JJ Sefton
Live, Laugh, Love
Brealey did indeed want out and BIFA beef with him was that he was asking too much for the club. If BIFA pressed him into selling for less than he was holding out for, I can't see anything wrong with that.
Indeed. My memory is that Brealey had lost interest in the club after his ground redevelopment plans fell through and his shares - which he had more or less bought by accident in the first place - had been on the market since 1987. Woolhouse was always preening about as the White Knight but he never actually acted on it. The Hashimi business smoked him out in 1990 (convenient for Reg that) but in the longer run it also revealed that Woolhouse didn't have any cash and so Brealey ended up with the club again in about 1993. BIFA came along a year or so afterwards, about 1994, and McDonald turned up in 1996.
In other words, Brealey had wanted shot of the club for about ten years but a viable buyer only turned up a couple of years after BIFA got going.
This does not prove that BIFA brought the sale, but it does indicate that BIFA, or something like it, was not an insurmountable obstacle to a sale.