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FOOTBALL

Sheffield Wednesday owner’s plea to fans: pay off our £2m debt

Dejphon Chansiri says 20,000 supporters giving £100 each can help alleviate ‘cashflow problems’ – and he’s promised to pay the money back ‘with interest’
Chansiri has come under fire from Wednesday fans and threatened to stop putting money into the club
Chansiri has come under fire from Wednesday fans and threatened to stop putting money into the club
MICHAEL REGAN/GETTY IMAGES

Sheffield Wednesday’s owner Dejphon Chansiri has asked the club’s fans to raise £2 million in the coming days to clear debts and pay wages.

The millionaire Thai businessman said he had a problem with “cashflow” and has asked for supporters to bail the club out of their mess, promising to pay them back with interest.

The EFL has placed the club, who are bottom of the Sky Bet Championship, under a registration embargo — meaning they cannot register any new players without prior written consent — over money owed to HM Revenue & Customs, and Chansiri revealed that if those debts are not paid in the coming days the club face a three-window transfer ban.

Chansiri also said that players and staff may not be paid this month and has called on supporters to help. In an interview with the Sheffield Star, he said: “If 20,000 people gave £100 then it’s £2 million, and it’d be clear — so we can finish it.

“That would cover everything, [the money owed to] HMRC and the wages. That would need to be done before November 10 if they don’t want to pass the 30 days, but that means that there can be no next time.

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“It’d need to be before to make it safe — if it was on the fifth then there would be ten days left. If we were to hit 30 days then we’ll get a ban for three windows.”

Sheffield Wednesday owner Dejphon Chansiri attacks fans

Chansiri, who has owned the club since 2015, has asked for the money now because of what he called “cashflow problems” and claims supporters would be paid back “with interest” if they were to give him the money.

In September the Wednesday owner threatened not to invest any more money into the club because he believed he was being treated unfairly by the supporters. Wednesday have made their worst start to a season — despite finally winning at the 14th time of asking against Rotherham United on Sunday — and fans protested against his ownership by throwing tennis balls on to the pitch during a 1-1 draw with Middlesbrough.

Stewards clear the pitch of tennis balls thrown by fans in protest during the match against Middlesbrough at Hillsborough in September
Stewards clear the pitch of tennis balls thrown by fans in protest during the match against Middlesbrough at Hillsborough in September
MATT WEST/SHUTTERSTOCK/REX FEATURES

However, Chansiri’s response to the fans’ concerns has merely been to ask them — rather than him — to take financial responsibility.

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“I will not inject any more money into the club if I am being treated unfairly,” he wrote in an open letter to supporters in September. “Those fans who create trouble to the club and myself and believe that they are the real owner of the club need to be responsible for the financial matters of the club from now on.

“If they can take such financial responsibility to save the club and they believe that I am not the right owner, they may propose any buyer who I believe can operate the club for the benefit of all stakeholders going forward.”

Gill Furniss, the MP for Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough, said that the development was “very concerning” and stressed that it was the responsibility of the owners to fix their financial situation and not the fans.

Wednesday are nine days into a “persistent default” under EFL regulations, having failed to pay their HMRC debt, and if they fail to pay players’ wages, which Chansiri said was a possibility, they would have another default against their name. If clubs accrue 30 days of breaches between July 1 and June 30 they are liable to be banned from registering new players for three transfer windows.

In response to Chansiri’s comments, Sheffield Wednesday Supporters’ Trust posted a statement on X (formerly Twitter) which read: “Regarding the chairman’s interview . . . we are astounded by the request for fans to pay a £2m HMRC bill. A fit and proper owner would not ask fans to do this.”