Always a Wasp

Author Topic: Nobody wants Tigers...  (Read 1345 times)

Vespula Vulgaris

  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2991
    • View Profile
Please consider supporting the forum in 2022! Donate Here

BG

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1559
  • Wasps Rugby Fan
    • View Profile
Re: Nobody wants Tigers...
« Reply #1 on: March 19, 2020, 09:41:04 AM »
I'm not an accountant but a £60m valuation seems high seeing as the club is trading at a loss. They own Welford Rd which is probably an asset a new investor would be eager to acquire but most likely sell off to a developer and then move the club to ground share somewhere else.

welsh wasp

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 578
  • Wasps Rugby Fan
    • View Profile
Re: Nobody wants Tigers...
« Reply #2 on: March 19, 2020, 11:20:53 AM »
Tigers debated moving in with Leicester City a few years ago & retreated when the fans revolted about the idea. We were in the sensible position of sharing with Coventry City until SISI turned nasty.
Running a stadium where you are the sole user & then only every other week on average is not the best financial situation.
We are lucky to host pop concerts & other events.

DGP Wasp

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2447
  • Wasps Rugby Fan
    • View Profile
Re: Nobody wants Tigers...
« Reply #3 on: March 19, 2020, 01:31:32 PM »
As much as I love visiting the old, traditional grounds like Welford Rd, commercially it makes no sense at all to have 2 separate sports clubs, each of which only needs use of a stadium on alternate weeks for about 9 months of the year, operating on each other's doorstep.  From that point of view, Bristol probably have the right approach, with a single umbrella organisation running both Bristol Rugby and Bristol City football out of the same stadium.  Wasps under Chris Wright tried the same with QPR at Loftus Rd, but not so easy when you don't have that shared identity of the city.  London is too vast and tribal in sporting terms to pull it off.  We now have a different problem in Coventry where we are viewed by some as the cuckoos in the nest without the shared history in the city.

Emotion and tradition in sport count for a great deal though, so simply packing up Welford Rd and moving up the road to the King Power will be pretty universally unpopular, however commercially sensible it may be.