I liked him in so much as he would regularly be on the old forum talking to us and engaging in conversation with the fans...bringbackthecowshed wrote:I Liked him
And that he kept the club afloat for all those years.
I liked him in so much as he would regularly be on the old forum talking to us and engaging in conversation with the fans...bringbackthecowshed wrote:I Liked him
cambgull wrote: We had one, he was called Mike Bateson. He was a very shrewd businessman and Torquay often finished off the season in profit.
No one liked him.
Absolutely. And while that's fine for, oh, I dunno, let me pick a business randomly, a windows company, football clubs are different. They don't exist simply as money-making endeavours. Being profitable is helpful in that it (theoretically) increases you future chance of sporting success, but it isn't the *point* of the exercise.superwilf wrote:A good business man like Mr Bateson would not be concerned with winning popularity polls but only with running a business or football club successfully.
cambgull wrote: We had one, he was called Mike Bateson. He was a very shrewd businessman and Torquay often finished off the season in profit.
No one liked him.
I quite liked him. Most of his tenure we were pretty solid financially and kept our head above water, we had some real low moments but a couple of promotions, some near misses and a few good times also. He could be a bit arrogant, but a lot of successful businessmen are.by bringbackthecowshed » Today, 11:11
I Liked him
I remember those days and had a bit of chat a few times with him. One night in particular we were talking about Elvis as Mr B said he is a fan as well, I tried to persuade him to use "A Little Less Conversation" as the teams run out tune, he was intrigued but felt it might cost. If I remember rightly he gave up using the forum after a while because of a lot of abuse he started to get. Likewise he was quite accessible on matchdays and often stood by the mini/family stand so supporters who wished to chat with him about issues etc could, I remember some people giving him quite a bit of stick and eventually he had to knock this practice on the head also. Also there was the time he strolled across the pitch and addressed an angry mob of us on the pop after the Scunthorpe 1-8 whipping. That took some bottle and front, although everybody behaved quite well in the circumstances.by PhilGull » Today, 13:39
I liked him in so much as he would regularly be on the old forum talking to us and engaging in conversation with the fans...
And that he kept the club afloat for all those years.
To be fair when he first took over he was very enthusiastic and put investment in, there were many quotes from him about ambition and how we were going for promotion, how he would eat his hat if we didnt go up, we made a record signing that year in Wes Saunders, also added Tommy Tynan among others, we had a record breaking start to the season and were top for a while, it tailed off but we were promoted via the play-offs. Big Mike never seemed so enthusiastic after that.by happytorq » Today, 14:59
people didn't like him because his running the club well (as a business) meant that ambition had to be curtailed. I think I heard a quote from him stating that the best thing for him would be for Torquay to lose in the playoff final every year (i don't know if this is true, but it would fit what I know of him).
I remember that day, Andy McFarlane destroyed us with 4 goals, so MB went and signed him.chunkygull wrote:Also there was the time he strolled across the pitch and addressed an angry mob of us on the pop after the Scunthorpe 1-8 whipping. That took some bottle and front, although everybody behaved quite well in the circumstances.
Oh Big Andy Mac I loved that man but god he was crap at football!cambgull wrote: I remember that day, Andy McFarlane destroyed us with 4 goals, so MB went and signed him.
Unfortunately, he was bloody useless and invented the "duck-jump" where despite being 6 foot 45 inches tall, he still managed to jump for a header and then duck at the last second so the ball flies over his head. He then turns around and gesticulates to his team mates that he had no idea how the ball went over his head and the cross should be better next time. Better, because it needs to be arrowed directly at his forehead giving him absolutely no chance to get out the way of it.
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