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cooperblade

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http://www.thesundaily.com/article.cfm?id=59467


Rubber handle for Blades?
The proposed second major investment by a Malaysian in a British football club has been dogged by managerial changes and a court case, but is still on. theSun's BOB HOLMES has followed the saga from Bukit Tunku to Sheffield



IT seems a long time ago now, that expectant summer day back in August. It was the first home game of the season when anything seemed possible – promotion to the Promised Land of the Premier League, even restoring credibility.

If the weather was not especially summery, there was a warm glow coming from the directors’ box. Providing much of it was a “mystery foreign investor”.

After a good lunch, Datuk Vinod Balachandra Sekhar (pix)took his seat next to Sheffield United chairman Kevin McCabe.

Vinod was to put up to £5 million (RM25 million) via his family trust into the club – the second major stake in a Championship outfit by a Malaysian (following Tan Sri Vincent Tan’s in Cardiff City) inside a year.

An agreement had already been signed on a napkin in a Sid’s pub in Kuala Lumpur two weeks earlier. United chief executive Trevor Birch was keeping this not-so-hard copy and promised to frame it once the deal had been sealed. The framers are still waiting.

United went 3-0 down after 22 minutes. At the time, it was regarded as a blip – they were playing rich and fancied Queen’s Park Rangers – but the fans were blaming manager Kevin Blackwell.

So was McCabe who sacked him minutes after the final whistle. But it was not a blip, more the shape of things to come. Because things would get bad and things would get worse.

Blackwell was accused of losing the dressing room but since then the Blades, as they are universally known, have lost the plot. To lose one manager might be regarded as a misfortune, to lose three in half a season ... ?

Blackwell’s assistant Gary Speed was swiftly installed as his replacement but after an unconvincing tenure, couldn’t resist when his native Wales came calling. An in-house appointment aimed at continuity produced anything but.

Next-in-line John Carver held the reins on a temporary basis but by the time Micky Adams was brought in from Port Vale at the end of the year, the Blades were not looking at the Premiership but at League One. They were not the only half of this Anglo-Malaysian alliance faced with going down.

In September, Vinod was accused of failing to comply with provisions in the Bankruptcy Act by becoming a director of 25 companies and leaving the country without permission.

Malaysia’s Director-General of Insolvency wanted to jail him. The Blades board could have laughed off their prospective investor there and then. Fit and proper person?

A Google search does not just set alarm bells ringing, it could send the fire brigade and a fleet of ambulances. Vinod says it is all malicious nonsense and if you search thoroughly you find more positives than negatives. This newspaper did.

Amid the controversies, we found huge donations to charities and prestigious awards. They include being the first Asian to win the Global Green award and inaugural Corporate Leader of the Year (2008).



He has addressed the World Economic Forum which named him as one of 40 “New Asian Leaders” in 2003. None other than Bill Clinton (pix) came to Malaysia in 2008 and told his audience: “You should be proud of this man.”

The audience has yet to make up its mind. Whilst admitting: “I took a massive hit” in the Asian crash of 1997, Vinod has bounced back.

“I had overseas investors who allowed me to rebuild and pay off my debts.” And he has always maintained that the bankruptcy papers were never served and the signatures were forged.

But in a difficult end to 2010, the prosecutor’s affidavits seemed to alternate with the changing of Blades’ managers. The napkin was not being framed but Vinod claimed he was.

It was not meant to be like this when these improbable suitors first met over a beer in KL’s leafiest suburb. McCabe and Birch had come to Malaysia in search of investment.

“We were looking for potential investors in the Middle East and Far East and Vinod’s name popped up,” said Birch.

Earlier he had told a fans’ meeting in Sheffield: “Football is as popular as it’s ever been … if you can’t find an investor now, then you probably never will.” Vinod was looking for greater branding for his Green Rubber company.

No dating agency could have made a match as unlikely as this. At first glance, it is doubtful if a single compatibility box would have been ticked.

One is British steel, the other Malaysian rubber. Sheffield United are on the wrong side of the tracks in an industrial city; Vinod lives in Bukit Tunku and keeps a pad in London’s Mayfair; the Blades are blue collar; Vinod mixes with blue bloods.

In short, they make Manchester United and the Glazers look like Anthony and Cleopatra.

That’s the kind of couple Vinod would have around for dinner if they were still available. Immensely likeable, this family man has the knack of attracting A-listers.

His “A” team would be skippered by Clinton, include Bollywood babe Preity Zinta, King Abdullah of Jordan with Bruce Willis as the hard man. Paris Hilton would provide a bit of flair on the wing and Mel Gibson and Wyclef Jean could be twin strikers. Nelson Mandela and Mikhail Gorbachev would be the wise pair of old heads at the back. Too good to be true?

He would be ridiculed if it wasn’t. This is not a fantasy team – he has met them all and his wife and children have met many. Several have stayed with the family and only two weeks ago, this newspaper interviewed Oscar-nominated director Sekhar Kapur at his house.

He does not drop names, he plants them firmly in the ground with a documented story and photographs, some of which this paper has seen. It all makes Vinod’s London driver a little more believable when he says: “He gets his cigars from Castro."

It was a different kind of smoke that McCabe, 62, inhaled growing up in a two-up and two-down terraced house a free-kick away from the Bramall Lane ground. It was either the “rotten eggs” emissions of steel foundries or the soot of iron smelters – depending on which way the wind was blowing.

He and Vinod make the oddest of couples. McCabe is a self-made man, Vinod, 43, is the son of a famous father, Tan Sri BC Sekhar, known as Malaysia’s Mr Natural Rubber.

McCabe built a property empire; Vinod, according to his critics, builds castles in the air.
Scottish newspapers have claimed he had not delivered on a £8 million (RM40 million) promise to help build a medical and sciences block for St Andrews University.

He says: “I have already given them £5 million (RM25 million) in shares in Green Rubber and will continue to make payments. And within 24 hours of those stories coming out, the university made a statement in support of me.” It is a recurring theme.

Bruce Willis had threatened to sue over a RM3.1 million (RM15.5 million) investment and Tunku Imran Tunku Ja’far is quoted as saying of their association “enough is enough”.

Vinod acknowledges mistakes but has settled all his personal debts – and many misunderstandings. Willis retracted his suit within 48 hours and is still a shareholder of Green Rubber. So is Tunku Imran – and still a friend.

And there is an admirably philanthropic side to Vinod’s businesses – recycled rubber, development of a form of microwave radiation that inhibits the growth of HIV cells in the body and software to help the poor pay bills more cheaply by handphone.

He also wants to help Malaysian football by setting up youth development through the Blades deal.

Despite the colourful past, it was McCabe and Birch that found Vinod, not the other way round.

The Blades have still not recovered from the Carlos Tevez affair that saw them relegated in 2007.

“That cost us £200 million,” McCabe said. “It couldn’t have come at a worse time as we missed out on the increased television money.”

All United received was a grudging out-of-court payment from West Ham for around £20 million (RM100 million). So what was it about the club that set Vinod’s pulse racing?

“It was the global nature of the enterprise,” he says, “that will give me the exposure for (his pet brainchild) Green Rubber. The club’s links with Chengdu Blades in China, Ferencvaros in Hungary and Central Coast Mariners in Australia (McCabe owns a chunk of all three) are just what I’m looking for to promote Green Rubber on a global scale. Besides, I think Sheffield United will be in the Premier League very soon.” That was in August.

As the Blades have fallen down the ladder, Vinod has “slipped” with them.

In the 2008 Forbes Magazine rankings, he was listed as Malaysia’s 16th richest man and a billionaire. In 2010, he was not in the top 40. He has an answer for that too.

“That’s because I’ve given 60% of my wealth to the foundation (the Petra Trust),” he explains. But the size of the proposed investment has also been scaled down.

He’s now talking of a £1.5 million (RM7.5 million) sponsorship with £500,000 (RM2.5 million) before the start of next season and the rest over three years. So the deal is still on. When asked if it is still going ahead, Birch told me: “Our view is if it does, great; if not move on.”

Birch agreed that “we did a very good job selling each other” and “hit it off straightaway. We were looking for people of some magnitude and believe we’ve found one. Kevin is positioning himself to step aside one day and wants a partner who can shoulder some of the financial pressure.”

At the time, all they thought they needed for promotion was a couple of “judicious signings” which Vinod’s investment could have provided.

Judging by the welcome he received in Sheffield, they find him more than just a man they can do business with. Seldom without a glass in his hand or cigar in his mouth, he was instantly at home. Wherever he went, banter and back-slapping followed.

If United impressed him with their history and future plans, he certainly impressed them with his vision and vitality.

A mover and shaker indeed. And he was serious – I watched the QPR game sitting next to his banker whom he’d flown in from Dubai. The talk then was of shirt sponsorship, laying the perimeter of the pitch with recycled rubber and even Malaysianising the Blades’ anthem Greasy Chip Butty to Greasy Chicken Curry. He was even working on the lyrics.

That was then, this is now and rather different. McCabe has had enough and stepped down as chairman of the club although he still calls the shots as the plc chairman. The fans want the entire board to go. The Blades are odds on for the drop and one report spoke of “a negative atmosphere” in the ground.

Then, last month, came a couple of glimmers. The case against Vinod was thrown out – he was completely exonerated – and Sheffield United have pulled off two big wins. Now that Vinod has avoided going down, the question is: can the Blades?

“It doesn’t matter if they don’t,” Vinod insists as he prepares to announce a deal for Green Rubber with a major tyre company. “The trust is still going to invest. The club has great potential.”

So have a lot of his ideas. Delivering on them is now his greatest challenge.
 

This is just wonderful, wonderful stuff.

Absolutely hilarious. Well done Birchy.
 
didnt read it but i always thought an aprils fools joke was only valid up to midday
 
didnt read it but i always thought an aprils fools joke was only valid up to midday

It's actually quite interesting, the only thing that looks like an April Fool's is:

Malaysianising the Blades’ anthem Greasy Chip Butty to Greasy Chicken Curry.

Which is genius.
 
I wondered if it was an April Fool too but why would a Malaysian newspaper be interested in taking the piss out of Blades fans?
What about this article. Is it a wind up?

http://sun2surf.com/article.cfm?id=59468

I've always wondered to what extent our "mystery investor" influenced McCabe's decision to sack Blackwell.
According to that article he was "sounded out" despite having contributed precisely f*** all to United before or since!
Why didn't he ask me what I thought instead, I've put more into the club than Datuk Vinod Sekhar.

"ONE day he was making a superb presentation about the future of the club; the next he’s a statistic from its past. Only bomb disposal crews have riskier careers than football managers.

Kevin Blackwell (pix) had so impressed with his vision for Sheffield United that his audience broke into spontaneous applause. Less than 24 hours later, he was the first manager to be sacked this season. Your correspondent still feels bad about it and so, you suspect, does the chairman.

Blackwell had asked me to go to his office at noon on the Saturday – three hours before the first home game kicked off. I spent about 45 minutes there as he asked about Malaysia, about setting up academies and how his “Blades Way” blueprint might be received here.

We had a pleasant chat and he said we’d have a drink after the match. We never had that drink. I then went upstairs to see how “a prospective Malaysian investor” was being received in the rarified air of the boardroom. Datuk Vinod Sekhar was already looking like he belonged.

There was a buzz about the place, the sense that United – so cruelly relegated from the Premiership because of the Carlos Tevez affair three seasons ago – were on the way back. And that new investment would be coming in. Drinks were downed, lunch was served. In the bowels of the stadium, Blackwell was giving his final team talk.

Whatever he said this time, it didn’t work. United were being outplayed by a Queen’s Park Rangers managed – as fate would have it – by former Blades boss Neil Warnock who still has his supporters. There were chants of “Blackwell Out”. Feet shuffled in the directors’ box.

At halftime, chairman Kevin McCabe (pix) sounded out the board – and prospective new member. “He made me feel part of the club,” said Vinod. Something had to be done, McCabe felt, and the sooner the better. Unless there was a rousing second half fightback, he would sack Blackwell.

There was no fightback and the “Blackwell Out” chants grew in decibels. Long before the end, thousands were heading for the exits. After the mercy of the final whistle, McCabe looked at his directors. All nodded. There would be no stay of execution. He looked grim. He is not a sacking chairman.

As the deed was being done, I walked to the hotel next door where the fans were drinking in the bar unaware of what was happening. Most were demanding that Blackwell be sacked. I listened with a strange mixture of sadness and amusement and had to hold back from telling them their wish had been granted. It was a full hour before it came on Sky Sports as “Breaking News”. Then the rumour mill went into overdrive.

“That ‘Indonesian’ is a ruthless so and so,” said one fan. “He’s sacked the manager before even taking over.” Vinod enjoyed that when I told him later. “I’ve got blood on my hands,” he quipped. Others thought it might be “a condition of the ‘takeover’”.

Finally a reporter appeared on Sky to put them out of their misery. And there was no mention of Vinod, Malaysia, Indonesia or a non-existent takeover. We were joined by CEO Trevor Birch. He had trouble drinking his pint as his BlackBerry never stopped. During a brief lull of about 20 seconds, he took a sip and said: “That’s 16 agents in an hour that have contacted me.” I was sitting next to him but he kept his screen from my prying eyes.

McCabe and family joined us and we joked about the candidates for Blackwell’s job. The usual suspects were mentioned. Then someone said: “Maradona is available.” We chuckled. “So is Sven,” said another. That got the biggest laugh. But neither Birch nor McCabe was letting on. Only in their nightmares did they think they would have three more managers by the end of the year and be facing relegation.
 
This is just wonderful, wonderful stuff.

Absolutely hilarious. Well done Birchy.

Oh come on Mic, surely you can do better than that.

In many peoples minds you're seen as a negative twat always having a dig at the club, calling for every manager's head after 2 weeks that sort of thing, constantly banging on about Birch being useless, McCabe getting fat off our club. Obviously its not my opinion of you.

To me, you're the Roger Cook of S24su.com fighting for the truth, you showed this when you broke the story of Blades Realty being late with their accounts. You set the bar high for yourself with Martin Samuel style invesgitive journalism.

So come on, dig around a bit on this one, I'm sure you'd love to be the one to say "I told you he was a wrong un" when you find yet more groundbreaking information on Birchie's mate!

It begs just two questions though (if its true). As this guy was supposed to be at the QPR game in August, did McCabe hastily sack Blackwell (the man he backed through the summer) because he wanted to show off to his Malaysian Mate? Will this Malaysian fella be at the QPR game on Monday?

---------- Post added at 01:08 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:07 PM ----------

It's actually quite interesting, the only thing that looks like an April Fool's is:



Which is genius.

The did it with Chengdu!
 
Oh come on Mic, surely you can do better than that.

In many peoples minds you're seen as a negative twat always having a dig at the club, calling for every manager's head after 2 weeks that sort of thing, constantly banging on about Birch being useless, McCabe getting fat off our club. Obviously its not my opinion of you.

To me, you're the Roger Cook of S24su.com fighting for the truth, you showed this when you broke the story of Blades Realty being late with their accounts. You set the bar high for yourself with Martin Samuel style invesgitive journalism.

So come on, dig around a bit on this one, I'm sure you'd love to be the one to say "I told you he was a wrong un" when you find yet more groundbreaking information on Birchie's mate!

It begs just two questions though (if its true). As this guy was supposed to be at the QPR game in August, did McCabe hastily sack Blackwell (the man he backed through the summer) because he wanted to show off to his Malaysian Mate? Will this Malaysian fella be at the QPR game on Monday?

---------- Post added at 01:08 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:07 PM ----------



The did it with Chengdu!

Puzzling stuff again Swiss but very kind of you to see what others fail to see. Problem is there is so much to go at in that report I hardly know where to begin.

The digging has been done long ago hasn't it? we knew the bloke had an interesting history didn't we? Yes, I genuinely believe McCabe and Tricky thought we'd better get rid of Blackie to keep Malaysia on board. Thank God they did get rid.

I'm glad you've reminded me off Realty accounts because Jansky's posts explaining that McCabe had possibly a number of sensible reasons for the accounts being late rather than ridiculous losses will always be a favourite of mine.
 
Wasn't this the guy lined up before Christmas before Mr Birch parked it because of the guys suspect background?


Old News re-released, and lapped up by those who love to have a go at the club with minimal evidence.
 
Puzzling stuff again Swiss but very kind of you to see what others fail to see. Problem is there is so much to go at in that report I hardly know where to begin.

The digging has been done long ago hasn't it? we knew the bloke had an interesting history didn't we? Yes, I genuinely believe McCabe and Tricky thought we'd better get rid of Blackie to keep Malaysia on board. Thank God they did get rid.

I'm glad you've reminded me off Realty accounts because Jansky's posts explaining that McCabe had possibly a number of sensible reasons for the accounts being late rather than ridiculous losses will always be a favourite of mine.

Whats puzzling you Mic? Let it all out.

I'm sure a man of your calibre should have no problem putting together a comprehensive review of the geezer and the potential investment which Birchy and McCabe had lined up.

Thank God we got rid, yeah of course, we'd probably be just below mid table by now if we'd kept the same manager.

Aren't there some shreds in this which you could use to further beat Birch or McCabe with?

You going to rear your head and join for a beer in the Lion v Boro
 
Whats puzzling you Mic? Let it all out.

I'm sure a man of your calibre should have no problem putting together a comprehensive review of the geezer and the potential investment which Birchy and McCabe had lined up.

Thank God we got rid, yeah of course, we'd probably be just below mid table by now if we'd kept the same manager.

Aren't there some shreds in this which you could use to further beat Birch or McCabe with?

You going to rear your head and join for a beer in the Lion v Boro

Puzzling because I cannot tell if you are simply taking the piss or making sensible comments. As I said, plenty has been said about this bloke without me adding to it and also as I said I don't know where to begin in terms of lambasting McCabe and Birch for their part in all of this.

It took me about 10 seconds to find out that Realty accounts were late by the way.

Aye, Lion sounds good to me.
 
Puzzling because I cannot tell if you are simply taking the piss or making sensible comments. As I said, plenty has been said about this bloke without me adding to it and also as I said I don't know where to begin in terms of lambasting McCabe and Birch for their part in all of this.

It took me about 10 seconds to find out that Realty accounts were late by the way.

Aye, Lion sounds good to me.

As always there is always a touch of cynicism smothered with piss taking and sarcasm towards your posts (on subjects like these).

But I, as always am genuinely interested in knowing if people like yourself see anything in this. I tend not to get involved in discussions about the accounts, mcCabe, birch etc so I must've missed the discussions on this first time around. But this bloke is in the clear now isn't he?

So does this, as the end of the article suggests, mean that he could be back in the frame. Fit and proper person test will be fine as it's worked ok for Leeds and piggies.

Or as the date suggests should we dismiss this as an April fools joke?
 
Cheers for that Coops. Entertaining stuff regardless of how much of it resembles the truth. :)
 
It may include some unverified sources but it is a genuine article, not an April fool. The author appears to be a Malaysian-based journalist who obviously knows a lot about the Blades, and Datuk Vinod Sekhar is a name that sells papers in Malaysia, so the story is probably seen as newsworthy there.

Incidentally I was talking to a Hungarian football journalist the other day and he says that the fans of Ferencvaros (sp?) are extremely pissed off with the state of their club, and the number one targets of their wrath are the new British owners.
 

Mica would rather be proven right and United to be fuck rather than be wrong.
 
Mica would rather be proven right and United to be fuck rather than be wrong.

I have been proven right, ages ago re McCabe, property and the associated ruination of our beloved Blades but cheers for thinking of me.

Bitter and twisted but a few millions off his pot won't do anyone any harm.
 
I have been proven right, ages ago re McCabe, property and the associated ruination of our beloved Blades but cheers for thinking of me.

Bitter and twisted but a few millions off his pot won't do anyone any harm.

Apart from us.
 
And if the property world hadn't gone tits up we'd probably been sitting very pretty, but it did go tits up
 
You've got to be a bit crazy to invest in football tbh with the in one way out the other money situation it is nowadays

Fans/Sponsors/TV Money/Competition winnings (Chortle) goes in - Players (and other staff) wages goes out

Nearly any other business plan has the money in some part being recycled by the employees buying the product that is provided by the company they work for.
I can't see Pro footballers paying to watch matches or for merchandise ever, so the money doesn't get recycled through the system, it just gets spent on flash cars and designer clothes most of the time.
 
Why, what did 'we' own?

Depends who you see as 'we'.

The parent companies and owners of our football club had a very large property portfolio didn't they (they still do, but perhaps its assets are not as saleable as they were a couple of years back).


Back at you Lenners...

As Chief Speculator and Hindsighter Enlighten-er on this site, Lenners what are your thoughts on the OP in this thread?
 
Depends who you see as 'we'.

The parent companies and owners of our football club had a very large property portfolio didn't they (they still do, but perhaps its assets are not as saleable as they were a couple of years back).


Back at you Lenners...

As Chief Speculator and Hindsighter Enlighten-er on this site, Lenners what are your thoughts on the OP in this thread?

I've only ever seen SUFC as 'we', it was a few others who seemed excited about the benefits various other entities owned by Kevin McCabe brought.
The stuff about Rubber Man is comedy gold. Gotta love the kind of people who want to get involved in football, he sounds like a small step up from the boy Sheard.
 
I've only ever seen SUFC as 'we', it was a few others who seemed excited about the benefits various other entities owned by Kevin McCabe brought.
The stuff about Rubber Man is comedy gold. Gotta love the kind of people who want to get involved in football, he sounds like a small step up from the boy Sheard.

I'd say he'd be a very major step up from Sheard on account of he does at least look to have some dosh, maye not as much as he had, or as much as he says he has, but probably more than you or me. Why he'd want to be involved with any English football club is a puzzle.

Sadly, he probably wouldn't even make the top three of SUFC's dodgiest ex-owners/chairmen.
 
I think you need to re-read it Trig, he certainly doesn't seem to have much dosh, finds himself in trouble with the law and has been reduced to some vague, never going to happen, investment of £1.5m over three years.
Me and thee could probably raise £500,000 a year to loan to United for a few per cent interest back.
Pretty embarrassing that he's the best that Birch and McCabe could come up with - especially with the amazing, supersonic, fantabulous array of global interests to dazzle with.
Wonder how much money they spent fannying around with Rubber Man.
 
Go on then, raise 500k and loan it to United.

What for? What good is £500k going to do? Pay Ched's wages for a few months?
No point, McCabe's going to end up doing that anyway in a few months time.
Or mebbes Rubber Man is going to step into the fray. Can't wait, at least it would be entertaining to have our own Sheard episode.
 

What for? What good is £500k going to do? Pay Ched's wages for a few months?
No point, McCabe's going to end up doing that anyway in a few months time.
Or mebbes Rubber Man is going to step into the fray. Can't wait, at least it would be entertaining to have our own Sheard episode.

Thats not the point, you said you could do it.... Or are you saying that you can't do it now
 

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