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  • "Interesting times.

    It looks like some open, transparent assessment of the financial viability of the various options open to OUFC should be made.

    Obviously have to use the head not the heart, but it would feel so, so sweet to walk away from that albatross stadium and basically start again.

    OUFC is in our hearts, it will always exist, so it doesn't matter where we play or where we 'start again' from.

    I also don't think FK can be blamed too much, he is spiritually sick and feels absolutely no connection to his fellow man, he is under the delusion that ££££ will make him happy (and seeing as he came from poverty, this is perhaps unsurprising). This whole tragedy is partly of our making, and stretches back to the mid-1980s at least.

    Whatever happened to Robin Herd?"
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Oxford United must pay more for stadium

Oxford United expect to pay an increase of up to £100,000 a year for the service charge they pay to their landlords at the Kassam Stadium.

Last November, the U’s settled a dispute with Firoz Kassam’s company Firoka Ltd for additional charges relating to four years up to last summer.

The one-off payment of £298,000 put the latest club’s accounts, for the year to June 2011, into the red as they recorded a loss of £296,000.

And chairman Kelvin Thomas revealed at the AGM the club would be paying higher rates from now on – although it is unclear whether it would be affected by the ground-share with London Welsh.

He said: “There will be an estimated £75-100k increase per year moving forward, but this will be absorbed into the profit and loss rather than being treated as a exceptional item.

“The club is disappointed with the effect on the financials for the year, but is pleased the matter is resolved.”

Thomas was encouraged by the rest of the figures, with the U’s increasing turnover by 24 per cent, from £2.6m to £3.2m.

It meant they had an operating profit of £10,000, compared to a £91,000 loss for the previous year, while £175,000 of external debt was also repaid.

Meanwhile, United have broken their silence over the ground-share with London Welsh.

When chairman Kelvin Thomas was questioned about the matter at the club’s annual general meeting, he said: “We have been in dialogue with London Welsh, but will not know full details until we sit down with them next week.

“We can’t really say much more about the advantages and disadvantages until we know full details.”

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