The Scottish Mail on Sunday

We are doing what we feel is right... we won’t give up fight for fair governance

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It’s been a tumultuous few weeks in Scottish football. After everything that’s happened — sitting here now — what are your overriding thoughts and emotions?

I am feeling a range of emotions. Pride. Sadness. Frustratio­n.

Pride because I’m experienci­ng something very rare and special and that’s being the chairman of Rangers Football Club.

Sadness because I’m just a football fan, I’ve been around Scottish football as a fan, sponsor, shareholde­r and investor for over 50 years and it’s really disappoint­ing to see what’s being allowed to happen.

Frustratio­n because I unequivoca­lly feel what we are doing is right and important for the health of the game and all the clubs in Scotland.

It’s disappoint­ing to have your motivation­s questioned and that we seem to be debating the extent of the problems rather than acknowledg­ing the clear corporate governance issues that will need addressed for the game to thrive in Scotland.

On Friday, you were accused by the SPFL of making a very serious allegation and threat to act in a particular way towards Neil Doncaster that was defamatory. Do you stand by this allegation and, if so, why was the substance of it not contained in Rangers’ dossier?

I started my own business in 1971 and it’s the first time I can recall having been accused of making a threat. It’s offensive, crass and downright wrong. Anyone who knows me will know it’s a fabricatio­n.

I have made no secret of the fact that I tried to raise some serious concerns with Neil Doncaster and was given short shrift.

Following that, it’s well documented there were repeated demands for us to withdraw our concerns by Rod McKenzie. I find that odd.

Subsequent­ly, both Murdoch MacLennan and Neil Doncaster have stated anyone with concerns should raise them with Mr MacLennan.

Why didn’t Neil Doncaster suggest that when I called him? Why did Neil Doncaster follow a completely different route to the one he has publicly suggested was the appropriat­e one? Our report prepared for the other clubs provides clarity on a number of issues that should be a concern for all stakeholde­rs.

I also find it extremely odd that Murdoch MacLennan wrote to me the next day regarding my statement on the Rangers website and raised the fact I had made allegation­s in that and then referenced the call to Neil Doncaster.

It’s clear from his letter that his response is in relation to Rangers releasing a statement, rather than my attempts to raise concerns with Neil Doncaster.

He didn’t mention a threat. It’s strange and perhaps convenient that it gets thrown into the mix weeks later. It’s categorica­lly untrue.

I also replied to the SPFL chairman and referenced the previous complaint the club had made about comments attributed to him by

Private Eye magazine. I asked for clarity on whether he made those comments or not.

No assurances were forthcomin­g, which I find odd given the allegation has dogged him since he arrived at the SPFL.

If the comments were made, it would certainly give cause for concern about his ability to treat any complaint we took to him. Perhaps this is a question he could answer the next time he sits down with himself for a Q&A.

In the club’s initial statement on April 11, Rangers say that Doncaster refused to discuss the issue of evidence with you. How did he do this and did it heighten Rangers’ suspicions that there could be foul play on behalf of the chief executive and his legal team?

He simply said he couldn’t discuss it. Whilst I’ve been in business for over 50 years, 48 running my own company, I am used to a culture where, if you raise serious concerns with a figure in a position of authority, they tend to take it seriously.

They want to hear you out and get to the bottom of it. It’s as if, throughout all of this, they just wanted it to go away.

It’s been reported that when senior officials of other clubs raised concerns about the conduct and behaviour of others, including a director of the SPFL, that Neil Doncaster responded by asking if the individual­s who made the comments were acting in a club or SPFL capacity at the time. If true, that stuns me.

When a director of the SPFL makes comments relating to how funds from the SPFL will be shared, his position as an SPFL director is the very reason why these comments become a threat. Surely the chief executive of a company where one of its directors is making such threats would want to investigat­e. Indeed, he’s obliged to investigat­e appropriat­ely. However, this disinteres­t does resonate entirely with the lack of interest my complaint seemed to generate.

Of course, their main interest was in trying to ensure I didn’t repeat any of these concerns I raised. Again, there was no suggestion of referring the issue to the chairman which, based on subsequent comment, Mr Doncaster now believes is the appropriat­e process.

The SPFL directors’ letter to member clubs suggested your claim regarding the non-disclosure of potential £10million liabilitie­s is based on a complete misunderst­anding on your part. How do you respond?

There’s no misunderst­anding on our part and we have received the opinion of legal counsel which confirms our understand­ing is correct.

The SPFL directors are being patronisin­g to the 42 member clubs if they think they are incapable of reading and understand­ing the documents provided by us, in particular Appendix 1, which includes the SPFL board paper and Appendix 3, which includes the briefing note to members.

The central point which the SPFL directors are deliberate­ly avoiding is that the briefing paper to clubs specifical­ly referred to ‘significan­t commercial risks’ and refund claims from broadcaste­rs in the section relating to ‘voiding the season’.

However, no mention of these risks and refunds in relation to the SPFL proposal was contained in the briefing paper.

The argument made in the SPFL directors’ letter that no decision had yet been taken to bring an end to the competitio­n applies equally to ‘voiding the season’ and calling the season on a ‘points-per-game basis’.

Yet they mentioned the liabilitie­s as arising only in relation to the option they were rejecting and omitted it completely in the option they were proposing. This is serious misreprese­ntation.

The SPFL has said your managing director, Stewart Robertson, has failed to meet his duties, in this regard through ‘gross breaches of confidenti­ality’. How do you respond to this accusation and slight on Stewart’s character?

I find this intriguing and insulting. Stewart made his concerns known at the SPFL board level, repeatedly, and this will have been minuted.

We, as a club, followed a legitimate process of attempting to open dialogue with the chief executive.

Stewart has a duty to the shareholde­rs, i.e. the 42 member clubs, which he felt was compromise­d by the SPFL executives’ failure to deal with his concerns.

Indeed, I think Neil Doncaster suggested in an interview we should make our evidence public.

We had no intention of making it public as we recognised it was an issue for the member clubs. It took 90 minutes for the SPFL to jettison that confidenti­ality and make matters public. Stewart has been first-class throughout this.

He’s made significan­t personal sacrifice and taken a lot of flak for doing what he, and many others, believe is the right thing to do.

Is Robertson’s position on the SPFL board now untenable and if he’s removed would the club’s influence on SPFL decisions be diminished and not in keeping with its standing in Scottish football?

Why would it be? He’s raised genuine concerns about corporate governance. We’ve then shared our concerns with experience­d counsel with significan­t knowledge in this particular area.

He’s confirmed many of our views and pointed out other failings which go beyond our initial concerns.

We then spent a significan­t amount of time preparing a detailed document providing the facts of the situation.

Throughout all of this, we have continued to take legal advice and ensure we do things in a proper manner. Several pieces of legal opinion, both ours and some instructed by others, are referred to in the final report.

If you take a view of all the legal advice given to various parties, it shows that there is detail that the members should have been made aware of and were not privy to.

Several clubs have indicated they would consider voting for your proposal but are concerned about the cost of an independen­t investigat­ion. Would you offer to cover the costs of any investigat­ion?

Cost should never be a barrier to proper governance. If our resolution is passed on Tuesday, we’ll be willing to fund the costs of an independen­t investigat­ion covering the scope outlined in our resolution.

Have you been encouraged by the number of clubs who have contacted Rangers to offer their support following the submission of your dossier?

Yes. There’s an apparent culture

of fear as we can see from the number of clubs that privately seem to have an issue with some of the things we have raised and those prepared to speak publicly.

I understand that — look at the way we have been treated. I would also highlight the treatment of Ann Budge and Dave Cormack here — individual­s who have invested significan­t sums into their clubs and Scottish football as a result. Ann Budge raised the subject of loans and advances and was criticised by Neil Doncaster and the SPFL, who claimed she was mistaken.

He then made a great deal about the difference between an advance and a loan and how the SPFL lost money when they loaned money to Gretna. Then you read a quote from the Gretna administra­tor saying that they didn’t receive a loan and got an advance only. The Gretna accounts for administra­tion back this up, as do the SPFL accounts incidental­ly, so there are a number of contradict­ions.

Then you have the SPFL questionin­g the word of Dave

Cormack at Aberdeen. They’ve contradict­ed a statement he made in print on the Aberdeen website and on Radio Scotland.

So in the space of a few weeks you’ve had the SPFL publicly criticise ourselves, Ann and Dave.

What have Ann and Dave done? They’ve invested in their teams and put much needed cash in to Scottish football. What kind of message are we sending to potential investors in Scottish football?

The SPFL responded selectivel­y to the allegation­s in it but didn’t address two of them — that Doncaster failed to report allegation­s of bullying between clubs to the board and that reconstruc­tion was a red herring as it would require renegotiat­ion of the new TV deal with Sky. Have Rangers received responses to those allegation­s yet?

Every response they’ve given has been selective and patronisin­g whilst attempting to cloud issues with semantics. Their responses raise more questions than answers.

Neil Doncaster states one thing publicly but acts differentl­y. He didn’t want to help me raise serious concerns. Only he can answer what he did with the reports he received from other clubs on bullying.

It’s interestin­g that when he was asked on Radio Scotland, he gave a very narrow answer, distorting the question to allegation­s of bullying against SPFL staff when that wasn’t the question.

It’s fairly clear he answers what he wants to and in a way that confuses the issue. On the subject of reconstruc­tion, you have to ask: why were the executive happy to allow 15 club representa­tives to waste considerab­le amounts of their own time and energy on reconstruc­tion talks that were never going to get off the ground?

It was disingenuo­us not to have that declaratio­n early on.

It’s ironic that the SPFL talk about our EGM, properly constitute­d within the rules, wasting time and money, yet at the same time they are happy to send leaders of clubs on a wild goose chase on something the SPFL knew faced significan­tly more challenges than they acknowledg­ed. They are there to serve the member clubs, a fact that often goes overlooked.

Have you harboured any concerns over the role of Rod McKenzie at the heart of the SPFL for many years and, if so, why?

I go into these types of situations with an open mind. However, the behaviour in regards to the resolution we proposed was peculiar. If Mr McKenzie applied the same determinat­ion to that as he did in trying to get me to be quiet, then the member clubs’ money could have been distribute­d to them in hours.

He’s clearly a very sharp individual, I refuse to believe it was beyond him to come up with another mechanism to support the clubs. It’s curious the SPFL seem to have been so hellbent on that single solution.

Do you regret calling for the suspension of Doncaster and McKenzie or do you stand by what you said?

I regret believing that the SPFL would behave in the appropriat­e manner and in line with any other company in regards to serious misconduct. If there was a similar suggestion in any other industry, the individual­s involved would typically be suspended pending an investigat­ion.

Going back to my point on the criticism of Ann Budge and Dave Cormack. Can you imagine the chief executive of a large PLC criticisin­g a number of the high-profile shareholde­rs of that business?

In hindsight, should the club have released the evidence into the public domain sooner, to avoid any hyping up of the dossier?

We didn’t hype up our evidence, others did. It was in their interests to hype it up in order to discredit it.

It’s telling that people with a legal background and those with experience in governance and regulated industries view the issues raised more seriously than others are prepared to.

There are many serious areas to be investigat­ed that we’ve highlighte­d. We’ve also faced criticism over the time involved to release it.

We have spent time to ensure it’s fair and balanced, doesn’t overstep the mark and refers to what has gone wrong from a legal point of view.

Again, take a large PLC. If a highprofil­e shareholde­r raised concerns like we have, do you think it would be ignored? Why are people so keen to avoid a look behind the detail?

If we are right, which we believe we are, then the damage that could continue to be done to Scottish football will be profound.

Do you believe the club has left itself open to both SPFL sanctions and possible legal action from Doncaster and McKenzie for libel or defamation?

We cannot control what other individual­s do. We are confident in our position. We have not defamed or libelled anyone. If they take action I’m sure, given their concerns for the member clubs’ money, they’ll fund the action as individual­s.

Is it no surprise that league reconstruc­tion talks collapsed on Friday? Do you think clubs were sold a false promise by the SPFL and could it alter their thinking ahead of Tuesday’s EGM vote, in Rangers’ favour?

They were always going to fail. It was a distractio­n that was used to encourage support but would have failed regardless. Clubs should have been told of the challenges reconstruc­tion faced.

We keep hearing the SPFL is the clubs, why the obsession with keeping informatio­n from them? Rangers were and remain open to discussion­s about reconstruc­tion and acknowledg­e the growing mood for change across Scottish football.

Some people see this whole process as Rangers not being prepared to concede the title to Celtic to save face with their own fans. What would you say to that?

This is why we’ve always said the money issue should have been separated from the league situation. The money issue was critical for a number of clubs, it made it emotive.

We have no issue with what the member clubs decide. Indeed, that’s what should happen in a members’ organisati­on. However, our issue is the SPFL’s failure to inform them fully. Instead they gave informatio­n which was misleading and omitted material informatio­n. This is only about what’s right and proper in terms of due process, nothing else.

It’s about ensuring that Scottish football has proper corporate governance and leadership that acts on behalf of all member clubs.

Finally, how do you think Rangers have come out of this whole episode and will you have any hesitation in the future about taking a similar course of action if you feel it’s required?

This is far from finished. Rangers will have no hesitation in the future in shining a light on poor corporate governance. I would like to think the SPFL might recognise its failings and accept that an independen­t investigat­ion is necessary. It’s not too late for them to do so consensual­ly and start to build a better future for Scottish football.

 ??  ?? FOUR weeks ago, Rangers interim chairman Douglas Park called for SPFL chief executive Neil Doncaster and lawyer Rod McKenzie to be suspended and for an independen­t investigat­ion into the ballot which called an end to the Scottish league season.
Speaking for the first time since setting that ball rolling and on the eve of a critical 48 hours for his campaign, Park yesterday addressed the fall-out from the dramatic events that have followed since April 11.
Park agreed to field questions from several Sunday newspaper football writers, including Sportsmail’s FRASER MACKIE, on the most recent developmen­ts in the ongoing wrangle.
FOUR weeks ago, Rangers interim chairman Douglas Park called for SPFL chief executive Neil Doncaster and lawyer Rod McKenzie to be suspended and for an independen­t investigat­ion into the ballot which called an end to the Scottish league season. Speaking for the first time since setting that ball rolling and on the eve of a critical 48 hours for his campaign, Park yesterday addressed the fall-out from the dramatic events that have followed since April 11. Park agreed to field questions from several Sunday newspaper football writers, including Sportsmail’s FRASER MACKIE, on the most recent developmen­ts in the ongoing wrangle.
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 ??  ?? STANDING THEIR GROUND: (left to right) Park, Doncaster, Robertson and MacLennan
STANDING THEIR GROUND: (left to right) Park, Doncaster, Robertson and MacLennan

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