest of us became despondent under the O's and without his involvement I fear we might not have a BFC to support any longer. You only have to look at where clubs like Bury and Macc Town have ended up to understand what could have become and I am far happier with where we are, even being relegated, than those few years ago.

I read an article when he bought the club that his personal fortune was something like GBP100m. I have no idea how accurate that number is but if you are spending GBP5m a year and have already spend GBP18m then that could be close to a quarter of his savings disappearing in a very short period of time. Clearly he has more money than any one of you and I (well, at least I assume that is the case otherwise we should be the ones lining up to take on the stewardship of this great club of ours!).

At the end of the day, he is a businessman with little specialist knowledge of running a football club and while he is trying to surround himself with so-called experts he is also learning on the job. If he ran the club as a fan and spent more money or bought more players as I think we might want him to do and talk about on here, I actually doubt that he would be around for as long as I hope he will be. I think promotion to the Championship came sooner than anyone expected and perhaps that was a bigger problem than we realised. We survived for one year and then had Critch set sail on almost the eve of the new season which threw all the best laid plans into chaos. We can argue about who he then chose to run the club but we all make mistakes and I remember a number on here saying they thought McCarthy was a good choice when he came in to try and save the season.

Open communication with the fans is important as it is at any business of any size and, while we are not employees of the club, we are passionate stakeholders with a vested interest in our club. I commend SS for coming out with his message and hope that there will be perhaps more of these as has been mentioned earlier.

Above all I hope for all of us to pull together, get behind the team we have, and be successful on the pitch.

#UTMP
 
I'm behind SS he's a fan doing his very best. Could any of us have done better clearing up the mess from the Oyston's?