2018/19 The Everton Board Thread

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New CEO got to have battles to establish themselves...could it be this is going on? Normal.
 
IF the rumours are true, that’ll be two CEOs to quit weeks into the job under a certain Mr Kenwright. Utter cancer of the club.

It’ll be a great day when he finally leaves.

All conjecture like you say, but it could it be that Mosh needs to buy out Bill in order for the club to really make any progress at all?
 
All conjecture like you say, but it could it be that Mosh needs to buy out Bill in order for the club to really make any progress at all?
Was that ‘option to buy’ after two years his shares even true? Hate the fella.
 

IF the rumours are true, that’ll be two CEOs to quit weeks into the job under a certain Mr Kenwright. Utter cancer of the club.

It’ll be a great day when he finally leaves.
Seems to be a theme every season for me nothing will change at the club as long as kenwright still around
 
Hull earned more than us ; bloody useless.



More stats on the 2016/17 season.

https://mobile.twitter.com/SwissRamble


So it costs you, the fan, less to watch Everton than it does for a Hull fan, and that's bloody udeless is it?

I went to see us at Arsenal away last year but went with a couple of Gooner fans, so we went in the stand, not the £30 away end. Standard seat - £114. Is that what you'd rather pay to watch your team?
 
So it costs you, the fan, less to watch Everton than it does for a Hull fan, and that's bloody udeless is it?

I went to see us at Arsenal away last year but went with a couple of Gooner fans, so we went in the stand, not the £30 away end. Standard seat - £114. Is that what you'd rather pay to watch your team?
It's not just the price of tickets, it's the overall income. I'm sick of us being also rans ; if you think Hull earning more match day income than ourselves is acceptable, fair do's.
 

Same bunch of losers still around. Nothing has changed and we’re further away from competing now than we have been in a long time.

Should have known the managed decline was in full swing hiring some no mark internally to be our CEO.

Hardly a 'no mark'...very highly thought of in top business circles and will be sought after by top companies if she ever indicates that she will leave Everton. You obviously just make statements off the top of your head,most of which cannot even be classed as an opinion, just cyber graffiti.
 
It's not just the price of tickets, it's the overall income. I'm sick of us being also rans ; if you think Hull earning more match day income than ourselves is acceptable, fair do's.

Take your point mate, but the graph shown was just matchday income. It's not the worst thing in the world that the club makes it affordable to watch the team and has deliberately kept prices as low as possible over many years. There's not much scope to increase it out of Goodison Park but this will no doubt change significantly in a new stadium.

I would be massively surprised if our overall income was lower than Hull - but the caption you posted only referenced the top 6.
 
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Everton has appointed a Stadium Development Director to support the Club’s ambition of delivering a new ground at Bramley-Moore Dock.

The new role will be filled by Colin Chong, a construction industry specialist with more than 35 years’ experience in the development sector. He has successfully delivered a vast range of large-scale projects and has been involved at a senior-level in stadium redevelopment projects at Old Trafford and the Manchester Commonwealth Games stadium, as well as the build of the DW Stadium. Colin also delivered the build of the Park Stand at Goodison Park in 1994.

“I feel privileged to have the opportunity to play a key role in the delivery of what will be a great project, not only for Everton Football Club but also for the City of Liverpool,” said Colin.

“The Club has already done a huge amount of work to get us to our current position, spending millions of pounds to make sure that any scheme we develop is right for the Club and our fans, that the design principles are right and, crucially, that it’s affordable.

“This is a long and complex process, but we have put together a well-resourced team of internal staff and consultants to ensure we are able to drive this forward effectively.”

Colin initially joined Everton from Laing O’Rourke in 2016 as Head of Estates at Goodison Park and has been appointed to this new post following a recruitment process spanning many months.

Chief Executive Denise Barrett-Baxendale said: “The appointment of Colin as our Stadium Development Director is an important step for us.

“Whilst we have made progress on our plans for Bramley-Moore Dock - as well legacy plans for the Goodison Park site - there is a lot of detailed and complex work to do to enable our move to happen.

“The fact that he has had some involvement in the project so far – albeit without being wholly dedicated to it – means he can really hit the ground running with an awareness of what needs to be done next.

“Colin has extensive experience in delivering stadiums and other large-scale capital projects and, together with our strengthened internal team and a best-in-class team of external advisers, we now have all the resource and expertise we need in place as we move towards the crucial planning phases.

“A key part of Colin’s remit will be to ensure that we consult fully with all groups on both schemes - including finalising designs and capacity and developing the best possible legacy for Goodison Park - and we are entirely committed to doing this.

“I’d like to thank all fans for their support and patience to date and hope that they see this appointment as a positive sign of our ambition to move to Bramley-Moore Dock as soon as we possibly can.”

Over the course of the next few months, a period of engagement with local residents regarding the legacy for L4 will be undertaken and a project website containing key information about both schemes will be launched.
 
411326d7b82c4e3c9bf32a21c8d78368.jpg


Everton has appointed a Stadium Development Director to support the Club’s ambition of delivering a new ground at Bramley-Moore Dock.

The new role will be filled by Colin Chong, a construction industry specialist with more than 35 years’ experience in the development sector. He has successfully delivered a vast range of large-scale projects and has been involved at a senior-level in stadium redevelopment projects at Old Trafford and the Manchester Commonwealth Games stadium, as well as the build of the DW Stadium. Colin also delivered the build of the Park Stand at Goodison Park in 1994.

“I feel privileged to have the opportunity to play a key role in the delivery of what will be a great project, not only for Everton Football Club but also for the City of Liverpool,” said Colin.

“The Club has already done a huge amount of work to get us to our current position, spending millions of pounds to make sure that any scheme we develop is right for the Club and our fans, that the design principles are right and, crucially, that it’s affordable.

“This is a long and complex process, but we have put together a well-resourced team of internal staff and consultants to ensure we are able to drive this forward effectively.”

Colin initially joined Everton from Laing O’Rourke in 2016 as Head of Estates at Goodison Park and has been appointed to this new post following a recruitment process spanning many months.

Chief Executive Denise Barrett-Baxendale said: “The appointment of Colin as our Stadium Development Director is an important step for us.

“Whilst we have made progress on our plans for Bramley-Moore Dock - as well legacy plans for the Goodison Park site - there is a lot of detailed and complex work to do to enable our move to happen.

“The fact that he has had some involvement in the project so far – albeit without being wholly dedicated to it – means he can really hit the ground running with an awareness of what needs to be done next.

“Colin has extensive experience in delivering stadiums and other large-scale capital projects and, together with our strengthened internal team and a best-in-class team of external advisers, we now have all the resource and expertise we need in place as we move towards the crucial planning phases.

“A key part of Colin’s remit will be to ensure that we consult fully with all groups on both schemes - including finalising designs and capacity and developing the best possible legacy for Goodison Park - and we are entirely committed to doing this.

“I’d like to thank all fans for their support and patience to date and hope that they see this appointment as a positive sign of our ambition to move to Bramley-Moore Dock as soon as we possibly can.”

Over the course of the next few months, a period of engagement with local residents regarding the legacy for L4 will be undertaken and a project website containing key information about both schemes will be launched.

Did he not realise when he delivered the park end stand it should've had 2 tiers?
 
411326d7b82c4e3c9bf32a21c8d78368.jpg


Everton has appointed a Stadium Development Director to support the Club’s ambition of delivering a new ground at Bramley-Moore Dock.

The new role will be filled by Colin Chong, a construction industry specialist with more than 35 years’ experience in the development sector. He has successfully delivered a vast range of large-scale projects and has been involved at a senior-level in stadium redevelopment projects at Old Trafford and the Manchester Commonwealth Games stadium, as well as the build of the DW Stadium. Colin also delivered the build of the Park Stand at Goodison Park in 1994.

“I feel privileged to have the opportunity to play a key role in the delivery of what will be a great project, not only for Everton Football Club but also for the City of Liverpool,” said Colin.

“The Club has already done a huge amount of work to get us to our current position, spending millions of pounds to make sure that any scheme we develop is right for the Club and our fans, that the design principles are right and, crucially, that it’s affordable.

“This is a long and complex process, but we have put together a well-resourced team of internal staff and consultants to ensure we are able to drive this forward effectively.”

Colin initially joined Everton from Laing O’Rourke in 2016 as Head of Estates at Goodison Park and has been appointed to this new post following a recruitment process spanning many months.

Chief Executive Denise Barrett-Baxendale said: “The appointment of Colin as our Stadium Development Director is an important step for us.

“Whilst we have made progress on our plans for Bramley-Moore Dock - as well legacy plans for the Goodison Park site - there is a lot of detailed and complex work to do to enable our move to happen.

“The fact that he has had some involvement in the project so far – albeit without being wholly dedicated to it – means he can really hit the ground running with an awareness of what needs to be done next.

“Colin has extensive experience in delivering stadiums and other large-scale capital projects and, together with our strengthened internal team and a best-in-class team of external advisers, we now have all the resource and expertise we need in place as we move towards the crucial planning phases.

“A key part of Colin’s remit will be to ensure that we consult fully with all groups on both schemes - including finalising designs and capacity and developing the best possible legacy for Goodison Park - and we are entirely committed to doing this.

“I’d like to thank all fans for their support and patience to date and hope that they see this appointment as a positive sign of our ambition to move to Bramley-Moore Dock as soon as we possibly can.”

Over the course of the next few months, a period of engagement with local residents regarding the legacy for L4 will be undertaken and a project website containing key information about both schemes will be launched.

Good luck to him but I'm again sceptical that the club always seem to look to old contacts for senior management posts such as this. It can't be a recurring theme by accident. From what I've read of his background there, it doesn't seem hugely stellar. Everton in the Community need not have such a literal meaning when a role as critical as this has to be filled.
 

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