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Newcastle owner Mike Ashley has said he is ready to sell the troubled club.

 

Ashley, who has pumped about £250m into the club, says he fears for the safety of his family after a weekend of heated protests by unhappy Newcastle fans.

 

"I am now a dad who can't take his kids to a football game because I am advised that we would be assaulted," he said.

 

"I am no longer prepared to subsidise Newcastle," added the billionaire, who has been under fire since manager Kevin Keegan rocked the club by quitting.

 

Keegan left his position after just eight months on 4 September, claiming he had no control of transfer dealings at St James' Park.

 

His departure prompted a number of protests against Ashley and the Newcastle board of directors, culminating in demonstrations in and outside the ground before, during and after Saturday's 2-1 home defeat to Hull

 

Those protests appear to have been the tipping point for Ashley, who has decided to put the Premier League club up for sale just 16 months after his £134.4m takeover of the club.

 

"I am putting the club up for sale. I hope the next owner is someone who can lavish the amount of money on the club that the fans want," said Ashley.

 

Ashley, 43, issued an emotional 1,644 word statement on Sunday in which he spoke of his pride at owning the club.

 

Since taking control of the Magpies, he has made a point of standing with the fans rather than sitting in the director's box but says he no longer feels it is safe for him to do so.

 

It was this 'special' relationship with the fans that influenced his decision to hand Keegan a second chance to manage the club following the sacking of Sam Allardyce.

 

Keegan took charge in January 2008 but eventually left citing boardroom differences, much to the anger of the majority of Newcastle fans.

Fans protested at the weekend over Kevin Keegan's departure

 

Most of that anger was directed at Ashley and Dennis Wise, the club's executive director of football.

 

"I am not stupid and have listened to the fans," said Ashley, who insisted he bore no ill will to Keegan.

 

"I don't want anyone to read my words and think that any of this is an attack on Kevin Keegan. It is not," he added.

 

"Kevin and I always got on. Everyone at the club, and I mean everyone, thinks that he has few equals in getting the best out of the players.

 

"He is a legend at the club and rightly so. Clearly there are disagreements between Kevin and the board and we have both put that in the hands of our lawyers."

 

Signs of a split first surfaced towards the end of the January transfer window when the club sold James Milner to Aston Villa for £12m.

 

Michael Owen, Joey Barton and Alan Smith almost followed and it was Keegan's lack of control over these dealings that angered him. I shall be paying out many more millions over the coming year to pay for players bought by the club before I arrived

 

Keegan also became frustrated with the lack of new faces at St James' Park despite the summer arrivals of Fabricio Coloccini, Jonas Gutierrez and Xisco.

 

But Ashley claimed that there was only so much money he could spend on the club without plunging Newcastle into further debt.

 

This was a philosophy not shared by Keegan or the club's supporters who were eager for big names to arrive at St James' Park.

 

"The truth is that Newcastle could not sustain buying the Shevchenkos, Robinhos or the Berbatovs," said Ashley.

 

"My plan and my strategy for Newcastle is different. It has to be.

 

"Arsenal is the shining example in England of a sustainable business model. It takes time. It can't be done overnight."

 

In his statement, Ashley revealed just how much he has spent in his tenure but insists he did not buy Newcastle to make money and will not leave them in the lurch.

 

Indian businessman Anil Ambani publicly ended his interest last week while Chinese billionaire Xu Rongmao has also been linked with a bid.

 

"I paid £134m out of my own pocket for the club," said Ashley.

 

"I then poured another £110 million into the club not to pay off the debt but just to reduce it. The club is still in debt.

 

"Even worse than that, the club still owes millions of pounds in transfer fees. I shall be paying out many more millions over the coming year to pay for players bought by the club before I arrived."

 

He added: "I have put Newcastle on a sound financial footing. It is reducing its debt. It is spending within itself. It is recruiting exciting new players and bringing in players for the future. You want me out... that is what I am now trying to do but it won't happen overnight and it may not happen at all

 

"This will not be a fire sale. Newcastle is now in a much stronger position than it was in 2007. It is planning for the future and it is sustainable.

 

"I am very conscious of the responsibility that I bear in owning Newcastle United. Tough decisions have to be made in business and I will not shy away from doing what I consider to be in the best interests of the club. This is not fantasy football.

 

He added: "I have the interests of Newcastle United at heart. I have listened to you.

 

"You want me out. That is what I am now trying to do but it won't happen overnight and it may not happen at all if a buyer does not come in.

 

"You don't need to demonstrate against me again because I have got the message."

 

Source: BBC Sport

 

This guy is quite clearly deluded. The Newcastle supporters protested over his and the directors' influence over decisions the manager should have been making, not the amount of money being pumped into the club. It's one stop forward, two steps backwards for Newcastle again...

 

I wish Liverpool's owners could do the same. :(

 

I do wonder if Newcastle will be the next club to be over-taken with a huge foreign investor though... if they do all that's gonna happen eventually is the lesser clubs (i.e. Man City) will just end up buying players for extortinate (sp?) transfer fees, and higher wages.

 

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I wish Newcastle fans would wake up and smell the coffee. They think they're such a huge club, they're not anymore, the only thing they've won in over 50 years is the Intertoto Cup :rofl: and Keegan is well past it in managerial terms.

Bugger

 

Was a good laugh while it lasted :(

 

Thank you Mike Ashley for entertaining Sunderland fans worldwide, and giving us the opportunity to laugh at Newcastle harder than we've been able to in a long, long time. Thanks for forcing Keegan out (he was a pain in the arse anyway), and putting quite possibly the most hated figure in football in charge of transfer dealings etc to comical effect. Cheers also for the media circus that has followed the Toon in the past week or so. Highlights included the fans 'boycoutting' the club with their little banners, that drunk tosser telling Keegan to fuck off live on North East Tonight and of course all of the pre-pubescent junior magpies staging hilarious protests wafting their reebok classics and nike air max trainers in the air. You've brought so much joy and happiness to us Mackems in such a short time, and I think I speak for us all when I say i'm devastated you're leaving. Thanks for all that you've unknowingly done for us, and here's hoping the next owner somehow manages to out-do even your tremendous balls-ups and finally takes Newcastle and the "toon faithful" back to where they belong (League Two)

Newcastle owner Mike Ashley has said he is ready to sell the troubled club.

 

Ashley, who has pumped about £250m into the club, says he fears for the safety of his family after a weekend of heated protests by unhappy Newcastle fans.

 

"I am now a dad who can't take his kids to a football game because I am advised that we would be assaulted," he said.

 

"I am no longer prepared to subsidise Newcastle," added the billionaire, who has been under fire since manager Kevin Keegan rocked the club by quitting.

 

Keegan left his position after just eight months on 4 September, claiming he had no control of transfer dealings at St James' Park.

 

His departure prompted a number of protests against Ashley and the Newcastle board of directors, culminating in demonstrations in and outside the ground before, during and after Saturday's 2-1 home defeat to Hull

 

Those protests appear to have been the tipping point for Ashley, who has decided to put the Premier League club up for sale just 16 months after his £134.4m takeover of the club.

 

"I am putting the club up for sale. I hope the next owner is someone who can lavish the amount of money on the club that the fans want," said Ashley.

 

Ashley, 43, issued an emotional 1,644 word statement on Sunday in which he spoke of his pride at owning the club.

 

Since taking control of the Magpies, he has made a point of standing with the fans rather than sitting in the director's box but says he no longer feels it is safe for him to do so.

 

It was this 'special' relationship with the fans that influenced his decision to hand Keegan a second chance to manage the club following the sacking of Sam Allardyce.

 

Keegan took charge in January 2008 but eventually left citing boardroom differences, much to the anger of the majority of Newcastle fans.

Fans protested at the weekend over Kevin Keegan's departure

 

Most of that anger was directed at Ashley and Dennis Wise, the club's executive director of football.

 

"I am not stupid and have listened to the fans," said Ashley, who insisted he bore no ill will to Keegan.

 

"I don't want anyone to read my words and think that any of this is an attack on Kevin Keegan. It is not," he added.

 

"Kevin and I always got on. Everyone at the club, and I mean everyone, thinks that he has few equals in getting the best out of the players.

 

"He is a legend at the club and rightly so. Clearly there are disagreements between Kevin and the board and we have both put that in the hands of our lawyers."

 

Signs of a split first surfaced towards the end of the January transfer window when the club sold James Milner to Aston Villa for £12m.

 

Michael Owen, Joey Barton and Alan Smith almost followed and it was Keegan's lack of control over these dealings that angered him. I shall be paying out many more millions over the coming year to pay for players bought by the club before I arrived

 

Keegan also became frustrated with the lack of new faces at St James' Park despite the summer arrivals of Fabricio Coloccini, Jonas Gutierrez and Xisco.

 

But Ashley claimed that there was only so much money he could spend on the club without plunging Newcastle into further debt.

 

This was a philosophy not shared by Keegan or the club's supporters who were eager for big names to arrive at St James' Park.

 

"The truth is that Newcastle could not sustain buying the Shevchenkos, Robinhos or the Berbatovs," said Ashley.

 

"My plan and my strategy for Newcastle is different. It has to be.

 

"Arsenal is the shining example in England of a sustainable business model. It takes time. It can't be done overnight."

 

In his statement, Ashley revealed just how much he has spent in his tenure but insists he did not buy Newcastle to make money and will not leave them in the lurch.

 

Indian businessman Anil Ambani publicly ended his interest last week while Chinese billionaire Xu Rongmao has also been linked with a bid.

 

"I paid £134m out of my own pocket for the club," said Ashley.

 

"I then poured another £110 million into the club not to pay off the debt but just to reduce it. The club is still in debt.

 

"Even worse than that, the club still owes millions of pounds in transfer fees. I shall be paying out many more millions over the coming year to pay for players bought by the club before I arrived."

 

He added: "I have put Newcastle on a sound financial footing. It is reducing its debt. It is spending within itself. It is recruiting exciting new players and bringing in players for the future. You want me out... that is what I am now trying to do but it won't happen overnight and it may not happen at all

 

"This will not be a fire sale. Newcastle is now in a much stronger position than it was in 2007. It is planning for the future and it is sustainable.

 

"I am very conscious of the responsibility that I bear in owning Newcastle United. Tough decisions have to be made in business and I will not shy away from doing what I consider to be in the best interests of the club. This is not fantasy football.

 

He added: "I have the interests of Newcastle United at heart. I have listened to you.

 

"You want me out. That is what I am now trying to do but it won't happen overnight and it may not happen at all if a buyer does not come in.

 

"You don't need to demonstrate against me again because I have got the message."

 

Source: BBC Sport

 

This guy is quite clearly deluded. The Newcastle supporters protested over his and the directors' influence over decisions the manager should have been making, not the amount of money being pumped into the club. It's one stop forward, two steps backwards for Newcastle again...

 

I wish Liverpool's owners could do the same. :(

 

I do wonder if Newcastle will be the next club to be over-taken with a huge foreign investor though... if they do all that's gonna happen eventually is the lesser clubs (i.e. Man City) will just end up buying players for extortinate (sp?) transfer fees, and higher wages.

 

i stopped reading then

 

he was sold in August, not January

Edited by This Charming Man

Highlights included the fans 'boycoutting' the club with their little banners, that drunk tosser telling Keegan to fuck off live on North East Tonight and of course all of the pre-pubescent junior magpies staging hilarious protests wafting their reebok classics and nike air max trainers in the air.

 

You forgot one thing - walking out of the Hull game on 80 minutes. Mike Ashley's really gonna be hurt by that. :rolleyes:

 

newcastle for sale

 

:rofl: :rofl: :rofl: :rofl: AHAHAHAHAAHAHAHA

 

Notice how the seller comes from Sunderland.

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