Despite his off the radar wealth it seems that Cavenagh is a team player, linking up with 49ers Enterprises to buy some shares in the troubled Ibrox club before performing boardroom gymnastics to reach 51% of the shares.
To buy up 51% of the shares the consortium would need to buy up every share belonging to the six biggest shareholders, that includes Dave King and Douglas Park, not a peep has been heard from the Lanarkshire based businessman who has an 11.54% stake in the club and has…
There was barely a dissenting voice across the various Ibrox podcasts, websites and forums. It appears that almost 15 years after being introduced to Craig Whyte that every single one of them nod in agreement at everything that they are told.
With more than a decade to reflect on the Whyte saga it appears that Keevins has learned very little, he has been nodding through the 49GERS takeover even though Jackson has quickly moved on to 49ers Enterprises to Andrew Cavenagh and now an unidentified American consortium.
if I’m one of these guys- Dave King, John Bennett, Barry Scott- I’m kind of thinking ‘I agreed this weeks ago, I want the cash to drop into my bank account’.
Many of the people thinking like that are employed by Newsquest, the Daily Record or BBC Scotland, all of them hang onto the upbeat moonbeams being dished out across Ibrox social media.
This is a matter that would undoubtedly have engaged the attention of any intelligent well-motivated sports or financial journalist or broadcaster. So, naturally in Scotland in 2025, no one in the media has paid it any attention whatsoever.
It might just be very simple that Rangers know that this is a very difficult time for their supporters, Season Book renewals may be just around the corner and they just want to put something good out there, some but of news that fires up their supporters after a really…
Strangely it took one Herald subscriber to put some comments on one of the multitude of stories launched by that publisher, the questions that a sensible organisation would ask before lending their name to blatant campaigning.
The last decade of Celtic success has been devastating for the Record, daily sales hover just above 40,000 for a publication that was shifting 500,000 a day at the turn of the century.