Drumaville Consortium

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The Drumaville Consortium was a group of seven Irish businessmen and one English businessman led by former footballer Niall Quinn, who were involved in the 2006 takeover of English Premier League football club Sunderland A.F.C. The consortium was named after the village of Drumaville in County Donegal.

Contents

Members

The consortium consisted of Niall Quinn and eight other businessmen: [1]

Notes

While Sean Mulryan had been rumoured to have been part of the initial consortium, his name was absent from the list of consortium members revealed on 3 July 2006. However, an article [5] on 13 May 2007 in the Irish Sunday Business Post newspaper claimed that "Markland, a company jointly owned by Mulryan and Paddy Kelly[...] owns 25 per cent of Drumaville", suggesting his silent involvement in the club. Mulryan is also reported to have attended at least one Sunderland match in the 2006–7 season.

The Drumaville Consortium, the vehicle for Sunderland's new owners, was registered in the tax haven of Jersey and comprised eight Irish businessmen, some of them prominent, including John Hays, a travel company owner based in Sunderland, and Quinn.

The latest filing at Jersey's Financial Services Commission shows that at 1 January this year, the consortium had paid just over £20m for investment in Sunderland. The Dublin-based Patrick Kelly, of the major house builder Kelland Homes, was then the largest investor, with 2,271 shares bought for £2,058.53 each — a total of £4.6m. The pub group owners Louis Fitzgerald and Charlie Chawke were the next-largest, each having paid £3m.

Hays and his wife Irene (the chief executive of South Tyneside Council) invested £1.6m combined, as did the builders Jack Tierney and Patsy Byrne. Then the developer and house builder Sean Mulryan bought almost £1.5m of shares, Patrick Beirne, managing director of the plastics company Mergon International, invested £1m, and the housing developer James McEvoy £740,000. A further £1.5m was held for unnamed beneficiaries by a Jersey-based trust company. [6]

Purchase by Short

On 7 September 2008 it was reported [7] in the Irish Sunday Business Post that new shares had been issued to raise additional funding of up to £50 million (€62 million) for new players. It was understood that a number of the original consortium members did not take part in the fund rising and therefore their percentage share holding reduced. Niall Quinn was quoted as saying that the Drumaville Consortium was still intact and the individuals behind it remained the driving force behind the club.

On 25 September 2008 it was reported [8] that Ellis Short, a Dallas-based billionaire Irish-American fund manager, became the largest single shareholder in the Drumaville Consortium with a 30% buy-in. It was not known how this affected the shares of the original members. Short is one of the co-founders of Lone Star Funds.

On 27 May 2009 Short announced that he had purchased the remaining shares of the club, becoming the sole owner. Quinn remained as chairman.

Takeover dates

Takeover

Short's buyout

Notes

  1. Leading pub tycoons back Quinn's Sunderland bid (The Times)
  2. Chawke happy with 22m pub
  3. RTÉ News: Man convicted over Chawke shooting
  4. Louis and Helen Fitzgerald [ dead link ]
  5. Mulryan revealed as Sunderland stakeholder Archived 16 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  6. "Sports & Recreation". www.buzzle.com. Archived from the original on 21 July 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. Sunderland FC secures €62 million in new fund raising round (Sunday Business Post)
  8. Ellis Short becomes Sunderland's largest shareholder (Electronic Telegraph)
  9. (BBC News)
  10. (BBC News)

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