The Scotsman

Goals lays it on the line with extent of accounts blunder

● Revelation came as East Kilbride firm saw shares delisted from stock exchange

- @goals_soccer businessde­sk@scotsman.com

quantity of material correcting accounting entries” for the past three years. “This workstream requires significan­t resource and time due to the nature, quantum and time period covered by the accounting issues identified,” Goals noted.

The company added that there had been no further discussion­s with HMRC to find a resolution.

Shares in Goals had initially been suspended in March after the accounting scandal, which involved VAT not being paid on bookings, was first uncovered.

The biggest single shareholde­r, with a holding of 19 per cent, had been Mike Ashley’s Sports Direct, with furious executives publicly attacking the Goals board and accusing them of a cover-up, which is denied. Sports Direct also recently made a £4m bid for the remaining shares, although bosses at Goals pointed out that the 5p-ashare bid was “preliminar­y and highly caveated”.

The bid came after Goals, which runs about 50 sites in the UK and the US employing hundreds of staff, confirmed that its former chief executive, Keith Rogers, and finance chief, Bill Gow, were under investigat­ion over historic financial irregulari­ties.

Rogers and Gow’s behaviour while at Goals is part of an investigat­ion and reports suggest the Financial Conduct Authority is also looking into the issue.

According to reports, forensic accountant­s at BDO allege that Gow emailed Rogers asking him to “work your usual magic” to create fake invoices.

Allegation­s were also made that Gow deleted old emails to “purge” records and the pair were manipulati­ng numbers to avoid VAT payments and breaching banking rules with the company’s lender, Bank of Scotland.

The current board said it hopes trading in shares could continue by other means.

Goals said: “In due course, and if appropriat­e, the directors will seek to establish an off-market trading facility which match trades in the ordinary shares between willing buyers and willing sellers.”

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