I'm embarrassed for you both. Stop now.
Im so 3008 your so 2000 and late.
I'm embarrassed for you both. Stop now.
Woo hoo.I'm embarrassed for you both. Stop now.
Woo hoo.
Woo hoo.
Does anyone know the timing of the payment of TV money...presumably it's paid in installments over the season (with a final 'wash up) payment made in the close season)...??
@The Esk
Lukaku said he's willing to speak to the new owners, right before he belittled us.
That's another test for Moshiri. Except don't want any pandering towards that moon fodded, lash him in the reserves for two years. Everton are BACK.
What's with the avatar homes?But if you only have love for your own race, then you only leave space to discriminate
Did you get some mate?A good good night.
...must be the forum company I keep...You're very funny for a Kiwi.
Whatcha gonna do with all that junk, all that junk inside your trunk?

Cliff Finch, who was a director of Everton during the years that Peter Johnson owned the club, believes that Mr Moshiri’s 49.9% stake is, for all practical purposes, sufficient to give him the final say at shareholders’ meetings and in the club’s boardroom.
That’s because a significant number of Everton’s shares have either been lost or forgotten about over the decades.
More than 1,000 small shareholders
The club has more than 1,000 small shareholders, who typically own a handful of shares each. It’s a share structure that has been in place since before World War ll.
Mr Finch told the ECHO that, when he was at the club, there was an exhaustive attempt to make contact with all of the club’s shareholders, something that proved impossible to achieve. He said: “We tried to trace all Everton shareholders. Many of them had just one share. Finding these people was an impossibility. That’s because some have died or the shares got lost in The Blitz.
“So, in effect he (Mr Moshiri) already has control because you will never get 50.1% voting against him.”