General The Slum Landlord - Mr Kassam

He's still providing "quality" venues:


One of O Sullivan's complaints is about the presence of bins, then he calls himself a bit of a clean freak, seems an odd complaint to moan about the very necessary presence of somewhere to dispose of waste.
 
One of O Sullivan's complaints is about the presence of bins, then he calls himself a bit of a clean freak, seems an odd complaint to moan about the very necessary presence of somewhere to dispose of waste.
I think it was more the presence of large dumpster bins around the places the players were going, not there being wastepaper bins in his dressing room...
 
I think it was more the presence of large dumpster bins around the places the players were going, not there being wastepaper bins in his dressing room...

Still a bit precious, its only a big bin, if you can't handle the sight of a bin then no wonder he finds everyday life so hard. I work in the waste industry so maybe biased but are they that offensive to layman's eyes?
 
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He certainly is!

Part of me likes that, part of me thinks he an a**e.

Brilliant snooker player.
The documentary on him last year (I forget the channel) is definitely worth a watch if you haven't.
 
Still a bit precious, its only a big bin, if you can't handle the sight of a bin then no wonder he finds everyday life so hard. I work in the waste industry so maybe biased but are they that offensive to layman's eyes?
What's your favourite bin then?
 
The owner of Kassam Stadium says he is open to Oxford United staying at the ground, despite the club claiming it “must find a new home”.


Firoz Kassam has confirmed to the Oxford Mail he is happy for the Yellows to continue playing home games at the stadium in Littlemore.
It comes as the club looks to move away from the Kassam, with controversial plans to build a 16,000-capacity stadium in Kidlington.
Firoz Kassam owned Oxford United from 1999 to 2006
READ MORE: Bicester: Sheet of glass falls down onto high street
Oxford United chief executive Tim Williams claims there is “no option to renew the lease” at the Kassam which expires in 2026.

He said the club “must find a new home”.
But the top bosses at Oxford United have now faced accusations that they never even asked to stay at the Kassam.
Kassam Stadium, Oxford United's current ground which was opened in 2001
Friends of Stratfield Brake, a campaign group against the new stadium, claims Kassam landlords Firoka, a company owned by Mr Kassam, were never approached by the club about renewing the lease.

Group member Suzanne McIvor said the club’s bosses had “not given the whole story” about the stadium saga.
When the Oxford Mail put these claims to Mr Kassam, who owned Oxford United from 1999 to 2006 and built the stadium in 2001, he said: “That is completely true.”
The revelation comes as Oxford United prepares a planning application for a new stadium at the Triangle, an area of land south of Kidlington Roundabout.
The club wants to submit the plan to Cherwell District Council, the planning authority, at the “earliest possible opportunity”.
READ MORE: Oxford MP Anneliese Dodds' JLM Conference remark is slammed
A club spokesman said: "The club has explored options at the current stadium.
“We have always been clear in our position and remain focused on securing a long-term and sustainable future for the club and look forward to submitting our full planning application."

A computer generated image of Oxford United's proposed stadium in Kidlington (Image: Oxford United)
But the stadium move has been criticised by Ian Middleton, who represents Kidlington East on the district council.
The Green councillor said: “There’s more to this claim from Oxford United that they can’t negotiate to stay at the Kassam than they are letting on”.
He accused the club of having “tunnel vision” on the Triangle site.
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“No one wants to see the club homeless, but if they genuinely have no option to stay at the Kassam they shouldn’t be wasting what little time they say they have left by pursuing a pipe dream in Kidlington,” he added.
Oxford United's relationship with Firoka has historically been tricky.
In 2019, the company served the club with a winding-up petition for £204,000 in unpaid rent and service charges.
At the time, the club said it was “extremely disappointed” with Firoka’s actions.
 
The owner of Kassam Stadium says he is open to Oxford United staying at the ground, despite the club claiming it “must find a new home”.


Firoz Kassam has confirmed to the Oxford Mail he is happy for the Yellows to continue playing home games at the stadium in Littlemore.
It comes as the club looks to move away from the Kassam, with controversial plans to build a 16,000-capacity stadium in Kidlington.
Firoz Kassam owned Oxford United from 1999 to 2006
READ MORE: Bicester: Sheet of glass falls down onto high street
Oxford United chief executive Tim Williams claims there is “no option to renew the lease” at the Kassam which expires in 2026.

He said the club “must find a new home”.
But the top bosses at Oxford United have now faced accusations that they never even asked to stay at the Kassam.
Kassam Stadium, Oxford United's current ground which was opened in 2001
Friends of Stratfield Brake, a campaign group against the new stadium, claims Kassam landlords Firoka, a company owned by Mr Kassam, were never approached by the club about renewing the lease.

Group member Suzanne McIvor said the club’s bosses had “not given the whole story” about the stadium saga.
When the Oxford Mail put these claims to Mr Kassam, who owned Oxford United from 1999 to 2006 and built the stadium in 2001, he said: “That is completely true.”
The revelation comes as Oxford United prepares a planning application for a new stadium at the Triangle, an area of land south of Kidlington Roundabout.
The club wants to submit the plan to Cherwell District Council, the planning authority, at the “earliest possible opportunity”.
READ MORE: Oxford MP Anneliese Dodds' JLM Conference remark is slammed
A club spokesman said: "The club has explored options at the current stadium.
“We have always been clear in our position and remain focused on securing a long-term and sustainable future for the club and look forward to submitting our full planning application."

A computer generated image of Oxford United's proposed stadium in Kidlington (Image: Oxford United)
But the stadium move has been criticised by Ian Middleton, who represents Kidlington East on the district council.
The Green councillor said: “There’s more to this claim from Oxford United that they can’t negotiate to stay at the Kassam than they are letting on”.
He accused the club of having “tunnel vision” on the Triangle site.

“No one wants to see the club homeless, but if they genuinely have no option to stay at the Kassam they shouldn’t be wasting what little time they say they have left by pursuing a pipe dream in Kidlington,” he added.
Oxford United's relationship with Firoka has historically been tricky.
In 2019, the company served the club with a winding-up petition for £204,000 in unpaid rent and service charges.
At the time, the club said it was “extremely disappointed” with Firoka’s actions.

It doesn't really say a lot does it? Kassam is open to anyone buying or leasing the Kassam off him for the right price, if anyone on here has £50 million they don't want then they can own a shithole.

Its poor from Kassam to come out with that, should be between him and the club, its poor from the Oxford Mail to report it with so little facts and barley a quote from the man, its just reporting gossip told to them by an extremist nimby group and putting peoples jobs and a multimillion pound investment on the line.

But despite all that the club needs to come out and fight its corner, it also needs to be frank and honest with local people and fans.
 
The owner of Kassam Stadium says he is open to Oxford United staying at the ground, despite the club claiming it “must find a new home”.


Firoz Kassam has confirmed to the Oxford Mail he is happy for the Yellows to continue playing home games at the stadium in Littlemore.
It comes as the club looks to move away from the Kassam, with controversial plans to build a 16,000-capacity stadium in Kidlington.
Firoz Kassam owned Oxford United from 1999 to 2006
READ MORE: Bicester: Sheet of glass falls down onto high street
Oxford United chief executive Tim Williams claims there is “no option to renew the lease” at the Kassam which expires in 2026.

He said the club “must find a new home”.
But the top bosses at Oxford United have now faced accusations that they never even asked to stay at the Kassam.
Kassam Stadium, Oxford United's current ground which was opened in 2001
Friends of Stratfield Brake, a campaign group against the new stadium, claims Kassam landlords Firoka, a company owned by Mr Kassam, were never approached by the club about renewing the lease.

Group member Suzanne McIvor said the club’s bosses had “not given the whole story” about the stadium saga.
When the Oxford Mail put these claims to Mr Kassam, who owned Oxford United from 1999 to 2006 and built the stadium in 2001, he said: “That is completely true.”
The revelation comes as Oxford United prepares a planning application for a new stadium at the Triangle, an area of land south of Kidlington Roundabout.
The club wants to submit the plan to Cherwell District Council, the planning authority, at the “earliest possible opportunity”.
READ MORE: Oxford MP Anneliese Dodds' JLM Conference remark is slammed
A club spokesman said: "The club has explored options at the current stadium.
“We have always been clear in our position and remain focused on securing a long-term and sustainable future for the club and look forward to submitting our full planning application."

A computer generated image of Oxford United's proposed stadium in Kidlington (Image: Oxford United)
But the stadium move has been criticised by Ian Middleton, who represents Kidlington East on the district council.
The Green councillor said: “There’s more to this claim from Oxford United that they can’t negotiate to stay at the Kassam than they are letting on”.
He accused the club of having “tunnel vision” on the Triangle site.

“No one wants to see the club homeless, but if they genuinely have no option to stay at the Kassam they shouldn’t be wasting what little time they say they have left by pursuing a pipe dream in Kidlington,” he added.
Oxford United's relationship with Firoka has historically been tricky.
In 2019, the company served the club with a winding-up petition for £204,000 in unpaid rent and service charges.
At the time, the club said it was “extremely disappointed” with Firoka’s actions.
a rehashed 'piece' more or less lifted from FoSB latest tirade- out of date 'quotes' regurgitated- its pure clickbait from the American owned , once decent, now sadly very poor so called local 'news'paper.


IF OUFC ceased to exist, the Oxford Mail would fold too, yet the Amercan stye editorial hierarchy at Osney Mead seem to be oblivious to that fact. Their bias against OUFC , pandering to pressure groups ( usually ones that involve Suzanne McIvor) in the news section ( NOT tucked away on the Sport pages), is obviously blatant, intended to generate online hits to apease Newsquests thirst for online clicks and comments. Whatever happened to investigative journalism? It doesn't exist in the local paper anymore. This latest 'story' in reality is a non-story, compiled from previous quotes made at different times, made loosely with the potential new stadium in mind , now rehashed with no tangible contex. Its a new low from the Oxford Mail, who have, in recent years themselves set the bar for balanced reporting so low it trips up the unsuspecting.


I stopped buying the Oxford Mail ( after buying it daily for many decades) last year, due to the news section editorial stance slanted against the county's only fully professional football club, the club Ive supported for well over 5 decades.
 
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The Oxford Mail are terrible, money grabbing s**t stirrers who put NIMBYs on pedestals for clickbait
 
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