@Raziel , I have to be honest and say this is where I'm slightly confused. It seems to be, and I may be wrong, that you are taking it almost as a personal affront to suggest that Levy and Lewis, heads of an investment vehicle, may look, at some point, to sell the club. A conspiracy theory? To suggest that people sell and buy football clubs? I mean, that's been the nature of football for decades now. Unless Levy/Lewis are going to do an Agnelli and hand over the club to their families and build a generations spanning dynasty for the club (fair play to them if so), I don't see what's so conspiratorial about it?
At one stage, you seem to be suggesting that now wouldn't be the right time to sell (football not yet reached peak) and therefore they won't sell yet and then in the next sentence, seemingly say its ridiculous to suggest they would sell?
I'd actually be interested to hear from some of you on what you think Levy's faults are.
No mate, nothing personal (I try, as hard as that is when we discuss things that are our passion, never to take it personal). And sorry .. long ass post incoming
- Levy/ENIC could sell, perhaps inevitably will sell at some point.
What frustrates me is
- The either quick flip or milking club narrative (which after 19 years is way beyond dead horse stage)
- The other point of whenever the club reaches a point (CL, stadium, Jose, whatever), the "ahhh, right, yes they will sell now" as if Spurs is some hot potato that ENIC is trying desperately to get rid off as quickly as possible (see first point again)
It is a lazy narrative, I've yet to see a single reason why an imminent sale is likely other than the same old same old with not a single fact to back it up.
So let's get to your points, what do I see (and personal opinion, I probably know fudge all)
- ENIC has Spurs as a great investment vehicle that will turn around a 60-80M investment into a multi-billion dollar asset
- In Levy they have a great CEO that is also emotionally invested in the club
- In the next 5-10 years the value of Spurs and football will likely still go up (with success and further growth in overseas markets)
- If they could buy into a joint NFL franchise +Spurs it could potentially create the single most valuable sports asset in the world (exceeding Madrid and United)
So where/why would they sell
- Someone makes an offer they can't refuse (unlikely as potential buyers could probably buy other clubs for far less up front)
- The NFL thing doesn't pan out and perhaps a NFL franchise reverses the deal, offers to buy Spurs instead (similar to point above)
- Something happens with Levy (personal/health/fall out with ENIC), he is the key and the visionary
- ENIC/Lewis run into financial problems due to other businesses and need the cash
Most likely (again my opinion)
- ENIC/Levy continue the plan for another 5-10 years, work the NFL angle, get some trophies and on field success, pay down the debt and re-evaluate do they continue or sell out at that point
Hence I simply don't see a sell scenario (where we are actively trying to sell/market the club, not where an amazing offer comes in) in the next 3-5 years minimum.
Levy\s weakness/faults
- Same as everyone else, there are moments where all of us believe we could have been that bit more aggressive in buying/paying/keeping a certain player or investing in squad
- Perhaps too much patience, too much the long game
- It also took him a while to learn, quite a few missteps in the first 10 years, really the BMJ/FA appointments were where he seemed to grasp the needs/model and also stop caring too much about fan/media opinion
He is not faultless, but as I said, it's kind of like nitpicking Messi's game, sure he has areas that aren't great in isolation, but once you actually compare to others you realize what you have.
One day Levy will leave (he has said he is just a custodian) and I will still support Spurs, just as I will whenever x player or manager leaves.