Blue watch: Grounds for concern over Everton's Kirkby proposal
FAIR play to the shareholders who have got enough of their fellow stakeholders together to petition the board of Everton for an EGM.
While the tone of the original document they sent out seemed unnecessarily hostile, their statements in the Press during this last week or so have been right on the money.
What they want is for the major shareholders and decision-makers at Everton to clarify crucial areas, including transportation links, the specifications of the ground itself and the levels of debt that will be incurred in pursuing Destination Kirkby.
Even many people who were originally open to the idea of the new stadium, and considered the benefits as enough to make leaving Goodison Park a regrettable but acceptable option, have been questioning for some time whether they are getting what it said on the tin, as it where, when they originally cast their vote.
Mark Grayson, one of the shareholders involved, summed the situation up perfectly when he said, essentially, that if the board believe the project to be in the very best interests of the club going forward then surely they must welcome this opportunity to clarify all the grey areas and dispel all the doubts at an EGM.
Evertonians at large will be watching this situation very carefully, because how the board treat this meeting will give an indication to just how much they truly believe in Destination Kirkby.
Obviously the decision over whether the plans for the retail complex and stadium get called in by the government will have an even bigger impact on project than Everton's EGM. Yet another delay in the announcement has everyone involved on tenterhooks and there is a nagging worry that, despite the club's insistence to the contrary, transfer spending this summer is dependent on the stadium decision.
The longer it goes without knowing the government's plans and, at the same time, continued inactivity on the transfer front, the stronger the suspicions grow that the immediate playing futures of several players depend as much on decisions made in Whitehall as those at Finch Farm.
The confusion over whether Everton have indeed accepted a bid for Andy Johnson from Fulham also serves to muddy the waters even further. The impression is that the club have made it clear that he can go, and when he pulled out of the squad for the Preston game that seemed to only confirm that feeling.
However, Keith Wyness and David Moyes seem to be at pains to say that the player is staying put.
Again, it makes you start to wonder - will a favourable decision over Kirkby mean that there is no need to cash in on one of our most saleable assets to fund other deals? Or are Everton simply trying to play a number of clubs off against each other in order to eke the last dime out the transfer?
Moyes will certainly need a substantial wedge of cash from somewhere if he is to fund the acquisition of the five or six players he says that he requires.
Until he does get them he may need to keep relying on the youngsters who have been getting some invaluable experience during the pre-season matches.
The Premier League will obviously represent a massive step up for any of them, but they showed against experienced opposition at Deepdale on Tuesday night that they will never be found wanting in terms of effort. They did themselves proud from start to finish, with Lukas Jutkiewicz running himself into the ground up front and Dan Gosling showing some real quality as well as tenacity in the centre of midfield.
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