996 The Red Army with an uncertain future
Gillette, one of Liverpool's two owners, has been a strong supporter of CEO Parry, while Hicks and Benitez have been unhappy with Parry for a long time.
The four formed two camps, but the foundation of the camp was extremely shaky, and Hicks was actually the most typical wall-to-wall grass, and he was more disgusted than Gillette by Benitez's tendency to cry like a child at press conferences.
Benitez wanted to buy Barry in the summer of 2008, and Parry was busy for more than two months without results, and finally Robbie Keane was left to work.
Keane Jr. was also Tottenham's captain anyway, but he was sold back to White Hart Lane in the winter, and it was thought that Benitez was punishing him for not fitting into the team, and later learned that the American owner needed the transfer fee to repay the bank loan.
There is also the renewal of the contract of the teenager Ag, which is still deadlocked after three months.
Gillette has a more moderate personality and has advocated "doing nothing" to bring the club back to the old ways of former chairman Murse.
Although this business model will not make a lot of money, at least it will not be poked in the back all day long, so he has always protected Parry.
Liverpool's infighting culminated in the 2008-2009 season over Benitez's contract extension, with the Yankees angry at the Spaniard's repeated refusal to renew his contract, while Benitez had his own calculations and needed more power in the club's infighting – something the American boss could not bear.
In the early spring of 2009, when Liverpool traveled to the Bernabeu in the knockout round of the Champions League, the American boss had secretly made a plan for a mutiny.
It was a situation much like Rafael Benitez's trip to Marseille in December 2007 if Liverpool were defeated. Knocked out of the Champions League group stage, and maybe then Klinsmann will be able to get to Anfield.
This time, before the match against Real Madrid, the Yankees also found Benitez's successor - Kenny Dalglish, but Liverpool's former "king" saw through the Yankees' fake face at a glance and directly said that he was not interested in reappearing.
Partisanship. There will be sacrifices and scapegoats.
Hicks and Benitez returned safely from the Bernabeu, and even won with a slight advantage of away goals, and the disgraced Gillett put the blame for Benitez's unfavorable contract extension and the untimely signing of new players was put on Parry, who was overwhelmed and publicly stated that he would leave at the end of the season.
Parry's departure is comic: Gillett and Hicks try to get rid of Benitez together, but they are beaten upside down, and they immediately jump back to their respective camps, and Gillett presses Parry to get out of the way. Hicks kept reassuring Benitez's wounded heart.
Parry was so kind, so kind that he had no brains, and he and another brainless Mr. Moores were really good partners, so they gave Liverpool endless joy from July 1998 to March 2006 – even if Anfield didn't win the same trophy as Manchester United.
In fact, Mr. Moore's departure doomed Parry to leave only a matter of time.
Parry is a good man, he gave up the high salary of the Premier League committee to work for Liverpool FC more than a decade ago, and he made this job an ideal with his love for Liverpool, and he did not allow his lofty ideals to be attacked by outsiders in the United States.
He had thought about change. However, his not strong business ability still held him back.
Parry and Benitez are both for Liverpool, it's just that Rafa is going too fast. Parry couldn't keep up despite his best efforts.
Parry left, and Plastus, who spoke Spanish and had a considerable background in the financial world, took his place, but in fact Perslow came to Liverpool with only one duty - to sell the club, but before selling, Plastlot had to deal with the bills of the Royal Bank of Scotland.
While he was running around to pay off his debts, Hicks and Gillette, two American bosses, had quietly approached Kuwaiti billionaire Nasser. Benitez didn't know anything about it.
Obviously, this is a cover-up scheme.
The £350 million in debt that the Yankees borrowed from the Royal Bank of Scotland and the fourth-largest bank in the United States, Vajovia, was used to build the new Stanley Stadium, before the 2008 financial crisis storms. The price of raw materials has risen sharply, the cost has doubled, and the shrewd Yankees have realized that whether the stadium is built or not is a loss-making deal, and repairing it is losing more than not repairing it.
They couldn't think of a better solution than a moratorium.
On September 13, 2008, when Liverpool and Manchester United fought Anfield, the Yankees formally submitted their applications to the two major banks to delay loan repayments, and Liverpool fans erupted in mass protests.
The U.S. bank of Vajovia approved the application, but the Royal Bank of Scotland rejected the Yankees' request, and the Yankees could not come up with the money, so they had to ponder the possibility of using Liverpool's shares to pay off the debt.
In October and November, Liverpool fans collectively cancelled their services at the Royal Bank of Scotland, resulting in a mess of savings accounts and credit accounts in the Royal Bank of Scotland during those two months, and they were forced to accept the Liverpool club's application.
The stadium is postponed, anyway, Anfield can still be used, and Klinsmann can be found, but he was the head coach of Bayern at the time, and it doesn't hurt if he doesn't buy people in winter, and the existing squad will not be too bad if there are games, and the season package has suddenly risen to the second highest in the Premier League, but who calls Anfield's atmosphere still so hot?
Liverpool fans are not demanding, and they hope to respect the Yankees in a compromise process, only to be disappointed again and again.
Liverpool has never had a shortage of buyers, but it just has one less price that will appeal to the Yankees.
In the face of repeated protests from Liverpool fans, Gillette has decided to run away, and a potential buyer, Indian tycoon Ampbani, was hired by him.
Ambani, India's richest man, has said he is willing to pay off all of Liverpool's debts, but only if he buys a 51 per cent stake in the club.
The crux of the matter is also here, with a 51% stake meaning that Ambani will become the club's largest shareholder and the American owner will lose control of the club.
Gillette was going to sell all of his 50% shares, but Hicks was still clinging to his share, and Ambani weighed it and finally decided to abandon the acquisition.
The chaos at Liverpool FC has reached unprecedented intensity, even more so than Real Madrid's civil unrest last season.
At least Real Madrid are not in a situation where the ownership of the club is in doubt, or the owners are divided.
Qin Xiong's heart was touched, it is the fans who really love football, and it is often the fans who are really hurt by football, and it is the fans who can really pay for football.
Liverpool fans are respectable, as he has seen from his many visits to Anfield, how many teams around the world have been able to come together to save the club and cause the banks to be forced to compromise?
They are small, but together they can shake the world! (To be continued.) )