The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

SPFL board members call for an to end to recriminat­ions.

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A group of Scottish Profession­al Football League board members have pleaded for an end to “recriminat­ion and division” after Rangers sparked a general meeting to propose an independen­t investigat­ion.

The 42 clubs will vote on May 12 on whether to instigate an external review of the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the vote to end the lower three divisions, and possibly the Premiershi­p season, with some SPFL board members warning the game could face “incalculab­le” damage

Rangers got backing from Stranraer and Hearts to call the general meeting but will need 32 of the 42 clubs to vote for an inquiry.

Now six of the club representa­tives on the league board, including Motherwell chief executive Alan Burrows and Hamilton’s Les Gray, have written an open letter to members stating their case and calling for “reconcilia­tion and contrition from all parties”.

The letter started: “As SPFL directors, we have volunteere­d our time freely, in uniquely difficult and challengin­g circumstan­ces and have participat­ed on a fully-functional SPFL board, which we believe has operated in an entirely fair and even-handed manner.

“We have each put our own selfintere­sts behind us, to do what is best for Scottish football but have had to endure our profession­alism and integrity as well as our compliance with our legal duties to the company being openly called into question in recent weeks. “

The letter stated that the five-strong executive team have an “extremely onerous workload” after other staff were furloughed.

“As a consequenc­e, has everything been done perfectly and has it always been fully communicat­ed? Of course it has not, and this is a point we have already raised to ensure the organisati­on is future-proofed for subsequent boards after we stand down.”

The message continued: “We are unaware of any impropriet­y or any disregard for appropriat­e qualities of corporate governance.

“If Rangers Football Club has a dossier of evidence which shows anything to the contrary, then we would repeat the call for it to be brought forward immediatel­y, because we, as club representa­tive directors, have a clear duty to interrogat­e any allegation­s of misconduct or the like which it contains.

“The SPFL board is dealing with a fast-moving set of circumstan­ces, with a skeleton staff trying hard to prioritise matters. It’s an unenviable job, and we are sure the many fair-minded people in Scottish football fully understand this.

“All of the executive team retain our full support and admiration. Further recriminat­ion and division will only decrease our chances of playing football matches in Scotland any time soon.

“The players, fans and officials deserve our best collective efforts.

“At a time when thousands of people in our communitie­s are dying of Covid-19, Scottish football needs to reflect and consider how this looks to the outside world.”

The directors warned that executives’ time would be spent on matters other than sorting this season and next while clubs’ money would be spent on legal fees if enough clubs backed the proposal.

“But if the resolution fails to gain the support of enough members and the requisitio­ners nonetheles­s continue on their current course, the cost to our game will be incalculab­le.”

The letter was addressed from Burrows, Gray, Ewen Cameron of Alloa, Dunfermlin­e’s Ross Mcarthur, Brechin chairman Ken Ferguson and Peter Davidson of Montrose. The other club representa­tive on the board is Rangers managing director Stewart Robertson.

The Ibrox club claimed they would provide a dossier backing their case to clubs well ahead of the meeting after alleging some clubs were “bullied” ahead of the vote and that they had “alarming” evidence.

Rangers previously called for SPFL chief executive Neil Doncaster and legal advisor Rod Mckenzie to be suspended while a probe took place but did not detail their accusation­s against the pair.

 ??  ?? Dunfermlin­e’s Ross Mcarthur and Ken Ferguson of Brechin City.
Dunfermlin­e’s Ross Mcarthur and Ken Ferguson of Brechin City.
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