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Drew Brees

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Everything posted by Drew Brees

  1. 4 jailed..nothing to do with rainjurs..nothing to see here timmy..we.were duped..give us our titles back...oh wait a minute.....
  2. They cant be, their 1st task as administrators was to try and buy Daniel Cousin.
  3. It's just money for January's war chest . He's 'given up' the naming rights which is of course the most important thing on Planet ***. Right Bares back to the *****s disrupting the minute silence, you have more important things to worry about
  4. What? £70m in 18months!! Just getting up to speed, they've spunked £70m and what have Scotland's newest football club got to show for it ? Two Irn Bru baubles, that in any other year would be routinely won by teams of joiners, postmen, and plasterers on petrol money. And they're still in turmoil on and off the field; are still teetering on the edge of the financial abyss; f**k me sideyways with a dugout canoe. life is good.
  5. So does that mean they won the ECWC in their centenary season? 1st i've heard, not like them to keep that quiet.
  6. Stolen from elsewhere This chart shows the percentage of UK tax spent in each area. http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/ye.. .11bc1i#ukgs302 Given the above and the fact that Duff and Phelps have projected the amount owed to the public purse will total £93m when the big tax verdict is announced we can work out who the horrible b*****ds have robbed. Pensioners - £16,740,000.00 Sick people and the Doctors & Nurses treating them - £15,810,000.00 Poor people dependant on welfare - £14,880,000.00 School children - £12,090,000.00 Military - £6,510,000.00 (How many squaddies would £6.5 million of armor save?) Protection (police, fire service, courts etc) - £4,650,000.00 Remaining stolen from transportation, general government, interest on national debt etc. And the c***s are gonna be allowed to walk back into the SPL debt free with 2 ten point deductions?
  7. American view of he current rangers scandal stolen from another forum. http:\\bleacherreport.com\articles\1...c ottish-soccer Imagine if you will an athlete. Let’s say he’s a 100m runner, and he has dominated the field for 10 years. He’s so successful, so popular, so charismatic,thatmany people considerthefuture of theevent itself depends on his continued participation, and success in, competition. He brings millions of dollars into the sport in sponsorship and television deals every year, and if he was to retire, no one would be interested in attending track meets or watching them on television any more. Now this athlete has been at the top of his game for many years, but time is catching up with him. It emerges that he has recently been using a new type of performance enhancing drug, and this discovery throws up the revelation that actually, he has been using steroids for his whole career. What should happen to our now disgraced hero? Should he be stripped of every Olympic and World gold medal he has won while using performance enhancing drugs? Should his personal records be removed from their placing in theworld records? Should he be banned from all competition for at least the minimum period prescribed in the rules? Or should he be forgiven and excused it all as a simple matter of expediency? We can’t have the money-tap for the sport turned off, after all. Can we? What’s more, years of steroid abuse have caused serious physical deterioration in our athlete, and he may have to retire from the sport. Should the sport pay for his medical treatment to allow him to continue? Consider then the curious case of Rangers Football Club. The most successful club in Scotland, they have won the Scottish title 54 times and claim over 100 first-class honors in their history. They attract the second-highest attendances in the SPL and their fan base probably provide the majority of the viewing public for SPL matches televised on Sky Sports and ESPN. Despite this, Rangers is in trouble. Since the club was taken over by Craig Whyte in May 2011, they have not remitted any of the taxes due to Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) in Pay as You Earn (PAYE) tax and National Insurance Contributions (NIC). Under previous owner Sir David Murray, the club operated an Employee Benefit Trust (EBT) scheme from 2000 to 2010. This is a scheme whereby employees are paid (and taxed on) a very small percentage of their wages. The remainder is paid into a trust, which then gives “loans,” to the employee, which are non-taxable and never repaid. This is perfectly legal, but the key word is “trust.” The employee must “trust” the employer to ensure they are paid, “loans,” from the trust.Contractual payments absolutely cannot be made through the EBT. Evidence has emerged in the public domain which suggests that Rangers players were assured in writing that they would be paid from an EBT, and that they would never have to repay the money. HMRC maintain that the payments made to Rangers players in this period were contractual in nature, and therefore taxable. They have presented Rangers with a bill for £24m in unpaid taxes, and £12m in interest. Should the First Tier Tax tribunal find in their favour, a further penalty will be imposed, which could see the final bill reach as much as £75m. Since at least 1999, when a similar tax dodge was operated (Rangers admitthisand havecommitted to paying £2.8m to HMRC), Rangers has therefore used non-payment and evasion of tax to give the club a financial and sporting advantageoverevery otherclub. That’s not all. As Rangers has made payments to players which were not included in their contracts, the players involved were not correctly registered with the national association, and so ineligible. The accepted sanction for fielding of ineligible playersin soccerisforthematch to be recorded as a 0-3 defeat. Since 1999, Rangers has won the Scottish Premier League seven times, whilst fielding ineligible players whom they could not have afforded to pay if they were not avoiding making tax payments on their wages. To the outsider, it seems simple. Rangers must be stripped of all honours won during their financial “doping” years. It goes beyond even this. The President of the Scottish Football Association is Campbell Ogilvie. He has held influential positions with the SFA and SPL over a period of many years, going back to the 1990’s. At which time, Campbell Ogilvie was the Secretary of Rangers FC. Indeed, Campbell Ogilvie was himself paid via an EBT during his time at Rangers.Both theSFA and SPL have launched investigations into Rangers’ conduct in the years since 1998, but there is no confidence within the Scottish soccer community that they will take any serious steps to dealwith Rangers’ wrongdoing. One thing Rangers cannot escape though, is financial reality. It finally caught up with them on 14th February when the club was placed into administration. This is a UK legal term which basically means thata court-appointed team take over the running of the company. It prevents creditors from taking legal action against it, and the administrator must take steps to make the company profitableto ensurecreditorsarepaid. The administrators may seek to arrangea CompanyVoluntaryAgreement (CVA)with thecreditors. This requires the agreement of 76 percent of the creditors by value. It means that all creditors would accept a pennies-to-the-pound deal. Once they are paid, for example, 30p for every pound owed, the company can exit administration and emerge debt-free. If the creditors do not agree a CVA and the company cannot pay them in full, it is then liquidated. All assets are sold off and the proceeds distributed evenly amongst the creditors.Asthemajority of Rangers’ debt is owed to HMRC, the chancesof a CVAareunlikely.It isthepolicy of HMRCto reject CVA’s. The most likely outcome for Rangers FC is that they will soon be liquidated. The club will cease to exist. Here’s where it gets interesting. The SPL yesterday published a set of proposed changes to their Financial Fair Play policy. Amongst them, is a proposal to allow a club, on liquidation, being allowed to transfer their, “share,” or membership of the SPL, to a new company. This would mean that should Rangers be liquidated, their directors, or anyone else who wants to buy their stadium, training ground and players, can do so and be given Rangers’ place in the SPL. Effectively, this would mean a debt-free company, called Rangers FC, playing in blue shirts at Ibrox Stadium next season, while HMRC and other creditors (Rangers are in debt to possibly as much as £134m) are left with nothing. One of those creditors is Heart of Midlothian FC, from whom Rangers signed full-back Lee Wallace. They still owe £800,000, which is unlikely ever to be paid. Another is Rapid Vienna, from whom Rangers purchased Nikica Jelavic, whose goals were instrumental in their winning of the SPL last season. Rapid are still owed £1m, and despite Rangers selling him to Everton FC for £5m in January, Rapid are unlikely to ever see their money. Effectively, the SPL propose to issue a cheats’ charter,and coincidentallyI am sure,just as it looks like Rangers are to be liquidated. Nothing like this happened just four years ago when Gretna FC were liquidated. Rangers FC is in serious danger of being liquidated because they have lived beyond their means for far too long, in the process distorting the market in Scotland. It has abused the tax system to give itself an unfair sporting advantage over the rest of the clubs in the SPL. It has bought players from other clubs it could not afford to pay for and had no intention of ever paying for. And the Scottish sporting establishment, governing bodies and media, want everything possible to be done to facilitate Rangers, who have destroyed the sporting integrity of the Scottish game, escaping the consequences of their self-inflicted troubles. To return to our doped up and physically damaged by self-inflicted wounds athlete, it appears that in Scotland at least, all the stops WOULD be pulled to ensure his continued participation in the sport. We can’t allow the money-tap to be turned off, after all. Can we?
  8. http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2012/mar/17/rangers-bids-administrator Thats more than Whyte paid for them.
  9. Wouldn't the team finishing last vote against them too, if they vote them back them they are going down, vote no and they stay up.
  10. Chocolate Orange! Why TF would you want chocolate that tastes of oranges? If i wanted to taste oranges i'd buy an orange, but orange flavoured chocolate. c'mon. If i buy or get given chocolate i want it to taste of chocolate, not fuckin oranges. Don't get me wrong, i like an orange filling or centre, but orange flavoured chocolate, f**k off.
  11. Pixies this Sunday SECC, Bring it on.
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