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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

QPR Report Tuesday: Chairman Fernandes on QPR Finances...QPR Accounts?...Rodney's Home Debut Flashback...Alec Stock 1962 Video...Balanta/Yeovi...Steffan Moore Update

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- To those QPR Fans who celebrate: Happy Passover!





Charles Sale - Daily Mail Another loss for Premier League basement boys QPR that doesn't add up

The huge losses racked up by Queens Park Rangers in their desperate attempt to stay in the Barclays Premier League suggest financial control is low among their priorities.

And the club’s accounts for the year ending May 31, 2012 do nothing to discount that theory. It has caused huge amusement elsewhere in the top flight that QPR’s profit and loss numbers don’t add up correctly.
More woe: Harry Redknapp's QPR are struggling on the pitch, and their sums don't add up off it

Auditors have signed off on a loss of £22.577million for last season. But the figures in the P & L account come to £1,000 less — with £38,000 added to £22.538m making £22.576m.

QPR would not comment on a simple mathematical blunder that doesn’t even require the use of a calculator to spot. MailBBC


BBC


QPR's Tony Fernandes says relegation finance fears overstated

QPR owner Tony Fernandes says the club would not be "crippled" by relegation and says they are close to operating within Financial Fair Play.
The club's wage bill doubled to £56m in its first year back in the Premier League and it reported a loss of £22.6m as debts jumped 57% to nearly £90m.
Continue reading the main story
The press have blown it out of proportion. Our wage bill is a lot lower than quoted. The salary of Samba is just ludicrous when I read what they've reported
Fernandes says it has been harder than he thought to make the club sustainable in the top flight but is not concerned.
"No fear at all," Fernandes told BBC World Service's Sportsworld show.
And he insisted the club's financial outlay had been "blown out of all proportion" by the media.
QPR are partly owned by Fernandes, and fellow Malaysian businessmen Kamarudin Bin Meranun and Ruben Emir Gnanalingam, who have a combined 66% stake. The remainder belongs to the Mittal family.
The club, who have spent millions of pounds rebuilding their squad following promotion to the top flight in 2011-12, lie bottom of the Premier League with eight games to go and are seven points from safety.
In January, Rangers twice broke their transfer record, spending more than £20m on Loic Remy and Christopher Samba.
Since taking over at the club in August 2011, Fernandes has invested a significant amount on transfers, and the wage bill and debt is likely to have increased dramatically since the last accounts which go up until May 2012.
There have been two further rounds of heavy spending on players since then, in the summer of 2012 and January this year, and despite the promise of parachute payments if they go down, there are fears the club could be in danger of financial meltdown.
But asked whether relegation would cripple the club, Fernandes replied: "No, I don't think so.

QPR signings under Fernandes

January 2013
  • Tal Ben Haim - free
  • Loic Remy - £8m
  • Christopher Samba - £15m
  • Jermain Jenas - free
  • Andros Townsend - loan
Summer 2012
  • Jose Bosingwa - free
  • Julio Cesar - undisclosed
  • Esteban Granero - undisclosed
  • Sam Magri - free
  • Stephane Mbia - undisclosed
  • Fabio Da Silva - loan
  • Park Ji-Sung - £2m
  • Junior Hoilett - £4m
  • Andrew Johnson - free
  • Ryan Nelsen - free
  • Robert Green - free
  • Samba Diakite - undisclosed
January 2012
  • Federico Macheda - loan
  • Taye Taiwo - loan
  • Nedum Onuoha - undisclosed
  • Samba Diakite - loan
  • Djibril Cisse - £4m
  • Bobby Zamora - undisclosed
"If we went down, we would just have to come back up. I've been in the airline business where we have had [to deal with] Sars, bird flu, earthquakes, and an oil crisis - so relegation is just another thing that would have happened. And we learned. We know what we need to do and we've put the right foundations in place."
Fernandes says he is committed to the club and will remain at Loftus Road even if they do find themselves back in the Championship next season. And he insists the extent of their transfer spending, as well as the wages they are supposed to be paying, has been exaggerated.
The Air Asia owner says QPR are not far offthe limits that Financial Fair Play would introduce, and that he feels they have invested wisely. But he conceded that the difficulties in making the club profitable had surprised him.
"It's hard - much harder than I thought," he said.
"It is tough but hopefully next year there is a lot of TV money, hopefully we are still in the Premier League and that will give us a good chance.
"The press have blown it out of proportion. We are not that far away from FFP anyway.
"Our wage bill is a lot lower than being quoted. I mean the salary of Samba and stuff is just ludicrous when I read what they've reported.
"We are no different to any other club. We had to build a whole new team. None of the players who left QPR are in the Premier League anymore. These things happen."BBC


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