Hull City face battle to avoid administration beyond relegation

• Hull will seek to restructure loans with assorted creditors
• Club anxious not to start next season with 10-point penalty

Hull City face a battle to avoid going into administration or entering a creditors’ voluntary agreement as they attempt to trade through their financial crisis. Despite being £35m in debt, the east Yorkshire club is frantically renegotiating a series of loans with assorted creditors and hopes to make a formal announcement about a financial restructuring plan at the end of this week.

By side-stepping both administration and a CVA, Hull – who, privately, have no intention of reinstating Phil Brown as their manager – would avoid starting life in the Championship burdened with the 10-point deduction automatically imposed by the Football League in such circumstances.

Hull were effectively relegated – it would take an arithmetical miracle for them to retain their Premier League status – on Saturday when they lost at home to Sunderland and today the club’s owner, Russell Bartlett, and his chairman, Adam Pearson, convened an emergency board meeting.

Afterwards a club source said: “The owner has reiterated his belief we can manage to continue trading through the process of restructuring the club’s cost base. There should be a formal announcement to this effect by the weekend.”

The Essex-based Bartlett is a reclusive figure but, before that meeting, he made a rare public comment to play down talk of administration at the KC Stadium. “We face a tough period to trade through the transitional period and readjust the business to life in the Championship but I am confident we can do that,” said Hull’s owner, who must bitterly regret failing to insert mandatory relegation clauses, which would have lowered remuneration by 40% or 50% in the event of a fall into the Championship, into the contracts of Hull’s players.

“We are presently preparing plans to trade through, to significantly lower the wage bill and potentially restructure other liabilities,” he added.

Pearson, who succeeded Paul Duffen as chairman late last year, shortly after Hull’s auditor, Deloitte, warned the club faced a struggle to continue as a going concern, has been charged with the not inconsiderable task of trimming Hull’s £40m-per-annum wage bill to £15m.

A fire sale seems inevitable but Pearson will struggle to part company with Jimmy Bullard, the club’s biggest earner. The injury-prone £45,000-a-week midfielder has three years left on his contract, uninsurable knees and would almost certainly fail a medical.

While George Boateng is out of contract this summer, other high earners already being made available include Stephen Hunt, Geovanni and Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink.

The identity of Hull’s manager for the 2010-11 campaign remains unclear but the only way Brown – on gardening leave after being replaced by Iain Dowie in mid-March – could return to his post is if an administrator decided to reappoint him.

Brown, the subject of a verbal savaging by Boateng on Saturday evening, had fallen out with several players and his relationship with Pearson is understood to have become untenable. He was put on gardening leave because Hull could not afford to pay him off in full and it is hoped a settlement on the remaining year of his contract will soon be agreed.

Although on Saturday Pearson, whose bond with Bartlett is believed to be strained, said he could conceivably work with Brown again, the chairman was merely answering a question diplomatically lest administration became a reality. Dowie, whose short-term deal ends next month, is keen to stay on but his future will not be determined until at least the end of the week.

It could yet hinge on whether he manages to keep Hull in 18th position on the season’s final day – finishing a place above Burnley would be worth £750,000 to a board counting every penny.

Hull CityBusinessPremier LeagueLouise Taylorguardian.co.uk

Iain Dowie tells Hull to turn heat up on Aston Villa

• ‘This week has got to bring at least one win’
• Hull manager believes possession is key to survival

Hull City will aim to stop Aston Villa from playing their counter-attacking game tonight as they seek a vital home victory in east Yorkshire. Iain Dowie’s side sit third bottom of the Premier League, three points adrift of safety, but the interim manager remains optimistic relegation can be avoided.

‘This week has got to bring at least one win; beating Villa would change the whole picture,’ Dowie, below, whose team face Sunderland at the KC

Wigan and Hull unconcerned by Premier League eviction ‘plans’

• Premier League may rule on groundsharing
• State of pitches at KC and DW Stadiums a concern

Hull and Wigan say they are unconcerned at suggestions that the Premier League football clubs with whom they share a ground could be put under pressure to evict them.

The Premier League clubs may debate the issue at their summer meeting with a possibility of banning dual use of stadiums, following concerns over the state of the pitches at the Hull’s KC and especially Wigan’s DW Stadium this winter.

But Hull have a 25-year lease to play at the KC under the terms of the deal struck between the city council and the stadium management company, and Wigan Athletic have been at pains to stress that the recent problems with their pitch were not caused by rugby.

Everton submitted an official complaint about the condition of the DW Stadium pitch in late January, before the Super League season had even kicked off, and the Rugby Football League has agreed to Wigan’s request to avoid any home matches in May to allow the football club to carry out further work on the surface that was relaid last month.

The situation is complicated by the possibility that Wigan Athletic or more likely Hull City may be relegated from the Premier League.

Wigan and Hull are hopeful that the injury blows they suffered yesterday may not be as serious as first feared.

Amos Roberts, the Australian wing who scored two tries in Wigan’s 54-14 win against Wakefield but left the field on a stretcher after colliding with the post in struggling over for his second, is now not thought to have broken his leg, as was first feared, although the Super League leaders are anxiously awaiting further details of his knee ligament damage.

It is a similar story for Hull whose veteran scrum-half Sean Long will have further scans this afternoon on the ankle injury that forced him out of their 29-10 home defeat by Warrington. Long is expected to be out for weeks rather than months, although that still makes him a major doubt for consecutive games against Leeds in the Super League at Headingley on Sunday and the Challenge Cup at the KC Stadium the following Saturday.

Hull expect Long’s half-back partner Richard Horne and the influential Australian forward Craig Fitzgibbon to return at Leeds after missing the Warrington game with injuries sustained in their Good Friday win at Hull KR.

Wigan hope that Cameron Phelps and George Carmont will be fit for their trip to Salford to lessen the disruption caused by Roberts’s absence, although they also have a doubt over the New Zealand scrum-half Thomas Leuluai who suffered bruising to his foot against Wakefield.

Super LeagueHull FCWigan WarriorsRugby leaguePremier LeagueHull CityWigan AthleticAndy Wilsonguardian.co.uk