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  • "
    Rovers75 wrote:
    Jimmy Jambone wrote:
    Brfc24138931 wrote:
    You will realise next season why you should have listened to the supporters. Attendances will be in the mid teens 13000-16000. Personally I would like to see single thousands. Then maybe you venkeys just might have a re-think about selling up. I live in hope. Also I was hoping to see you at Chelsea just for a little chat ?
    Well if it goes to attendances pre Walker era, it will be down to 5,000.
    Seeing as all you dingles are not only obsessed with Rovers but attendances aswell (which I assume is to convince yourselves your the big club you think you are and far superior to Rovers) here's a couple of stats for you courtesy of Wikipedia:
    Burnleys 1986-87 Average home attendance: 3,257
    Lowest v Bolton: 1,465. Your highest that year was the Leyton Orient game which I've heard anywhere between 17,000- 20,00 were packed into the wonderful Turf Moor in a bid to keep you in league football. In actual fact there was under 16,00....15,696 to be exact. Well done. Gold star. Your highest home attendance the previous year was....drum roll....4,279! Wow. Now don't get me wrong Jimmy, I'm not suggesting Rovers were getting monster crowds during the 80's, far from it but before you bleat on about attendances as some sort of badge of honour, at least take the time to realise that your support, whilst admittedly quite good for a medieval rat pit, has at times also been abysmal. How refreshing that was to enter a bit of dingle banter, rather than have to post about golf ball head or the poison from Pune.
    My statement was:

    'Well if it goes to attendances pre Walker era, it will be down to 5,000'.

    For some reason you start to talk about the Leyton Orient game. I'll now explain the reason and the workings of that tiny lizard brain of yours.

    What you have done is attempt to paint my position as something it wasn't, and paint it as something you can more easily attack.

    If you are so willing to misrepresent my position then why should anyone not believe that you are also as easily willing to misrepresent your own?"
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Pressure increasing on Desai to sack Blackburn Rovers boss Kean

BLACKBURN Rovers co-owner Anuradha Desai is coming under heavy pressure to axe Steve Kean – but the under-fire boss remains confident he has her backing.

Club matriarch Desai has the final say on all Rovers decisions and has been the one to keep the faith in Kean throughout recent struggles.

Board members, close advisers and even fellow co-owners Venkatesh and Balaji Rao are understood to believe there needs to be a change of manager, but chief Desai is yet to be convinced.

An expected trip by Venky’s to Rovers’ final game of the season at Chelsea tomorrow will not happen with Kean now expected to arrive at their Pune HQ on Tuesday for talks.

Desai is understood to be ready to back her man but increasing media pressure from within India, plus heavy calls for Kean to go within her trusted camp, could yet persuade her to make a change.

Desai is also understood to be very concerned about the low season ticket uptake with large sections of Rovers fans ready to vote against Kean with their feet next campaign.

Kean himself will look to persuade Desai he is the man to lead Rovers back into the Premier League and is understood to be ready to suggest a potential new management team, in the wake of deputy chief executive Paul Hunt’s dismissal.

Neither Balaji or Venkatesh Rao were prepared to discuss Kean’s future during media interviews in India, increasing the uncertainty on the manager’s future.

“In the last month we have made the club debt free. We are here for the long haul,” Balaji Rao said. “We have absolutely no intentions of selling the club. Me, my brother Venkatesh and my sister (Anuradha Desai), our entire family, has fallen in love with the club. We cannot sell it.

“We were certainly not expecting to be relegated. It was the saddest bit of news for me since my mother passed away.

“But we will bounce back within a year.

“There will be lots of changes in the near future. We will bring in changes within the next month.

“We cannot hold back players.

“Those who want to leave may do so. But let me tell you, 80 per cent of the players want to stay.”

Meanwhile Ryan Nelsen is in a dispute with the club over a ‘golden handshake’ agreement following his January exit.

Nelsen agreed a pay-off to leave with 18 months still on his deal but has stopped being paid a monthly sum.

Canadian starlet Junior Hoilett has moved a step nearer his Ewood exit after giving notice on his Brockhall property lease. Sources close to Hoilett say he will definitely leave this summer.

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