Michael, they have taken you away… from Ibrox

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If you aggregate the nods, winks and rumours around Celtic this week you might be inclined to think we’re in the market for a target-man striker with a few years’ experience under his belt.  I agree with the principle that we need a target man and I’m also of the view that short-term deals are not nearly as desirable as permanent contracts, but as we know, it’s too easy to load the club full of squad players who cumulatively cost a lot of money but scarcely trouble the first team.

Hooper, Stokes, Samaras, Bangura, Rasmussen and Murphy are all under contract for next season and we cannot be confident of attracting bids for any of those Neil Lennon might want to move on.  If we add a seventh striker, his name better be on the team sheet before Gary Hooper’s.  Signing an exotic version of Daryl Murphy would add spice to our week but would only consume scarce resources.  I’d rather not.

Co-opting a media partner works in theory.  It’s always better to have good relationships with the media than the kind of relationships Celtic perennially have, but what happens when your media partner plays with a straight bat?

Rangers media partner, STV, today report Nigerian trialist, Michael Uchebo, boarded a plane out of Glasgow a few hours after arriving (Michael, they have taken you away….) as the VVV-Venlo striker with 8 career goals to his name had “a poor first impression of” Rangers.

Michael, you clearly have a rubbish strike rate but you’re a remarkably perceptive individual.

Issue 6 of CQN Magazine is currently being prepared; drop me a line if you would like to advertise, celticquicknews@gmail.com.

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  1. HT

     

     

    Sorry, how did we leave it.

     

     

    I want to go and can get a ticket, but I’m really struggling time wise, my nephews birthday that day, I’ve got something on that night, and a sportsman’s dinner the night before – all while trying to do 2 full time jobs :-)

     

     

    Would there be room on your bus if I decided to go ? Will decide tomorrow/Sunday

     

     

    hh

  2. Jeg er Neil Lennon-Greeninbingley on

    Saint stivs

     

     

    Fabulous footage. Takes me right back – can smell the wet turf and fag smoke again.

  3. that needs the full transcript mate, its a first in the broader domain for reporting whats unfolding in front of their bulging eyes.

     

     

    good catch, keep it lit.

     

     

    —————————————————————

     

     

    The Lizard King says:

     

    27 January, 2012 at 23:49

     

    Apols if already posted.

     

     

    A rare example of some thorough reporting, from Sky website.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    When I first looked into the whir of financial chaos that was threatening to implode the club, from a football perspective all was rosy. Sitting pretty at the top of the SPL and 12 points clear. Now some two months later Rangers are second, sit four points below Celtic and there remains a pretty grim situation playing out behind the scenes: they are involved in a potentially crippling tribunal case with Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs that concluded last week. And that’s only part of it.

     

     

    So what’s going on?

     

     

    HMRC, the folk that collect our tax to you and I, are aggressively pursuing an unpaid tax demand issued to Rangers for £49million. This comprises of £35m in unpaid tax and interest and £14m in penalties. Suffice to say, for a club that is already in the red (Whyte took responsibility for the club’s £18m bank debt to Lloyds when he purchased the club from Sir David Murray for £1 in May last year, other creditors are said to take the total up to £30m) that’s a panic-inducing amount of cash.

     

     

    If the tribunal, which took place last week after postponement last November finds against Rangers, HMRC can demand payment immediately, regardless of whether the club launches an appeal or not.

     

     

    The reality, Whyte has recently admitted, is “obvious”; if the club has to pay up he may be forced to take them into administration.

     

     

    The club has been hauled up over its past use of Employee Benefit Trusts (EBTs) to pay part of their players’ salaries – Rangers paid money into a trust which then paid out to the beneficiaries (players) as a loan. The loans are not subject to income tax or National Insurance – in fact they’re hardly taxed at all. Where the issue of tax evasion arises is that these payments cannot be made on a contractual basis – this would make them wages and therefore subject to the usual deductions – and that’s the point where the club find themselves in trouble. HMRC say they have proof of the misuse of EBTs in the form of documents and emails between those in charge at Ibrox and players’ agents.

     

     

    It’s been suggested that Rangers are one of many football clubs who have used (or misused if found guilty) EBTs to meet the demands of payroll. This could very well be seen by Government as a test case, which, if won, would open the doors to the recovery of millions of pounds from other clubs who withheld in a similar way.

     

     

    Rangers deny the accusation of tax evasion and have been to two prior tribunals to fight their case. No decision was reached in either. They now find themselves in a period of inefficacy after what is expected to be the final hearing on the matter. Some will argue that the club made full use of taxation loopholes, HMRC will insist that in paying top earners at the club in the most ‘tax efficient’ way Rangers crossed the divide between tax avoidance – which is legal – and tax evasion, which is not.

     

     

    Following the tribunal, which was held in Edinburgh last week, Rangers must now embrace a period of uncertainty. A decision is expected in weeks, if not months, although most expect the verdict to be announced in mid to late March.

     

     

    In April last year Alistair Johnston, then chairman of the club was bullish in his optimism of a successful outcome in the case.

     

     

    “We continue to vigorously contest HMRC’s challenge on the taxation treatment of the trust and, in doing so, continue to receive reassuring opinion from tax, accounting and legal specialists.”

     

     

    Encouraging words. But then the club was about to be sold to Whyte – the lifelong Rangers fan who was completely aware of the tribunal process happening at the time of his 85% purchase from Murray – something that puzzled many as to why he should so fervently persist with the acquisition. A few days after he became the club’s new owner, Whyte was in a defiant mood.

     

     

    “Our advice is that we’re going to win the case. I’m confident that we are going to win the case and that there will be no liability there.”

     

     

    But last October, Whyte, who was not involved with the club at the time that EBTs were in use, discussed administration in an interview with the Daily Telegraph.

     

     

    “It is one of the possibilities we have looked at, yes. The choice in terms of an adverse finding is pretty obvious really.”

     

     

    It also appears the club may not challenge the findings of the tribunal, should they be found liable for the tax debt, with Whyte seemingly keen to avoid the issue being dragged out any further.

     

     

    “It’s in some ways worrying but in other ways it would draw a line under a sad event and a sad period in history and would be a chance for a fresh start for Rangers,” he said in an interview with Scottish television in October last year.

     

     

    By entering into administration the club would incur an automatic 10 point penalty, as well as potentially exposing themselves to other sporting penalties open to the SPL.

     

     

    Whyte, having transferred the club’s debt to a holding company he owns is effectively the club’s main creditor, which he claims puts the club and himself in a position of power should they lose the case to HMRC. He could expect to buy the club back from the administrator without its other debts – something commonplace throughout this recession. You can concur that this proposal would cause little disruption out on the frontline and mean little change to matters on the field, leaving the team to concentrate making up lost ground on Celtic.

     

     

    Without getting too complicated though, HMRC could block the sale of the club back to Whyte – challenging any arrangement made with creditors. If HMRC win the tax case they could argue they are the biggest creditor, therefore they would have the power to determine who controls the club and when it comes out of administration.

     

     

    There has been speculation that Rangers could even have to start again, to be re-established as a ‘new’ club – though this is generally seen as a pretty extreme measure.

     

     

    And don’t forget, even if the tax authority has little chance of recovering the money owed to them they may still want to use the case against Rangers to set a legal example to others.

     

     

    And just one more coal to add to the flames: HMRC’s recent behaviour indicates that it’s now not shy to use a legal power that it has laid dormant for several years – this holds directors, including those former, personally liable for unpaid tax, particularly National Insurance. What else?

     

     

    Think this is purely scaremongering? Well the courts don’t. They are also concerned by Rangers’ financial fragility.

     

     

    In launching legal action for breach of contract former Rangers chief executive Martin Bain went to the courts and successfully persuaded a judge to ring-fence £480,000 of Rangers’ money should he win his case. He’s actually seeking damages for loss of earnings of around twice that amount but such was the case for “real and substantial risk of insolvency” the money was frozen ahead of his court case.

     

     

    Former finance director Donald McIntyre, pursued a case for alleged breach of contract and successfully managed to have £300,000 of the club’s assets frozen last year – the case was settled out of court in December.

     

     

    This has to help paint some of the picture at Ibrox. There is money ring-fenced for the payment of another tax bill – relating to the exposure of another loophole in tax law. This one’s probably too much to go into after all this tax talk but basically it emerged in the club’s accounts in April last year that from 1999 to 2003 they had used a Discounted Options Scheme – a bit like an EBT in that it’s used for the avoidance of paying tax, but works by issuing shares to a beneficiary from a company set up in a tax haven. HMRC state that the club owes £2.8m in back taxes and interest, £2.3m of which has reportedly already been frozen on their behalf. Rangers have just launched an appeal against this charge and the reported £1.4m owing in penalties.

     

     

    Capita Trustees, which provides pension services to employers, had taken court action against Rangers in pursuit of an unpaid bill. It was seeking payment of what Capita’s lawyer calls a “straightforward commercial debt for advisory services rendered”. They agreed an out of court settlement.

     

     

    Just a few weeks ago the PLUS stock exchange suspended trading in Rangers when the club was found to have failed to publish their audited accounts up to June 30 2011 or hold their AGM on time, therefore breaching the Companies Act (2006).

     

     

    So why weren’t the audited accounts published in time? The club say the delay is due to problems in finalising the audit: “Which the board believe will be completed on or around 31 January 2012. The delay in finalising the audit is principally related to the ongoing HMRC tax tribunal.”

     

     

    The SFA have confirmed that Rangers have until March 31 to publish their audited accounts and in turn show that they do not owe money to the tax authorities. Without this proof it’s unlikely Rangers will be granted a license to play in Europe next season.

     

     

    And there’s more. Whyte failed to disclose to PLUS until November 30 last year that he had been disqualified from becoming a company director for seven years by the UK Insolvency Service in 2000. Such an oversight could cost the club a further £100,000.

     

     

    So when you look at the whole picture there’s a very real chance Rangers could be in serious financial disarray later this year; but of course there’s also the possibility that, perhaps for the good of Scottish football, for the competition and commercial side of the whole affair that Whyte may well be able to negotiate himself a tax bill he can cover.

     

     

    Over the next month or two Ally McCoist must work very hard with his Rangers team to keep the club together. The farewell to long-standing captain Davie Weir and injuries can’t help. Neither could the potential sale of players such as Nikica Jelavic if Whyte has to keep the wolf from the door. The loss of European football so early this season has also not helped matters.

     

     

    Although the latest tribunal with the HMRC has finished, many weeks will pass before the case reaches its conclusion; something which has the possibility to change the face of Scottish football for many years to come.

     

     

    .

  4. bjmac

     

     

    No worries you should get a space and if not then I’m sure Tosh won’t mind you sitting on his knee :-)

     

     

    Leaving 7.30am I believe.

  5. Fred C. Dobbs says:

     

    27 January, 2012 at 23:42

     

     

    Neil got Ibrahim signed up as sharp as possible. Neil knows a player, he proved that with Hoops.

     

     

    We have, IMO, a man who will turn out to be every bit as influential as Victor. After reading a bit about him he comes into the Martin O’Neil school of “having something to prove”.

     

     

    I am very excited about this guy playing for us, the 7 afterall is awaiting its next Legend and I think he may well be it.

  6. The young fella is in Aberdeen, he got a start last week with a service co, through an agency, a decent job with resonable money, he got robbed, not much about 40 quid and his cards, someone went into the locker room and robbed him.

     

     

    Now, If I had been in jockland this week I would have been in there, he doesn’t want to rock the boat. a major failing if I may say so, he will see the light one of these days, there are a lot of things that I can forgive, but your workmates robbing you is not one of them.

     

     

    It will be sorted, as sure as eggs are eggs.

  7. G64

     

     

    Mrs BT dropped you off nearer PV than your home last week….

     

     

    forgot;lVP wasnt invited…

  8. Gordon64 says:

     

    27 January, 2012 at 23:55

     

     

     

    check out my flickr pictures earlier re the Dundee 88 we won the league game.

  9. tommytwiststommyturns

     

     

    Thanks, more or less same life.

     

    I sent you long mail before Christmas. Did you find it?

     

    Not asking for an reply but I’m just curious if you got it?

  10. TET

     

     

    Disgusting! Tell him to come down for weekend of M’well game 25th and we ‘ll look after him. Aff the swallae myself for a few weeks. Need to lose a bit after festive greedy b. mode.

     

     

    Gordon64

     

     

    Purdies from Pollok. Mrs P worked at St Andrews Teacher training. Liam P on SW degree course at Paisley 84-87? Ex Bellarmine myself.

  11. Johann , TAL .

     

     

    sorry , editing issues.

     

     

    Should had read

     

     

    3. TTT was pissed off (cos yours truly can be a right pain in the arras when he wants to be)

     

     

     

    TTTT , OldTim , as a a substitute for Hendricks , have you tried Caorunn (esp with a slice of macintosh red apple) ? Mmmm

     

     

    Me thinks there will be a good gathering in Juty’s for Taggsybhoy’s CQN quiz night (HH Taggsybhoy) so looking forward to it .

     

     

    Sanna

  12. sanna

     

     

    Do you know what the next night Taggsybhoy is going to be and when it is?

     

     

    I’m taking the missus away that weekend of the music quiz so can’t make it.

  13. THE EXILED TIM

     

     

    I hope the bhoyo is not affected too much by what happened to him. :(

     

     

    I emailed my 5 for later today.

  14. hamiltontim says:

     

    27 January, 2012 at 23:55

     

     

    :-))))))) You’re making the trip more tempting !

     

     

    Think it would be a bit unfair for me to go, terrible ko time AGAIN

     

     

    Speak soon, Sunday maybe

     

     

    #hh

  15. Gordon64

     

     

    Not seen L for about 15 years. Enjoyed some good nights out at Paisley with him.

  16. bankie

     

     

    The young fella is fine, just a little miffed, a bit disalusioned that he could be done like that, but times are hard and folk must justify that to themselfs.

     

     

    The onus always falls back to Da, far away, but Da will sort it out, Da won’t be around for ever, but not to worry, Ma will be there to sort things, who in all honesty has always sorted things.

     

     

    Jeez, I just want an easy life, that’s what we get for our fornicating I suppose :>)

  17. tommytwiststommyturns on

    hamiltontim/Sanna – was wondering the same, what’s Taggsy got in mind for the other night?

     

     

    Zbyszek – yes I got it thanks. I was away with my family over Christmas and New Year and January is the usual whirlwind.

     

    I know you’re not looking for a response, but I’ll be in touch soon.

     

     

    All the best,

     

    TTTT

  18. THE EXILED TIM says: 27 January, 2012 at 23:58

     

     

    I’m sure the boy would have loved you wading in. Sometimes ya gotta let them live their lives.

     

     

    PS remind me of this in approx 6 yrs time when boy reaches 17 – maybe sooner as me & mom are already a permanent embarrassment.

     

     

    S

  19. Yogiy @ 23.26

     

    Going to see her on sunday. Hope you left her in good voice. Will listen out for that chorus.

     

    hh lbb

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