Kernowgull wrote: Uh, maybe the prospective new owners have said they want it to stay private until complete. That would be a good reason.
Accept your point but will have to agree to disagree - aside from a possible great escape the place is still foaming with frustration as the most irrational, eccentric, self-defeating, dysfunctional, implausible football club in the conference. A club that seems hell-bent on turning incompetence into an art form. A club where every good idea feels like beginner's luck and the next lamp-post is always around the corner. This season has been painfully typical and nobody can be entirely sure where it all leads now with the onset of a buy out of the club that is shrouded by a veil of secrecy. Torquay Utd is a football club that serves the community it should be open and transparent and not permitted to stay private in the interest of lining some directors pocket with gold coins.
There is the FA's owners-and-directors' test which is there, supposedly, to safeguard clubs but it does not root out everyone, as the supporters of Hereford, can testify. I can remember when Notts County were taken over in 2009, the new owners (presumably in the name of the club) entered into contracts , yet by the time they had resold the club in the same year they still had not satisfied the FA that they were fit and proper persons - indeed, the FA (let alone the club's fans) never even knew who those owners were.
Yes some people do leave a mark on a football club but many tend to leave a stain. Torquay United is a story of how not to run a football club, and it will be the thickest, heaviest book on your shelf. As supporters we may not except any sympathy but, by God, we deserve it