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Welcome to Portsmouth: They've got no goalkeeper, 10 players and they're all for sale

CheesePie

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Welcome to Portsmouth: They've got no goalkeeper, 10 players and they're all up for sale


By NEIL MOXLEY PUBLISHED: 21:11 GMT, 5 July 2012 | UPDATED: 21:14 GMT, 5 July 2012


When Tal Ben Haim signs in for pre-season training at Portsmouth on Monday, he will set a record for a player in League One.

Earning £36,000 a week, plus an image rights contract worth a staggering £1million a year, the defender is about to become the highest paid player in the third tier of English football.

It is nothing Portsmouth can be proud of, just another damning statistic that continues to numb the brain of the club’s administrator Trevor Birch.

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Record breaker: Tal Ben Haim is still being paid £36,000 a week


Portsmouth have a wage bill that will blow the mind of anyone familiar with League One finances, an £11m-a-year commitment that continues to freak out prospective owner Balram Chainrai.

The 10 highly paid members of Michael Appleton’s squad will drift into their shabby Eastleigh training centre on Monday.

Their first fixture of the season, a Capital One Cup tie at Plymouth, is just five weeks away, and their opening league game is a derby against Bournemouth at Fratton Park on August 18.

Appleton, Portsmouth’s manager throughout the latest crisis to grip the south coast club, has no idea whether he will even be able to field a team.

He does not have much to work with. Portsmouth have no goalkeeper, just three defenders, three midfielders and four strikers left.

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Uncertain future: Portsmouth will begin the season in League One with a shortage of money and players


Kanu, twice a Premier League winner with Arsenal, a Champions League winner with Ajax and an FA Cup hero at Fratton Park, has a year left on a contract worth £10,000 a week. Amazingly, he is still only 35.

The other high-earning players, Aaron Mokoena, Greg Halford, Liam Lawrence, Hayden Mullins, David Norris, Erik Huseklepp, Luke Varney and Dave Kitson, are also scheduled to report for training. They are there to fulfil their contractual obligations, but Birch, an honourable and dignified man, must move them on if Portsmouth are to somehow escape the end game.

‘For the club to survive, we have to sell them,’ admitted Birch. ‘They are on wages that are unsustainable at League One level. They are all for sale. We have already made some savings, but it isn’t enough to save the football club.’

Birch is obliged to cut Portsmouth’s catastrophic wage bill, a legacy from an era when they broke the bank in the Premier League with salaries running at 120 per cent of turnover. Former players, such as Michael Brown, Richard Hughes, Aruna Dindane, Benjani, David Nugent, Hassan Yebda, Ricardo Rocha and David James, are all owed substantial sums of money.

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Stripping assets: Trevor Birch has the unenviable task of selling Portsmouth's players


Along with Ben Haim, they are entitled to be paid in full, according to the terms of their contracts under the archaic football creditors’ rule. Portsmouth’s future depends on them reaching a settlement and Hughes, an ex-professional who is well respected at the club, is the intermediary.

‘We are negotiating with the players, but so much depends on whether an agreement can be reached,’ said Birch. ‘Various proposals have been put forward. The sums of money are so vast that it complicates the matter and the players can always fall back on the football creditors ruling, which means they must get paid.’

Naturally some are more willing to negotiate than others, but Hughes, to his credit, wants to find an equitable solution that will reflect well on the players and the club.

The future of Portsmouth could depend on it and new owner Chainrai has indicated as much. The Hong Kong-based businessman wants to recover the £19m he claims he is owed from his previous complicated ownership of the club, a legacy of Ali al-Faraj’s disastrous involvement in 2010.

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Debt: Balram Chainrai is owed £19m


Two years on, Portsmouth are back in administration and Chainrai has made it clear he will not be pouring money into the club to take them back into the Premier League. On June 25 the club’s creditors agreed to the company voluntary agreement, a paltry two pence return to the pound, that could eventually take the club out of administration.There is a rival offer from Portsmouth’s Supporters Trust, mobilised when the club was plunged back into administration last November. They are supported by £1,000 pledges from fans and are putting together a package that is designed to keep Portsmouth in the Football League.

Scott Mclachlan, a PST spokesman, said: ‘We do not want to start again unless the club is liquidated. It is all about saving a club with its 114-year history.’ They are also in the hands of the Football League board, a group comprising eight people who will soon determine Portsmouth’s fate. Without their support, the next stop will be the Blue Square Bet South.

To watch MV here without being made to go to YouTube website, press play, you will see the WMG message, refresh page and press play again.

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jw5

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Re: Welcome to Portsmouth: They've got no goalkeeper, 10 players and they're all for

It's partly Harry's fault, but nobody seems to remember.
 

CheesePie

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Re: Welcome to Portsmouth: They've got no goalkeeper, 10 players and they're all for


Portsmouth face liquidation within weeks after £3m Kanu wage demand, warns Birch


By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER PUBLISHED: 10:04 GMT, 23 July 2012 | UPDATED: 10:06 GMT, 23 July 2012


Portsmouth administrator Trevor Birch has warned that the club could be liquidated 'in two or three weeks'.The 2008 FA Cup winners are due to start the new season in League One with a 10-point penalty for returning to administration but Birch says the club might be out of business before the big kick-off, against Bournemouth on August 18.Pompey's first-team squad currently only contains 12 players and one of them, Nwankwo Kanu, has hit the club with a formal £3million demand for back pay.

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Clock is ticking: Striker Kanu's (left) demand has added to Pompey's woes

Former owner Balram Chainrai has submitted a takeover offer, conditional on eight senior players leaving or accepting pay cuts, including Tal Ben Haim, who is on a £36,000-per-week contract, and Kanu.Birch has imposed a £5,000-per-week salary cap to cut costs, with the excess paid once the club avoids liquidation, but the Nigerian forward is digging his heels in over the money owed to him.'The club is heading for liquidation in just a few weeks, perhaps two weeks if these players don’t leave or compromise on their wages,' Birch told ESPN on Sunday. 'We still have players like Ben Haim, Dave Kitson and Kanu on our books.'

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Hands tied: Portsmouth manager Michael Appleton cannot buy any players


Birch added: 'Kanu has served the club notice that he wants to leave but before doing so he wants the money he says is owed to him by the club.'These players hold the survival of the club in their hands.'I must stress it is not their fault as the players didn’t get the club into this trouble, but they do now have the ability to get the club out of this mess.'The problem with everybody is that this club has cried wolf so often that no one believes it will happen, no one believes they will go out of business, but they will in two or three weeks. 'It is that serious now. The trouble is "Portsmouth fatigue", but the truth is that the club is now fighting for its life.'
 

ballsathome

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Re: Welcome to Portsmouth: They've got no goalkeeper, 10 players and they're all for


Portsmouth's future set to be secured as Chainrai rides to the rescue

By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER PUBLISHED: 21:54 GMT, 22 August 2012 | UPDATED: 23:59 GMT, 22 August 2012



Balram Chainrai expects to complete his takeover of crisis club Portsmouth in the next two weeks.
The League One club were spared a 10-point penalty after entering administration but faced a bleak future.Manager Michael Appleton was forced to sign players on one-month deals.

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Saving grace: Balram Chainrai is set to finalise his takeover of the club


In a statement to Sky Sports News, Chainrai announced the return of his offshore company, Portpin.

'We understood from the administrator that the terms offered by PST were problematic in two areas,” said Chainrai. “Portpin [is] to take action to avoid imminent liquidation of Portsmouth. We hope to finalise the transaction in the next two weeks.

'Portpin is taking this step to save the club and looks to continue to work with interested parties, including the Supporters Trust. We hope everybody, including the huge fan base, will support this [rescue] process.'

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Tough task: Portsmouth's young squad face a difficult season in League One

 
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