They've not been bad owners, certainly not. But why have we been 'incredibly lucky' with ENIC? What have they put in, what have they *done*, that justifies this hyperbole? They have taken the club's own money, and spent it in a roughly competent, entirely risk-free way, in a manner that raises the value of their asset. Have they put their own money in? No. Has their reign resulted in trophies and titles? No, *hell* no.
And have they pushed the boat out when the chance to win titles and trophies has presented itself? F*cking no, not at all.
@BrainOfLevy made an interesting point a while ago, in that this crop of players and this manager has come too early for ENIC's liking. They didn't want to have to deal with funding a title-challenging team this early - their plan was for Poch to hover around 5th-6th place while the stadium was being built, and then worry about actually winning things long, long after that.
But I don't think that reflects well on them - in fact, just the opposite. Like with January 2012, when we were gunning for the title and received Louis Saha and Ryan Nelsen on free transfers instead of the more expensive strikers and defenders our manager requested. Like that, now we find ourselves in a similar situation - we found a diamond, a managerial gem who can get us punching above our weight and work miracles with no money at all.
And instead of backing that man and taking the risk to enable him to compete, we are content to let him keep working with absolutely nothing, floating around the top four, winning nothing and growing increasingly frustrated as a result.
Because to do otherwise would be taking a risk and backing him, you see. And we don't do that - it doesn't fit with our plan of vaguely competing at some point in the next 10 to 15 years, when the stars align (if they align).
I think that behaviour's fundamentally ingrained within Levy and ENIC. They don't care about winning things, and never have.
And that just exhausts me. We'll see more of the same, whether it's Wembley, or WHL, or Nike Stadium or whatever we end up calling it. It won't change. Nothing will be followed-up on, and momentum will always be lost because the club isn't interested in pushing the boat out when we are in positions like this.
Which is why we need new owners. And which is why I'm exhausted with them, and I'd rather they finish the stadium, take their billion-pound profit and leave. And I wish them well with their next venture afterward.
I'm aware of the chances involved. I never said we were guaranteed a jovial billionaire who cares about winning things.
But Levy isn't all that great, and the structural issues behind why we win so little will persist with him, and with our penny-pinching absentee owner, no matter who manages us and whatever the stadium brings us.