by stealthpapes »
25 Oct 2025 15:48
As I understand it, anyone who is owed money* can get a winding-up order in place but there's a strong, rather set in stone, hierarchy as to who gets paid their debts first.
EDIT - from the Guardian today
If the club are sold, Chansiri will receive money from the transaction as the leading shareholder and lender. But legal requirements mean he will come towards the bottom of the pile. Under the football-creditors rule the first people to be paid off will be players, managers and other staff as well as other clubs who may be owed money. Then come the club’s secured creditors, those who have collateral against their lendings, followed by unsecured creditors such as HMRC and, finally, shareholders. The further down the order of priority the less likely those debts are to be repaid in full and Chansiri’s estimated loans of £100m to the club are understood to be unsecured.
It does feel like the EFL and HMRC have subtly changed their approaches over the last few years.
(*So, going back in time, it was Eric Hall who moved to put Leicester in administration in 2002-3, believed to be a small fee but it came alongside Dennis Wise, who he was representing, trying to sue Leicester for wrongful dismissal. For punching Callum Davidson.)