Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement

 
 
Tuesday, 14th October 2008

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Boyle has ridden out bad times at Fir Park but deserves credit for keeping manager



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 28 May 2008
JOHN Boyle has come a long way since being expelled from training as a priest for smoking at 13, but his retention of Mark McGhee's services as Motherwell manager may be proof to some Fir Park fans that the travel entrepreneur still has the ear of a higher power.
The lure of Hearts proved strong enough for McGhee to stand at the door of a plane bound for Lithuania and Tynecastle majority shareholder, Vladimir Romanov. However, the former Scotland international decided against the move to Edinburgh from Lanar
kshire after agreeing an improved deal with Boyle.

But the Motherwell chairman is no stranger to making the right decisions in business, despite the Fir Park club being placed in administration just over six years ago.

Boyle had unveiled his vision of Motherwell as the 'third force' in Scottish football after the Old Firm when he took over in 1998. The big money salaries paid to the likes of Andy Goram and John Spencer indicated the ambition Boyle had, while the arrival of Pat Nevin as player-chief executive preceded the appointment of Billy Davies as manager.

Davies was handed a war chest of some size when he succeeded Harri Kampman. The results were not as hoped for in the first season as Motherwell finished fourth from bottom in the inaugural Premier League season. A year later, Hearts clawed back a 12-point deficit during the season's run-in to snatch a Uefa Cup place from Boyle's club.

Failure was a new word for Boyle to deal with – business success had followed his every move prior to buying Motherwell.

Boyle and his brother, Hugh, had sold their travel firm, Direct Holidays, making £56million into the bargain before setting up the investment vehicle, Hamilton Portfolio in 1999.

The investment firm has ploughed more than £230million into property and small firms from the technology, media and printing sectors.

Boyle's personal finances hit the buffers with Motherwell, though, as he overestimated the lure of Celtic and Rangers to Lanarkshire supporters.

And, in April 2002, Boyle placed the club in the hands of the administrators after losing a reported £11million of his own money in the chase for glory. As a result, Nevin also left the club along with then manager, Eric Black, although the former believed Boyle should have held off the route of administration for a while longer.

Boyle stood down in the wake of administration with Bill Dickie taking over as chairman, working alongside administrator, Bryan Jackson, to save the club. Nineteen players left Motherwell as cuts hit hard.

But Boyle still worked from the sidelines to help out, and the club emerged from administration two years later. He said: "I was largely responsible for creating a bit of a mess, but I cleaned up my own mess. We tried an experiment and it didn't work."

In 2003, Boyle returned to his original field of expertise as he unveiled Scottish Caribbean tour firm, Go Travel Direct and Zoom airline with his brother.

Things were still tough at Fir Park, though, with the team finishing bottom of the SPL in May 2003 and only surviving relegation by virtue of First Division champions Falkirk's Brockville failing to meet the stadia safety criteria required for the top flight.

In that same season, however, a number of gems were beginning to emerge with James McFadden and Stephen Pearson impressing for the Steelmen – the two players were to prove a crucial ingredient for survival. Everton shelled out £1.25million for McFadden in August 2003 and, just over four months later, Celtic paid £350,000 for Pearson.

Boyle was awarded the OBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours List in June 2004. Although no longer chairman of their club, his success within the travel industry had garnered a Buckingham Palace visit 'for services to business'. He was also gaining further respect within the business community for his contribution to Zoom which this year promoted him in the Sunday Times' Rich List to 644th with an estimated wealth of £120million.

Boyle returned to the Motherwell chair in February this year at the club's agm where a fourth successive annual profit was unveiled.

Some fans had criticised Boyle after their CIS Insurance Cup final appearance in 2005 when the then Fir Park manager Terry Butcher, who had succeeded Black in the dark days of administration, moved to FC Sydney in Australia that summer.

Butcher's assistant, Maurice Malpas, managed only one season in charge for himself before McGhee arrived last year, and to brilliant effect in a season that will forever be associated with captain Phil O'Donnell's death on the Fir Park pitch in December.

Yesterday's confirmation that McGhee has opted for Motherwell and rejected Hearts' overtures may yet see Boyle finally crowned as the fans' champion in Lanarkshire.



The full article contains 810 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 27 May 2008 11:07 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Motherwell FC
 
1

Patrick O'Reilly,

Coatbridge 28/05/2008 04:34:26
He has kept him until Celtic come calling - which will be soon. Strachan has had enough of the Celtic minded boo boys.
2

Northern Hibby.,

28/05/2008 09:03:23
CIS Cup game and the first half of the last league game, is the best football I have seen any team play at Easter Road this season. That is down to McGhee.
3

Who?,

28/05/2008 09:20:08
Boyle should not have been allowed to retain his input into motherwell after putting them into administration. He should have lost his shares and been barred from running another scottish club.

What about the other creditors who lost money? What about the employees who lost their jobs. Did Boyle ever think about them sitting at home wondering how they were going to pay the bills and put food into hungry mouths? Did Boyle offer any of his vast fortune to help them out?

Boyle is typical of those who run scottish football- incompetent, corrupt and only interested in self promotion.

A blind man could see that lanarkshire with its population would never follow a team who was against sectarian biggotry!
4

,

28/05/2008 10:14:00
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

invictager,

Kent 28/05/2008 12:07:26
#3
Did you actually read the articlr. It says he lost 11Million of his own money. Hardly the actions of a man solely out tpo promote himself.
6

Who?,

28/05/2008 14:35:37
#5- Boyle says he lost £11m. I'm willing to bet the figure is nowhere near that much.

Just like vlad at hearts Boyle lent the club the money and then charged interest on it. The club couldn't pay so he pulled the plug. Not only that but Boyle was paying himself over £100k a year as a salary for being a sheer incompetent.

Now Boyle is work over £120m so lets not pretend that he is a victum. The guys ego is almost as appauling as his hair colour (see yesterdays article and the pic of him standing next to Mcghee)
7

Skeptic29,

28/05/2008 16:54:26
#5 well said, regardless if he is worth £120M or £120K to loose 10% of your worth is no joke and to me doesn’t sound like someone who is solely out to promote himself.

#3, of course he thought about the employees, creditors etc. I am sure that fact weighed very heavily on him and was a driving factor to turn the team and its success around. But ultimately he is a business man and it’s extremely easy for you to sit at your computer and comment about him and the individuals who were affected but what you don’t understand is that without him they would have never had their jobs in the first place.

#6 How many individuals do you know that volunteer their time, effort and resources for nothing on a regular basis? Of course he is paying himself a good salary. I don’t know too many good executives that don’t. It’s also very difficult to have an individual wealth of £120M without making some right decisions along the way. So until you have achieved the success that Mr. Boyle has I would feel very reluctant in calling the man incompetent.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.