THE Celtic dynasty, ruling over a club with a #4.7m overdraft and
little on-field success, last night remained indifferent to an offer to
inject #18m into Parkhead.
It was made by a consortium led by Montreal based Scots millionaire
Fergus McCann.
Mr Michael Kelly, the director responsible for handling Celtic's
public relations, described the offer as fantasy.
He signalled that nothing had changed in the three-year saga for
control of the club -- and described yesterday's bid as a ''rehash and
reheat'' of previous offers which even now had never been formally
lodged.
Mr McCann yesterday called a news conference, which for the first time
officially confirmed that he had joined with Mr Brian Dempsey, an
ex-Celtic director, to wrest control of the club.
Also in the consortium is Mr John Keane, managing director of
Edinburgh-based Keane Construction -- like Mr Dempsey, a 50% owner of
the Strathvale Group, property developers; Uruguayan born Mr Albert
Friedberg, who heads a Toronto-based commodity and bond-trading firm;
and Bermudan based tax exile Mr Edmund Keane, founder of UK carpet
retailers Colonel Gee's. They did not attend the launch.
The offer is to pump #12.5m into the club, with Mr McCann investing
#8.5m, and the others #1m.
Mr McCann announced he had committed another #2m to fund loans to
Celtic supporters to buy shares -- then invited the fans to invest
another #5.4m through a public share offer to ensure widespread
ownership.
The consortium emphasised the offer was not a takeover bid but
designed to recapitalise Celtic by underwriting a shares issue and aimed
at returning the club to former glories.
Mr McCann's performance can best be described as lacklustre.
Embarrassingly, as a ''lifelong Celtic supporter'' he was unaware the
club had lost to its oldest rivals Rangers on Wednesday night.
Mr McCann emphasised the consortium would not have more than 50%
control, diluting fears of a future sale and takeover by a third party.
However, he did expect to be chief executive at the club for five
years, when his shares would be offered for sale to supporters.
Both Mr McCann and Mr Dempsey denied the offer was hypothetical. They
warned they would ''walk away'' from Celtic if it was rejected.
Over the next few days, they will approach the existing 150
shareholders to approve the cash injection and fresh share issue; such a
strategy would require a two-thirds majority. Eventually, an emergency
general meeting of shareholders would need to be held.
They are also taking advice on a legal document signed by the Celtic
board -- chairman Mr Kevin Kelly, Mr Michael Kelly, Mr Chris White, Mr
Tom Grant, Mr Jack McGinn, Mr David Smith, and Mr James Farrell -- that
binds them together in a pact.
The ruling Kelly-White family dynasty and its supporters hold in
excess of 53% of existing shares. The rebel consortium members would
each hold about 9% of shares, with the 50% reached via fans' subscribing
for shares.
''There is no great difference between his latest declarations to the
press and his previous statements,'' Mr Kelly said.
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