Popular Post davieG 17,691 Posted 28 July 2020 Popular Post Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 https://www.lcfc.com/news/1744901/khun-top-on-201920--the-clubs-continued-progress?fbclid=IwAR2W054IJiSeXKq2BXcddlT-BRDqt5UmPIluvCgI9sG1FYeRfe1Zz3yYGKo Approaching 10 years since King Power’s takeover of Leicester City, Club Chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha spoke to CITY Matchday Magazine on Sunday… Khun Top, you’ve seen so much in your 10 years with Leicester City, but surely nothing like this season. How will you remember it? I think I’ll remember it with a lot of different feelings. As a team and as a Club we’ve shown amazing potential at times this season, but continue to learn important lessons that will make us stronger going forward. For a young team and a growing club surpassing people’s expectations, we have had to grow up quickly and learn to cope with being held to the new standards we continue to set for ourselves. That’s not easy, but it’s not something we should fear. It’s something to which we must adjust if we want to be sustainably successful in the long term. Of course, the impact of COVID-19 means the season will be remembered for the absence of supporters during these final nine games, which has been a reminder, if any were needed, of the importance of fans to the passion, energy and appeal of the game. It hasn’t been the same without them. But I’ll also remember the way those same fans have supported our efforts to reach out to communities in need. I learned quite quickly that Leicester was a special place, but the way its people have rallied around to support each other through this crisis has been incredible and we’ve been very proud to be part of that. How significant do you expect the impact of COVID-19 to be on the Club as we move into next season and further? There are challenges that are specific to the Club, but also challenges that football needs to address generally. The first of those, assuming it is safe to do so, is bringing supporters back into the stadiums. Premier League clubs have done an outstanding job to fulfil the remaining fixtures to complete this season, but the gradual reintroduction of supporters is crucial to Premier League football maintaining the passion that makes it so compelling. We’re encouraged by the signs for next season and are preparing a strategy for how to make the games accessible to people while building up stadium occupation. It was always clear that such a situation was likely to affect our plans in terms of our new training ground in Seagrave and the proposed development of the King Power Stadium site, but it represents no more than a brief pause. Our resolve to deliver on those capital projects remains. The training ground is nearing completion and we intend to resume consultation on stadium expansion by the end of 2020. It’s been a frustrating period for the Club’s Academy, with football in all age groups beneath the First Team remaining suspended, but we will have a process in place to ensure this period doesn’t adversely affect the development of our young players or their opportunities to impress and move forward on our player pathway. Our ambitions and long-term objectives have not changed. We cannot anticipate the world’s ongoing response to the pandemic or how society will emerge from it, but the Club is a reference point for communities at home and abroad so we have to set an example and do what we feel is the right thing. We took the necessary steps early in the process to secure jobs within the organisation and to facilitate football’s return, which will hopefully have a positive impact on the associated industries that rely on its success. All of this must, of course, be kept in perspective. This pandemic has claimed thousands of lives all over the world and the steps that have been taken to protect people’s health have been necessary. As every other business in the world, we have to prepare for its implications on our future, but that will never be at the risk of our personnel or the communities we represent. You’ve been a regular at King Power Stadium in the last 10 years, how have you found following the games from afar in the same way our fans have? Very difficult! There have been times in the last 10 years where I have missed games and it’s never easy to watch from afar, but to be away from the team and the Club for this period of time, particularly at such an important stage of the season, has been tough. I’m probably not much fun to be around when the games are on! But I think about the supporters who haven’t missed a home game, or even an away game, for 10, 15, 20 years or more. As hard as I have found it, it must have been so much worse for them. You see how much it means to people and it drives everyone at the Club to work harder and give that bit more. The first game back in a full stadium will be a special occasion, but we should never forget this experience and how it underlined the importance of fans to the game. From a footballing perspective, has the break made it a difficult season to assess? The fan in me would say yes. The Chairman in me might be a little more considered and I think that’s important. Our performances and points return during the first half of the season was beyond anything we would have expected – some extraordinary games, a level of consistency you wouldn’t expect from such a young group and a really exciting league position. It’s been a mixed second half, as the mental and physical demands of a long season, progressing in multiple competitions, have caught up with us and a good measure of perspective would be needed for any season like that. It’ll be 10 years since King Power’s takeover of the Club this summer. To what extent do you feel the stakes of Sunday's game demonstrated the progress the Club has made during that time? We have said from the first day we arrived that this was about building sustainable success, investing for the long-term and putting the Club on a sound footing from which to grow. It’s the context which demonstrates that. We’ve already achieved the Club’s two best Premier League finishes in its history in that time. We have a young, hungry and talented squad, including players that have been on the journey with us since the Championship. Our Academy remains a prolific source of talent, including several players that have become regulars in our first team. Outstanding players have arrived and continue to subscribe to the culture of our Club. Others in whom we have invested have moved on, contributing to our sustainability and power to reinvest and we have continued to move forward. This year we will move into one of the best training facilities in Europe and we will soon be moving forward in our plans to redevelop the King Power Stadium site. Our infrastructure is better equipped now than it has ever been. So, for me, it’s not just about the place we have reached in 10 years, but the principles that have enabled us to get there and that will enable us to stay there. You’ve built such a special bond with the people of Leicester in the last 10 years. How important has that been to the Club’s progress? It wouldn’t have been possible without that support. I have always believed in the power of good deeds, how they can multiply and what that can help communities to achieve. For every gesture or donation we have ever made to the people of this city, it has been met with a level of love and support we could never have imagined. It was one of the reasons we moved quickly at the start of the pandemic to support community causes such as University Hospitals NHS Trust, Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust and Age UK Leicestershire & Rutland. We’ve tried to look deeper into the community to support less prominent causes through the Gift of a Wish programme and will continue to make support available as Leicester emerges from the grip of the pandemic. For everything our communities have given the Club, both under King Power’s ownership and during the 126 years before it, it’s our duty to offer that support. We’ve seen this week the announcement of a campaign to extend support to the people of Thailand. Can you tell us some more about Thailand Smiles With You? It’s a project on which King Power has worked very closely with the Club and the Tourism Authority of Thailand in recent weeks, aiding the country’s recovery from the pandemic through supporting its valuable tourism industry. The Thailand Smiles With You shirt will be worn by the players throughout the 2020/21 Premier League season and provides a unique opportunity to strengthen the relationship between the Club, the city of Leicester and football fans throughout Thailand. Just as we have tried to do in Leicester, this is an opportunity for us to make a real difference to a great number of lives in Thailand, and is made possible through the special relationship that exists between King Power, Leicester City and our supporters all over the world. Finally, what would be your message to the Leicester City supporters, looking forward? It can only be a message of thanks. Thank you for your support through this extraordinary season and for supporting each other through a unique period in any of our lifetimes. The support we are able to offer to communities in Leicester, Thailand and anywhere else is only possible because we have a passionate, engaged fan base that inspires the Club to keep improving, to keep growing and to keep fighting to realise our ambitions. 15 5 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Popular Post StanSP 28,469 Posted 28 July 2020 Popular Post Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 (edited) Love him. Just always seems so humble and thankful yet level-headed and doesn't let success go to his head. He's here for the long-term and wants to see us grow and be bigger and better. Will be tough at times but they'll be here to see us through it, like we as fans will be too. Can only wish the best for him as owner for our club and just in life in general, especially with what he went through in 2018. He loves the city, loves the people and we'll always be grateful for he and his family to taking us up a few levels in stature considering where we started the decade... On a club note, this is good to hear in terms of an update, per se Quote It was always clear that such a situation was likely to affect our plans in terms of our new training ground in Seagrave and the proposed development of the King Power Stadium site, but it represents no more than a brief pause. Our resolve to deliver on those capital projects remains. The training ground is nearing completion and we intend to resume consultation on stadium expansion by the end of 2020. Edited 28 July 2020 by StanSP 5 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
urban.spaceman 32,412 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 12 minutes ago, davieG said: https://www.lcfc.com/news/1744901/khun-top-on-201920--the-clubs-continued-progress?fbclid=IwAR2W054IJiSeXKq2BXcddlT-BRDqt5UmPIluvCgI9sG1FYeRfe1Zz3yYGKo Approaching 10 years since King Power’s takeover of Leicester City, Club Chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha spoke to CITY Matchday Magazine on Sunday… Khun Top, you’ve seen so much in your 10 years with Leicester City, but surely nothing like this season. How will you remember it? I think I’ll remember it with a lot of different feelings. As a team and as a Club we’ve shown amazing potential at times this season, but continue to learn important lessons that will make us stronger going forward. For a young team and a growing club surpassing people’s expectations, we have had to grow up quickly and learn to cope with being held to the new standards we continue to set for ourselves. That’s not easy, but it’s not something we should fear. It’s something to which we must adjust if we want to be sustainably successful in the long term. Of course, the impact of COVID-19 means the season will be remembered for the absence of supporters during these final nine games, which has been a reminder, if any were needed, of the importance of fans to the passion, energy and appeal of the game. It hasn’t been the same without them. But I’ll also remember the way those same fans have supported our efforts to reach out to communities in need. I learned quite quickly that Leicester was a special place, but the way its people have rallied around to support each other through this crisis has been incredible and we’ve been very proud to be part of that. How significant do you expect the impact of COVID-19 to be on the Club as we move into next season and further? There are challenges that are specific to the Club, but also challenges that football needs to address generally. The first of those, assuming it is safe to do so, is bringing supporters back into the stadiums. Premier League clubs have done an outstanding job to fulfil the remaining fixtures to complete this season, but the gradual reintroduction of supporters is crucial to Premier League football maintaining the passion that makes it so compelling. We’re encouraged by the signs for next season and are preparing a strategy for how to make the games accessible to people while building up stadium occupation. It was always clear that such a situation was likely to affect our plans in terms of our new training ground in Seagrave and the proposed development of the King Power Stadium site, but it represents no more than a brief pause. Our resolve to deliver on those capital projects remains. The training ground is nearing completion and we intend to resume consultation on stadium expansion by the end of 2020. It’s been a frustrating period for the Club’s Academy, with football in all age groups beneath the First Team remaining suspended, but we will have a process in place to ensure this period doesn’t adversely affect the development of our young players or their opportunities to impress and move forward on our player pathway. Our ambitions and long-term objectives have not changed. We cannot anticipate the world’s ongoing response to the pandemic or how society will emerge from it, but the Club is a reference point for communities at home and abroad so we have to set an example and do what we feel is the right thing. We took the necessary steps early in the process to secure jobs within the organisation and to facilitate football’s return, which will hopefully have a positive impact on the associated industries that rely on its success. All of this must, of course, be kept in perspective. This pandemic has claimed thousands of lives all over the world and the steps that have been taken to protect people’s health have been necessary. As every other business in the world, we have to prepare for its implications on our future, but that will never be at the risk of our personnel or the communities we represent. You’ve been a regular at King Power Stadium in the last 10 years, how have you found following the games from afar in the same way our fans have? Very difficult! There have been times in the last 10 years where I have missed games and it’s never easy to watch from afar, but to be away from the team and the Club for this period of time, particularly at such an important stage of the season, has been tough. I’m probably not much fun to be around when the games are on! But I think about the supporters who haven’t missed a home game, or even an away game, for 10, 15, 20 years or more. As hard as I have found it, it must have been so much worse for them. You see how much it means to people and it drives everyone at the Club to work harder and give that bit more. The first game back in a full stadium will be a special occasion, but we should never forget this experience and how it underlined the importance of fans to the game. From a footballing perspective, has the break made it a difficult season to assess? The fan in me would say yes. The Chairman in me might be a little more considered and I think that’s important. Our performances and points return during the first half of the season was beyond anything we would have expected – some extraordinary games, a level of consistency you wouldn’t expect from such a young group and a really exciting league position. It’s been a mixed second half, as the mental and physical demands of a long season, progressing in multiple competitions, have caught up with us and a good measure of perspective would be needed for any season like that. It’ll be 10 years since King Power’s takeover of the Club this summer. To what extent do you feel the stakes of Sunday's game demonstrated the progress the Club has made during that time? We have said from the first day we arrived that this was about building sustainable success, investing for the long-term and putting the Club on a sound footing from which to grow. It’s the context which demonstrates that. We’ve already achieved the Club’s two best Premier League finishes in its history in that time. We have a young, hungry and talented squad, including players that have been on the journey with us since the Championship. Our Academy remains a prolific source of talent, including several players that have become regulars in our first team. Outstanding players have arrived and continue to subscribe to the culture of our Club. Others in whom we have invested have moved on, contributing to our sustainability and power to reinvest and we have continued to move forward. This year we will move into one of the best training facilities in Europe and we will soon be moving forward in our plans to redevelop the King Power Stadium site. Our infrastructure is better equipped now than it has ever been. So, for me, it’s not just about the place we have reached in 10 years, but the principles that have enabled us to get there and that will enable us to stay there. You’ve built such a special bond with the people of Leicester in the last 10 years. How important has that been to the Club’s progress? It wouldn’t have been possible without that support. I have always believed in the power of good deeds, how they can multiply and what that can help communities to achieve. For every gesture or donation we have ever made to the people of this city, it has been met with a level of love and support we could never have imagined. It was one of the reasons we moved quickly at the start of the pandemic to support community causes such as University Hospitals NHS Trust, Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust and Age UK Leicestershire & Rutland. We’ve tried to look deeper into the community to support less prominent causes through the Gift of a Wish programme and will continue to make support available as Leicester emerges from the grip of the pandemic. For everything our communities have given the Club, both under King Power’s ownership and during the 126 years before it, it’s our duty to offer that support. We’ve seen this week the announcement of a campaign to extend support to the people of Thailand. Can you tell us some more about Thailand Smiles With You? It’s a project on which King Power has worked very closely with the Club and the Tourism Authority of Thailand in recent weeks, aiding the country’s recovery from the pandemic through supporting its valuable tourism industry. The Thailand Smiles With You shirt will be worn by the players throughout the 2020/21 Premier League season and provides a unique opportunity to strengthen the relationship between the Club, the city of Leicester and football fans throughout Thailand. Just as we have tried to do in Leicester, this is an opportunity for us to make a real difference to a great number of lives in Thailand, and is made possible through the special relationship that exists between King Power, Leicester City and our supporters all over the world. Finally, what would be your message to the Leicester City supporters, looking forward? It can only be a message of thanks. Thank you for your support through this extraordinary season and for supporting each other through a unique period in any of our lifetimes. The support we are able to offer to communities in Leicester, Thailand and anywhere else is only possible because we have a passionate, engaged fan base that inspires the Club to keep improving, to keep growing and to keep fighting to realise our ambitions. Bit too small. 3 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
davieG 17,691 Posted 28 July 2020 Author Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 4 minutes ago, urban.spaceman said: Bit too small. Yay! I forgot to click on the 'plain text' I'll expect a PM reprimand from @Mark anytime soon. PS So big you had to quote it Quote Link to post Share on other sites
StanSP 28,469 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 3 minutes ago, urban.spaceman said: Bit too small. You can talk 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Sly 1,954 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 5 minutes ago, urban.spaceman said: Bit too small. That was my opinion as well. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Charl91 2,588 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 Best owner, bar none. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
los dedos 636 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 11 minutes ago, urban.spaceman said: Bit too small. With you quoting it . Took me 5 minutes just to get to this point 4 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Foxes96 238 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 Love how he see’s himself as a fan as much and an owner. Top man. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
That_Dude 1,898 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 I absolutely love how he speaks simultaneously with passion and mesure about the club, its history and aspirations while not forgetting the fans, the city. He seems to have matured even more since his dad passed away. The latter would be proud. Top man. 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
urban.spaceman 32,412 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 16 minutes ago, StanSP said: You can talk How very dare you. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
foxes_rule1978 3,471 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 Took along time scrolling down through that anyway great read and I do love Top! fantastic for our club Quote Link to post Share on other sites
SheppyFox 3,477 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 👍🏻 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Poznan34 888 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 Quote As a team and as a Club we’ve shown amazing potential at times this season, but continue to learn important lessons that will make us stronger going forward. About the most diplomatic way to say we completely wet the bed second half of the season 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Fox of WA 30 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 This guy, his family, and his company are why I'm still optimistic even after the end of last season. It's hard to see what they've done and are doing and not imagine a steady progression forward. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
FoxinNotts 1,655 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 Top man is Top Quote Link to post Share on other sites
David Hankey 641 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 We all know there are no better owners in football. If Clubs across the world had owners who were half of what Top and his family are football would be in a far better place. It's about time football had awards for the best run Clubs, Top would win it season after season. Well done, Top, top man!! 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
ajthefox 2,579 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 It's a really well written statement, really echoes how a lot of us probably feel and I think that says a lot. Top is fantastic, we really did win the lottery when Milan sold the club to the family and the KP group. Onwards and upwards. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
weller54 9,340 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 3 hours ago, FoxinNotts said: Top man is Top He's tip top is Top. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Bourbon Fox 703 Posted 28 July 2020 Report Share Posted 28 July 2020 I love this man I LOVE HIM SO MUCH 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Unique FC 175 Posted 29 July 2020 Report Share Posted 29 July 2020 (edited) In the years since Top and his father bought our club it is incredible to think where we are now. I know we are highly frustrated and annoyed at the collapse second half of the season. On a positive note: - We are 5th - We have the top goal scorer in the league - Training ground to rival any club in the world - Increased stadium capacity coming next - Playing in Europe with a realistic chance of going far in this competition. Winner gets Champions league place! - We have gone from Mattock / Stearman / McCauley / Wellens / Matt Oakley to Chilwell / Ricardo / Soyuncu / Ndidi and Maddison. Half of our starting 11 are arguably worth north of 50million each. - Fans - Regularly free gifts / drinks / Merchandise / Clappers (some like and some do not but shows they care about the atmosphere that can involve everyone one of us in the stadium). - Our owners have done all of this without spending fortunes like other clubs. We have the best owners in the game. Edited 29 July 2020 by Unique FC 3 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
UHDrive 751 Posted 29 July 2020 Report Share Posted 29 July 2020 "we intend to resume consultation on stadium expansion by the end of 2020" Looks like he's put the stadium redevelopment back i.e. consulation/planning permission Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Wolfox 4,503 Posted 29 July 2020 Report Share Posted 29 July 2020 I’m probably not much fun to be around when the games are on! He’s one of us isn’t he? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Spudulike 3,481 Posted 29 July 2020 Report Share Posted 29 July 2020 51 minutes ago, UHDrive said: "we intend to resume consultation on stadium expansion by the end of 2020" Looks like he's put the stadium redevelopment back i.e. consulation/planning permission Perhaps the first consultation is now out of date and new consultation is needed. Can never have enough consultation. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
mozartfox 5,260 Posted 29 July 2020 Report Share Posted 29 July 2020 1 hour ago, Wolfox said: I’m probably not much fun to be around when the games are on! He’s one of us isn’t he? Yep. He probably reads the Match Thread on FT and thinks WTF are this lot taking? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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