http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=A1YourView&xml=/sport/2007/05/05/sfnjim05.xml

Leeds big on egos, small on accountability

By Jim White

Now it is certain. Thanks to the 10-point deduction for going into 
administration, Leeds United have been relegated to the third tier of 
English football. The frail mathematical lifeline that kept them still 
theoretically connected to the Championship has been cut from beneath 
them by their own board. Not even a mathematical turnaround that would 
make Stephen Hawking scratch his head with bemusement can save them now.

So extraordinary has been the club's decline that all week the 
newspapers, radio and television have been attempting to analyse 
precisely how is it that an outfit recently supping from the top table 
have plunged so deeply that in August their fans will be required to don 
an aqualung to navigate their way round the new fixture list. But 
reading of, and listening to those involved in the Leeds story speak 
about their part in the fall, it is hard to understand quite how it ever 
happened. No one, apparently, did anything wrong.

Despite being at the helm of a club in financial meltdown, for instance, 
the current chairman, Ken Bates, declares himself entirely blameless. It 
is nothing to do with him, he insists. As far as he is concerned, the 
fault lies with everyone from the city council, through the previous 
administration to those journalists with the audacity to try to pick 
their way through the fisherman's nest of holding companies within which 
he prefers to locate his business interests. Equally, the manager in 
charge of a team who have gone from the play-offs to relegation in 12 
months sees only positives in the experience.

"We can draw strength from this and improve as a group," says Dennis 
Wise, as if the plunge into League One were some pre-season team-bonding 
exercise involving the fording of a stream using only a ball of string, 
two paper clips and a milk carton.
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Meanwhile Peter Ridsdale, the chairman who presided over the 
accumulation of debt so mountainous you would need the skills of Chris 
Bonington to assess its true scale, is telling anyone who will listen 
that the only mistake he made at Elland Road was to defer to his 
manager, David O'Leary.

Talking to John Humphrys on Radio 4's On The Ropes this week, Ridsdale 
appeared to be the living embodiment of Brian Clough's assertion that 
there is no creature on earth with a more inflated ego than a football 
club director. According to the Ridsdale version, everything good that 
happened at Leeds was due to his wise stewardship. Everything bad was 
the fault of the manager or the other directors.

"Privately I had my own view on that, but I was obliged to go with the 
majority of the board," he told Humphrys of their cack-handed decisions, 
from buying stock for the office aquarium to having four managers on the 
payroll at once.

Indeed, anyone who caught Ridsdale in full post-rationalising flow would 
have hesitated to join in the outbreak of gleeful sniggering that has 
greeted the once-great Yorkshire club's humiliation. As if watching the 
football their team have played has not been punishment enough, the 
Elland Road faithful have been condemned to spending the past five years 
listening to the self-serving approaches of Messrs Ridsdale, O'Leary, 
Venables, Bates and Wise.

Instead of mocking surely, right now, there can be no one in the game 
more deserving of sympathy than Leeds' hard-pressed fans.

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