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Sport as an Investment The London Irish Experience Chairman Brendan Mullin. The London Irish Experience. Background Amateur to Professional Rugby 1995 Difficult years 1996-2002 Transformation 2002-2004 The way forward based on sound financials and a positive rugby environment.
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Sport as an Investment The London Irish Experience Chairman Brendan Mullin
The London Irish Experience • Background • Amateur to Professional Rugby 1995 • Difficult years 1996-2002 • Transformation 2002-2004 • The way forward based on sound financials and a positive rugby environment
Initial Approach re investment 2001 • Interest in sport/ Rugby • Access to finance • Initial reaction • Further analysis
Rugby in England at that time • Prospects for English Rugby • Franchise/ position amongst Premiership • Players strike/ RFU • Primacy of contract issues • Firm position estd RFU/ Premiership clubs
Once principles established LIH investment easy decision • Investment Equation: property backed / commercial prospects • 2001 Losses per annum averaging £1m Crowds at 6,500 • 2004 Profits at £300k Crowds at 11,000 2x 24,000 crowds this season
Investment • Underwritten share offer Stg£2.2m by firm • New and existing investors participation • Deal completed • BM director to represent 20% interest
LI Rugby/ LI Commercial • First major trophy Twickenham - Powergen Cup 2001 • Good squad • Excellent competition - best club tournament in the World
Commercially uncertain • Within 2 Board meetings obvious problems • Management team CEO/ commercial director poor • No serious finance function • Restatement of budgets • Focus on Rugby
Radical action required - traditional amateur operation • Brendan Mullin Chairman role - December 2002 • Second Irish based director added business experience • Action 1. Replaced CEO with Conor O’Shea 2. Replaced Commercial Director with Pat Coyne 3. Full time finance function installed and Finance Director installed 4. Positive proactive Board
February- April 2002 • Very difficult period • Off the field cash deficit £0.5m on continuing losses • On the field fighting relegation against good quality sides • Needed to raise cash • Needed to stay in the Premiership
Results • Beat Bristol last game of season to stay in Premiership • Excitement? • Tension? • Good for business • Cash raised - finances now sound • Bristol experience when relegated
Results • Financial Performance – 2003/2004 profit of £300k • Commercial Performance / positive background • Rugby Performance - consolidation turning to Premiership/ European Cup ambition
Support from various sectors • Fans - Reading/ Madjeski Stadium • Board – more focussed/ aware • Sponsors/ Commercial - tougher conditions but English Rugby very strong • RWC 2003 impact. Rugby replaced cricket as No 2 sport in England
Future • Rugby – compatible with profit • Commercial – sponsors/ crowds/ merchandise • Overall English Rugby - very positive future • Clubs in Premiership profitable • Return on investment
London Irish brand • Guinness/ Diageo • Global push- USA/ Europe? • Unique position amongst Premiership Rugby clubs • Must be competitive on the field Must be commercial off it • Return on investment/ value in franchise