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Milne: Still No Contact From FAI
Thursday, 31st Oct 2013 10:53

Joint-managing director Ian Milne reaffirmed that Town have heard nothing from the FAI regarding manager Mick McCarthy at last night’s Supporters Club AGM. McCarthy continues to be linked with the role he previous occupied between 1996 and 2002, although former Sunderland, Leicester and Celtic boss Martin O’Neill has edged ahead of him in the betting this morning.

Milne, who was answering questions from fans along with club secretary Sally Webb at the meeting in Legends in the Sir Alf Ramsey Stand, said: “We’re in constant contact with Mr Evans, we also talk to Mick and there’s been absolutely no approach been made to Mick or the club about Ireland.”

Would the club let McCarthy speak to the FAI if a move was made? “I’m not heading the question off, but it hasn’t happened.

“It all depends on how it manifests itself. It’s the same if you were to employ somebody and they wanted to leave. You can’t keep them there, but Marcus, myself, [fellow MD] Jonathan Symonds and everybody in the club love him.

“He’s a very honest, decent human being and he would be very honourable in his dealings, and he’s said that many times when questioned on the issue.

“So far as we’re aware, and we don’t disbelieve him and you'd have to talk to Marcus first, there has been no approach [to Mick] at the moment.

“We get into the fairyland of ‘what ifs’ and I don’t know what if. All I can say is that if a member of my staff came to me and said I want to move on, naturally we would try and convince them not to move on, a player or what have you.

“But if they don’t want to be with you then you’ve got to work something out. But we’re not at that yet. It’s ‘what ifs’.”

He added: “There’s been no approach, we don’t want him to leave, we want him to stay. Marcus is very content with what the squad is like and the way that it’s working, very content with Mick and TC and he wants things to stay as they are.

“We’re the best I’ve known, where the squad is and where the club is, in the five years since I’ve been at the club.”

Milne says McCarthy “is a totally committed to the club” and has yet to indicate whether he would be interested in the Ireland job as “the issue hasn’t arisen” and that “it’s a ‘what if’ situation and he doesn’t get into that. Until he’s asked or until Marcus is asked, it’s not an issue.”


Much of the rest of the meeting was taken up with discussions regarding various aspects of ticketing. There was criticism that away fans are charged too much at Town and that some visiting supporters are put off coming to Portman Road by the ticket prices.

Sally Webb explained that travelling supporters have to be charged the same as home fans for equivalent seats, with the visitors’ end at Portman Road currently in the upper tier of the Cobbold Stand.

Regarding matchday prices, which have been the subject of widespread criticism this season, Milne said: “On season tickets we took the view to keep the same prices because we believed that that was the right thing to do.

“We look at all pricing, from drinks to everything else and we took a view this year when looking at our fellow clubs in the Championship that we could raise [matchday] prices.

“So far we’ve proved that we were not wrong because our overall matchday revenue has gone up. Our gates are slightly down but our revenue has gone up compared to last year. We’re not the cheapest, I agree, but we’re not the most expensive.”

Fans expressed concern that gates are falling and he added: “I hear your point. Nobody likes increasing pricing and we do take it very seriously.”

The club were called on to drop the additional £2.50 surcharge on tickets purchased on the day close to kick off. Webb said that a charge of that type had been in place for 10 years and it was largely a stadium management issue; it’s preferable for the club to have a good idea of matchday attendances in advance of games.

The dropping of the ticketing phone line was also brought up with some believing fans, particularly older or more rural supporters, are put off from coming along as they are no longer able to purchase tickets in that way.

Milne also responded to claims that this is indicative of a lack of a personal touch at Town: “If we can’t make generate the income then it falls on the owner to foot the bill and at the same time we have to keep pace with what people do and many people when they buy concert tickets, for example, they buy online.

“I think it’s quite reasonable if we know that Suffolk is 100% broadband, which it is. We know that libraries are online as well for those who don’t have a friend or a relative who have a computer.

“I don’t recognise that we aren’t still a family club. We’ve all got families. We do our best to provide access to matches and to other the other things we provide here, and it takes a lot of hard work to do that.

“I’m sorry if you feel that we are no longer the community club, I don’t see that, quite frankly, but I’m sorry that you do.”

While some fans praised the online ticketing system, others said they had had problems with it, something Milne and Webb said the club were aware of and are addressing.

As per the recent interview with TWTD Milne said that McCarthy would have money to spend in January “if needed”, although the club was working within the parameters of Financial Fair Play, which limits the levels of cash owners such as Marcus Evans can spend above a club’s annual turnover.

Webb says there are Championship clubs who are taking a more risky attitude to the rules in order to gain promotion to the Premier League but are likely to face censure if their spending fails to take them into the top flight.

“There’s nothing fair about Financial Fair Play,” she said. “All it is is something to stop the industry self-destructing and the Premier League are doing the same thing with their own form of Financial Fair Play.

“Financial Fair Play, if you’re going to spend money there are two ways of looking at it. As another club’s chairman said to me when I was talking to him the other day, ‘We’re going to go for it’.

“And they’re gambling really because if you go over the edge with Financial Fair Play and you get it wrong you’ll have to pay a fine.

“They haven’t quite decided what happens about the fines yet. There has been lots of talk in the industry about fines having to have teeth - it’s going to be financial, it’s going to be points, it’s going to be transfer embargoes.

“But if you get it wrong, and football is often a gamble, you have to be prepared that maybe there will be some long-term issues.”

Milne said the club is close to confirming “a rock band” for next May’s second concert, which will take place the day following Barry Manilow’s visit to Portman Road.

With the recent bad weather continuing to impact on transport and thousands in Suffolk still without power, the attendance of 30-odd was well down on recent years.

In the main business of the AGM, chair person Elizabeth Edwards, secretary Rita MacKenzie, treasurer Steve Doe and committee members Irene Davey, Paul Voller, Martin Swallow and Nigel Cole were all re-elected to their positions.


Photo: Action Images



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Smithy added 11:48 - Oct 31
YAWN
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OldClactonBlue added 11:55 - Oct 31
With regard to all the ticketing issues. It just goes to show that they listen, but will not hear what is being said to them! They can carry on believing they are right in every respect whilst all the time attendances continue to fall, so it is fair to assume that they are not.

The current management have no knowledge of what it was like before and don't appear to want to know if it was better.

Glad I didn't go!
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SouperJim added 12:15 - Oct 31
People on here piss and moan about the direction the club is headed and how they don't listen to the fan base, yet only 30 turn up to the AGM and the same old faces are re-elected. It would take so little to hijack the Official Supporters Clique, yet nobody is prepared to do it.
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charsfield added 12:41 - Oct 31
“So far we've proved that we were not wrong because our overall matchday revenue has gone up. Our gates are slightly down but our revenue has gone up compared to last year. We're not the cheapest, I agree, but we're not the most expensive.”

“So far we've proved that we were not wrong because our overall matchday revenue has gone up. Our gates are slightly down but our revenue has gone up compared to last year. We're not the cheapest, I agree, but we're not the most expensive.”

Fans expressed concern that gates are falling and he added: “I hear your point. Nobody likes increasing pricing and we do take it very seriously.”

The club were called on to drop the additional £2.50 surcharge on tickets purchased on the day close to kick off. Webb said that a charge of that type had been in place for 10 years and it was largely a stadium management issue; it's preferable for the club to have a good idea of matchday attendances in advance of games.

The dropping of the ticketing phone line was also brought up with some believing fans, particularly older or more rural supporters, are put off from coming along as they are no longer able to purchase tickets in that way.

Milne also responded to claims that this is indicative of a lack of a personal touch at Town: “If we can't make generate the income then it falls on the owner to foot the bill and at the same time we have to keep pace with what people do and many people when they buy concert tickets, for example, they buy online.

“I think it's quite reasonable if we know that Suffolk is 100% broadband, which it is. We know that libraries are online as well for those who don't have a friend or a relative who have a computer.

“I don't recognise that we aren't still a family club. We've all got families. We do our best to provide access to matches and to other the other things we provide here, and it takes a lot of hard work to do that.

Its not all about the 'pricing' you thatcherite douchebag, people who support a football club dont treat buying tickets like they do buying vegetables, ffs

“I don't recognise that we aren't still a family club. We've all got families. We do our best to provide access to matches and to other the other things we provide here, and it takes a lot of hard work to do that.
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muccletonjoe added 13:00 - Oct 31
Wheather you are pro mm on this or anti , I think every town supporter has had a skin full of this now
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Cr0wman added 14:52 - Oct 31
Quote:- “We look at all pricing, from drinks to everything else and we took a view this year when looking at our fellow clubs in the Championship that we could raise [matchday] prices.

“So far we've proved that we were not wrong because our overall matchday revenue has gone up. Our gates are slightly down but our revenue has gone up compared to last year." Comment :- What further proof do we need as loyal fans that we are not really important to the club, and that any perceived loyalty is one sided! We are no longer in this together, they look after their own interests even if it conflicts with those that have supported the club for generation. R.I.P. club spirit :(
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Cheshire_Blue added 15:00 - Oct 31
SouperJim is absolutely right. How many would it take to call an Extraordinary General meeting and pass a vote of no confidence in the current officers ?
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linhdi added 15:15 - Oct 31
You could have turned up last night and had your say maybe? Or got in touch to find out what the job requires, and then decide if you could put in the commitment needed to stand for election? Half the current committe have joined in the last 3 years, I think, so it isn't a closed shop. If you want to get involved, one option is to volunteer for help out, and then see if you'd be prepared to be co-opted on. Another way is to get involved with your local branch and help them to grow / develop
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TractorBeezer added 16:05 - Oct 31
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Seasider added 16:15 - Oct 31
Dont forget that there is also a supporters trust which is independent of the club unlike the above which was taken over many years ago by ITFC from the old independent supporters club who used to meet at the Manor House/Ballroom (its so long ago I cant remember the details).
This is basically a social club with the Chairperson I believe now on the board.
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Mark added 18:05 - Oct 31
So basically if the club could double prices resulting in the attendance falling to around 8,000, they would do it if it increased revenue a tad? It's very sad as the club should be here for the supporters and we should want as many people as possible to come to the stadium.
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linhdi added 18:13 - Oct 31
Seasider, you're quite right. The Supporters Club is intended to be a social organisation, rather than a political one. But there is some demand from fans to be able to meet with ITFC to express their opinions on stuff (quite reasonably), and so the OSC has persuaded various ITFC people to turn up at free-of-charge events over the course of the season, in Ipswich and elsewhere, to do just that. Most of these events have a big social element too, in line with the main purpose of the OSC. Most are evenings, but some are matchday daytime - that way, pretty much anyone who wants to turn up and ask questions/ debate stuff has a chance to do so. But if you want to join a pressure group / lobbying group then Trust is surely the better option
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RegencyBlue added 18:23 - Oct 31
The overall impression is very much that the club will do what it wants and the supporters can either take it or leave it.

Ultimately they are right in that Evans owns the club but the goodwill which supporters used to have is rapidly disappearing, as are the supporters themselves, and that does not bode well for the future!
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Mark added 18:39 - Oct 31
> many people when they buy concert tickets, for example, they buy online.

Ticketmaster is the leading site, but even they have a telephone booking line:

"Book By Phone
Ticketmaster's telephone booking service is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. To make a credit card booking please call one of the following numbers, including all international and regional area codes:

UK Customers: 0844 844 0444"
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Bluebert added 21:17 - Oct 31
That man sounds like a bell end of the highest order. As long as the revenues up then screw everything and everybody else because I can still afford another 12 Portman pies
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MVBlue added 01:34 - Nov 1
So what you're saying Ian Milne is, that this is a business not a sports club. You think you are running a business. I thought ITFC was a sports team that fans associate with and follow. Next you'll all tell me Englands football team is a business..
Am I a fan or a paying subscriber to Ipswich Town PLC. So I'm a customer not a sports fan. Maybe I would be just as well off buying BT shares and following them?
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