Everton might well feel hard done by over yesterday’s 0-1 defeat at the Hill Dickinson by Arsenal with solid penalty calls for the hosts denied. But prospects for the club are better than they have been for many years. Yet when the Premier League was set up Everton were seen as one of the top clubs that needed to be involved. For four years every department at Everton had a relegation plan and one for promotion back to the Premier League. The financial turmoil that engulfed Moshiri’s reign resulted in instability over who exactly was going to own the club and a period of perennial due diligence from interested parties that raised expectations but actually prevented progress. As one potential owner after another studied the club accounts, the Kaminski Group, MSP Sports Capital and 777/A-Cap were previous suitors, Moshiri did not want to sink any more money into Everton, aware that he already faced losses of about £750million. A tortuous, t...
Chelsea still believe there is a chance of them building a new stadium at Earls Court, even though an alternative plan for the land has been approved by both councils involved. The Earls Court Development Company (ECDC) is now close to receiving full planning permission for a mixed-use development on the same land that had been mooted as a potential site for a new stadium for Chelsea. However, club sources, on the condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to speak publicly, have indicated to the New York Times that they are still considering all options for the future of their stadium — including a new ground at Earls Court. The future of Chelsea’s stadium is not a new debate. Under previous owner Roman Abramovich, the club submitted an offer for the Battersea Power Station site in 2012, in which they proposed to build a 60,000-capacity ground, but a Malaysian consortium purchased the site instead. In 2017, Chelsea secured planning permission for a 60,000-seat stad...