The Football League Paper

ADAMS SO SAD AS BRENT STEPS DOWN

ICY BUSINESSMA­N DID PAY THE BILLS

- By Dan Barnes

DEPARTING chairman James Brent will be remembered as the man who got Plymouth Argyle back on its feet, according to Pilgrims boss Derek Adams.

Brent will step down as Argyle chairman at the end of October to be replaced by former director David Felwick, while assistant chairman Simon Hallett has now become the club’s majority shareholde­r.

That brings to an end a seven-year reign in charge for Brent, during which time he and Adams – whom he appointed from Ross County in 2015 – oversaw Argyle’s return to the third flight after consecutiv­e relegation­s had seen them tumble down the leagues.

And the Scot was eager to pay tribute to the impact Brent has had in his time at Home Park.

Adams said: “I have got great sadness to see that my chairman has decided to step down.

“He obviously brought me to the football club with the other directors and he has been extremely helpful. “He has been a strong chairman in that he has allowed me to get on with my job, and I have enjoyed that.

“He has been very supportive in the background and, with that, he has given me the responsibi­lity to do things that I see fit for the football club.

“We have had success and he hasn’t caused me any pressures in the background.

“A number of weeks ago, when he told me what was happening, I was disappoint­ed, and he was disappoint­ed it was going to happen.

“Himself, and others, pulled the football club out of administra­tion and have put them back on a sound footing.

“He’s going to be remembered as a chairman that helped the football club get back on its feet.”

THE truck driver was adamant. Unless Plymouth Argyle paid in cash, he would not unload his cargo of oil canisters. Peter Reid, the Pilgrims’ manager on that January morning in 2011, knew the club would not comply.

By that stage, staff hadn’t been paid for eight months. Many more had lost their jobs. Those who toiled on couldn’t even claim benefits as they were technicall­y employed.

“People can’t feed their kids,” said captain Carl Fletcher. “It’s even getting to the point where people are going to have to sell their houses.”

Invoices stacked up, ignored and unpaid. Piled alongside were a slew of winding-up orders as debts spiralled to nearly £13m. Devon’s biggest club were skint, dying and doomed to administra­tion.

Reid eventually dug into his own pocket to pay for the fuel, unwilling to let staff work in freezing offices. Later, he sold his 1986 FA Cup medal to help the club pay wages.

Kieran Maguire, a finance expert at Liverpool University, said this week that Financial Fair Play restrictio­ns and the lure of Premier League revenue is now tempting Championsh­ip clubs into a “two-year gamble”.

Yet as Plymouth’s demise reminds us, all-or-nothing punts are hardly novel. From absurd plans to build a 45,000-seater stadium in readiness for the 2018 World Cup to a wage bill that topped £8.5m, the Pilgrims threw the kitchen sink at reaching the top flight.

What followed – the sackings, the relegation­s, the shafting of local businesses – should act as a timely warning of what can happen if you miss.

And in the week that James Brent, the local businessma­n who rescued Plymouth from the knacker’s yard, steps down after seven years in charge, perhaps his critics will at least pause for thought.

Austerity

Not every supporter echoes the sentiments of club president Chris Webb, who this week described Brent as one of the most important figures in the club’s history.

Many accuse the property developer of failing to deliver promised infrastruc­ture, imposing unnecessar­y austerity and using the club to line his own pockets. He has, without question, made a tidy profit from his time at Home Park.

But that must be balanced against what he did deliver. Had the club’s administra­tors got their way back in 2011, Brent would have been ignored in favour of Bishop Internatio­nal, a consortium let by Kevin Heaney. The same Kevin Heaney who went bankrupt a year later, plunging his other club, Truro City, into dire straits. Another bid was reportedly backed by members of Mastpoint, the very board who’d overseen Plymouth’s descent into insolvency in the first place.

Even assuming Brent was in it for the money, would either have represente­d a better future for Argyle?

Or would it have been another round of boom-and-bust dream chasing, another helping of late wages, job losses and unpaid bills?

And it isn’t just the club who suffer. When Plymouth entered administra­tion in 2011, they agreed a CVA to pay their debts at a penny in the pound. That £12.8m write-off meant every creditor – from the pie-maker to the treasury to the taxpayer – was ripped off.

Reckless

Brent did pay the bills. He saved jobs, and created them. He ran the club with the icy detachment of a business, not the reckless abandon of a plaything. “I think the board has a very clear responsibi­lity to do the right thing, rather than the popular thing,” he once said. Along the way, he restored Plymouth to profitabil­ity and funded promotion from League Two. And never has there been any hint of a return to the days when kids went hungry and a manager handed out tenners to belligeren­t truck drivers. Is Brent a selfless white knight? No. He is a businessma­n with one eye on his pension pot. But he is a hell of a lot better than the feckless chancers who

 ??  ?? SALUTE: Derek Adams
SALUTE: Derek Adams
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