popillius
Well-Known Member
Well, the phrase 'turn on Aiyawatt' wouldn't be something I'd be happy doing at any point.I happily accept that people have different opinions on this but you're missing the bit that I'm interested in.
You say 'at the moment'. I understand you don't think that moment has come.
When would be your moment? I assume that relegation and financial mismanagement aren't factors as they've already happened.
What needs to happen for you to turn on Aiyawatt as owner?
You don't want to look back on a legacy if there's nothing to look forward to and I think exactly the same. However, for us to equal or supercede the successes we have had, we would need another billionaire owner and these are hard to come by unless you want to throw every single ounce of morality out of the window and accept the blood money of a Saudi conglomerate.
We shouldn't have been in the Championship last season, but we were and we won it because we had the financial resources and could afford clever lawyers under our current owners. It isn't KP's fault that Maresca ****ed off but it is their fault that they appointed a complete failure in his place. You're right in that we need much better leaders in the club but selling to another billionaire really doesn't guarantee this so I am trying to weigh up the good against the risk and at the moment, the good in that we are a PL side who have been able to invest in players (albeit that the idiot we gave this responsibility to made a complete hash of it), finance legal protection from the PL (from self inflicted problems I grant you) and who won the Championship at a canter last season because they could invest again, in players, is far more palatable than the risk of becoming QPR or a Saudi owned plaything.
Like you say, there's no right answer and I can absolutely understand why some folk may have lost their patience with the current ownership but I'm not there yet. That's not to say that if KP sold us to another non Saudi billionaire tomorrow I would be inconsolable but I wouldn't expect things to suddenly become rosey either. Newcastle fans expected league titles, FA Cups and Champions League runs instantly and it doesn't work that way. Manchester United have gone backwards since their change. My gut instinct is that twisting is riskier than sticking right now but it is just that, a gut instinct. I guess it's just about how much time each individual wants to afford the current owners and that's down to individual opinion.