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The Takeover Thread - Duchatelet Finally Sells (Jan 2020)

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Comments

  • _MrDick said:

    If the takeover happens this side of Xmas, then the Aussies can have the RL World Cup and Ashes thrown in as part of the Deal

    Just the rugby please
  • RedChaser said:

    When this nightmare is all over @skywalker please stay on this forum as a poster, your input over the last 4 turbulent years has been most appreciated and I'm making you an honorary Addick and head of our Belgian supporters club.

    Yours RC Darth :wink:
    The nightmare begins when they go Elfsborg will be back
  • Why was my comment pulled?

    Police state!!

    ...( Can't I at least keep the lols?)

    I think you get to keep the lols but post it again as I missed it first time round :wink:
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  • Rothko said:

    Roland Duchâtelet, the controversial owner of Charlton Athletic, has put the club up for sale and admitted that he should not have invested in football.

    The Belgian bought Charlton nearly four years ago when they were in the Championship but has faced strong protests from supporters in recent seasons over the way that he has run the club, who are now in League One.

    CARD (Coalition Against Roland Duchâtelet), a supporters’ group, have put pressure on him to either invest or sell his stake in the club. Stunts have included a mock funeral being held before kick-off, beach balls being thrown on the pitch and a pitch invasion.

    Until now, Duchâtelet,71, had been adamant that he would not sell Charlton.

    “I have not decided anything, I am open to possible offers, I will take the time to think, but contrary to popular belief I have not made any money from football, this rarely happens for investors, those who say otherwise are wrong,” Duchâtelet said.


    Duchâtelet has controlled clubs in Germany, Spain and Hungary. He was forced to sell Standard Liège, the Belgian club, in 2015 when repeated fan protests turned aggressive. There were clashes with police near the stadium, a group of fans broke into Duchâtelet’s office and others stormed an event for sponsors, who had to ask the media to help them to safety.

    Liège fans had similar grievances to Charlton’s, including the lack of reinvestment from the sale of their best players, such as Axel Witsel, and the sacking of favoured managers.

    Duchâtelet sold Saint-Trond, the Belgian club, last month.

    “It’s not that I’m fed up, I have other activities and my age,” he said. “Actually, I wanted to leave football after the sale of the Standard Liège. Football is an exciting world, but very complex: there is a lot of underground influences, we decide a lot about emotions, we make and break your image on the basis of rumours, social networks create real background slides that are difficult to answer.

    “It was an interesting experience and I learned a lot about how social media have an impact on the psychology of masses and how they can influence decisions which affect many people.”

    Ok Alan Turing...thanks for your deep insight.
  • What was it Churchill said about The End of the beginning, or the beginning of the end?

    November 10th 1942:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pdRH5wzCQQw
  • I was at the Valley today and saw no Australians and no sign of a takeover.

    One manager said they had asked a member of the SMT and they had said there is nothing happening and there is no takeover.

    I think that is pretty definitive.

    There’s more than one manager!?
  • Duchatelet, Duchatelet, you've failed our club: Now go away.





  • The Times running it makes it a bit more authoritative.

    What I take from this is that he wants to retreat from his football interests, not entirely on grounds of expense but also due to his age.

    But we knew that anyway of course.

    Can a deal be done for the club that would be acceptable to him?
  • Well done admin
  • I reckon that would ensure a near full house at the Valley for the game against Portsmouth don’t you?
    Wont be room with the 15k Pompey that have bought tickets.
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  • edited December 2017

    Because up to that point they thought it was a real bird.
    Oh no, I thought it was real. The next thing you'll say is there's no Father Christmas.



    There is, or rather there was but he's now had gender reassignment and calls himself Easter Bunny.
  • Rothko said:

    Roland Duchâtelet, the controversial owner of Charlton Athletic, has put the club up for sale and admitted that he should not have invested in football.

    The Belgian bought Charlton nearly four years ago when they were in the Championship but has faced strong protests from supporters in recent seasons over the way that he has run the club, who are now in League One.

    CARD (Coalition Against Roland Duchâtelet), a supporters’ group, have put pressure on him to either invest or sell his stake in the club. Stunts have included a mock funeral being held before kick-off, beach balls being thrown on the pitch and a pitch invasion.

    Until now, Duchâtelet,71, had been adamant that he would not sell Charlton.

    “I have not decided anything, I am open to possible offers, I will take the time to think, but contrary to popular belief I have not made any money from football, this rarely happens for investors, those who say otherwise are wrong,” Duchâtelet said.


    Duchâtelet has controlled clubs in Germany, Spain and Hungary. He was forced to sell Standard Liège, the Belgian club, in 2015 when repeated fan protests turned aggressive. There were clashes with police near the stadium, a group of fans broke into Duchâtelet’s office and others stormed an event for sponsors, who had to ask the media to help them to safety.

    Liège fans had similar grievances to Charlton’s, including the lack of reinvestment from the sale of their best players, such as Axel Witsel, and the sacking of favoured managers.

    Duchâtelet sold Saint-Trond, the Belgian club, last month.

    “It’s not that I’m fed up, I have other activities and my age,” he said. “Actually, I wanted to leave football after the sale of the Standard Liège. Football is an exciting world, but very complex: there is a lot of underground influences, we decide a lot about emotions, we make and break your image on the basis of rumours, social networks create real background slides that are difficult to answer.

    “It was an interesting experience and I learned a lot about how social media have an impact on the psychology of masses and how they can influence decisions which affect many people.”

    It reads as he's still blaming others for his cock-ups.
  • Including one manager, appointed at a club then in the second tier of the English Football League, with no meaningful experience whatsoever of either playing or coaching professional football...

    Just the one?
  • I gave you a like but I do think you need to get out more.
    Creative mind mate, that's all.
  • clb74 said:

    I'm sorry but until the fans own the club I will always be weary.
    God knows what the next owners are like.

    I will have a word with him tomorrow morning
  • I’m planning to celebrate our impending takeover and welcome our new owners at the valley in fancy dress, bit concerned I’m getting constant pop ups on here of Wonder Woman.
This discussion has been closed.

Roland Out Forever!