Lord Horn 0 Posted December 13, 2012 Off topic but how do they aim to accommodate their level of support?????http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/20714161 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
paul moy 235 Posted December 13, 2012 Temporary stands perhaps ? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nicko 0 Posted December 13, 2012 [quote user="Lord Horn"]Off topic but how do they aim to accommodate their level of support?????http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/20714161[/quote]Hang on. Level of support? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Desert Fox 0 Posted December 13, 2012 Simple - they have no intention of playing at Hinckley or at the Rushden ground. This is simply a game of who blinks first. Coventry cant afford to pay the rent on the stadium and the onwers of have got no real hope of generating much revenue from other sources. A deal will be done, espeiclaly since the ultimate owner of the ground is the local authority. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bws Cat 0 Posted December 13, 2012 Tom will just love this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
paul moy 235 Posted December 13, 2012 [quote user="Desert Fox"]Simple - they have no intention of playing at Hinckley or at the Rushden ground. This is simply a game of who blinks first. Coventry cant afford to pay the rent on the stadium and the onwers of have got no real hope of generating much revenue from other sources. A deal will be done, espeiclaly since the ultimate owner of the ground is the local authority.[/quote]Of course you are correct but negotiations could be protracted so Coventry may need a temporary venue to maximise its negotiating powers to achieve the best deal. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
crabbycanary 2 Posted December 13, 2012 Match day revenue goes to ACL, plus Cov have to pay rent. Blimey, there aren''t many places left to generate income to pay the wages! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
York Canary 29 Posted December 13, 2012 [quote user="crabbycanary"]Match day revenue goes to ACL, plus Cov have to pay rent. Blimey, there aren''t many places left to generate income to pay the wages![/quote]Exactly. Seems a pretty disgusting situation to have got into. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Barclay hero 0 Posted December 13, 2012 Maybe they ought to pay their rent in peppercorns. To the UEA. Even though its 100+ miles.... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
shefcanary 2,956 Posted December 13, 2012 [quote user="York Canary"][quote user="crabbycanary"]Match day revenue goes to ACL, plus Cov have to pay rent. Blimey, there aren''t many places left to generate income to pay the wages![/quote]Exactly. Seems a pretty disgusting situation to have got into. [/quote] But one young Tom thinks is worth to get a new ground built! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lappinitup 629 Posted December 13, 2012 [quote user="Barclay hero"]Maybe they ought to pay their rent in peppercorns. To the UEA. Even though its 100+ miles....[/quote] Tom''s assertion that local authority''s would only charge a "peppercorn rent" is blown apart here. Coventry''s rent is £100,000 per month. WOW! [:S] Coventry City: Sky Blues prepared to consider ground switchCoventry City are prepared to consider finding a new home in a bid to resolve their rent row over the Ricoh Arena. Arena Coventry Limited (ACL) claim that the Sky Blues owe £1.1m in rent arrears and have given them until Boxing Day to pay up - or face a winding-up petition. The Sky Blues, who claim the rent is too high, are still keen to negotiate - but also have contingency plans. Analysis"The very idea of Coventry City playing home matches at Nene Park - or anywhere else - borders on the incredulous. But that appears to be where we are in the spat/row/slanging match between the club and ACL. "Surely before the imposed Boxing Day deadline common sense will prevail. "The situation comes with things on the pitch going well - a genuine positive feeling for the first time in many years. "An agreement has to be reached and, for what''s it''s worth, I think it will." Geoff Foster, BBC Coventry & Warwickshire "The club has commenced the sensible process of making contact with other clubs," said a club statement. "To evaluate if their stadiums meet our requirements should negotiations with ACL fail to reach a mutually agreed position on the rent, with the result that CCFC is forced to move away from the Ricoh to a new venue. "Following the issuing of a statutory demand by ACL last week the board of directors of CCFC will, first and foremost, continue to work hard at bringing about a resolution regarding the rent dispute with ACL that will enable the football club to remain at the Ricoh Arena. "However, in the interim period, they must consider other alternative and appropriate venues which are affordable for a football club to ensure CCFC fulfil their future fixtures." One report has suggested that Coventry, who averaged 15,000 gates in the Championship last season and are still bringing in almost 10,500 on average in League One, might even consider a 90-mile round trip for home games at the 6,500-capacity Nene Park, home of the now disbanded Rushden & Diamonds and latterly Kettering Town. The heart of Coventry''s dispute over their rent is that, at £1.28m a year, they believe it to be the highest outside the Premier League and that it should be renegotiated. Coventry claim that, on average, other clubs pay less than £170,000 a year and, unlike the Sky Blues, make revenue from matchday parking, as well as food and drink sales. The club were taken to the High Court in August in Birmingham after they stopped payments of £100,000 a month in rent to ACL in April - but they were told to top up a deposit fund to cover ACL''s unpaid invoices. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites