Thta's a valid point - but it's not like anybody in the end fought to hold onto their shares except perhaps to maximize their personal profits. After all he made 8500 a share and everyone selling now is making 11700 a share. But a valid point nonetheless.Bendtners Drinking Buddy wrote:I dont get all the David Dein love in
I dont deny he did an excellent job in the past, and could do in the future...
But he didnt waste any time making millions from his shares when the time was right did he?
But I think you answer your own question - he did an excellent job in the past and could do so in the future. I think there is a belief that is fully justified that Mr Dein's departure whatever the reasons behind it made the situation worse in terms of the football teeam, although I believe that ship had sailed already and the damage was done by that time, and Mr. Dein was forced for pointing that out and trying to fix it at that time.
I also do not think he was simply pro-Wembley as some state. I think he was pro-new stadium until the decision not to sell Highbury was taken. I think he saw and was proven correct that the club could not homor its commitment to the football team and the self-sustaining business model while borrowing the additional 120 million pounds(whioch had to be paid in full by 2010) on top of the 300 million borrowed for building the stadium and eliminating forty-eighty million pounds of revenue to pay for the stadium loan for five years.