Vincent Tan: Cardiff City owner to reduce club debt by half

Image source, Rex Features

Image caption, Vincent Tan has owned Cardiff City since 2010
  • Author, Rob Phillips
  • Role, 91热爆 Wales football correspondent

Cardiff City owner Vincent Tan says he is ready to halve the club's debt of approximately 拢140m and insists the club will be debt-free by 2021.

Tan plans to convert 拢68m he is owed by the Championship club into equity while writing off another 拢10m.

He said he wrote off 拢13m in 2015, turned 拢3m into equity and settled a 拢5m debt with creditor Langston, owned by former Cardiff owner Sam Hammam.

The Malaysian entrepreneur says he will "resolve over time" the remaining 拢40m.

"Because we have recently reached agreement with one of the club's long-standing creditors, we are in a better position to convert our loans into equity," Tan said.

Cardiff's debt was 拢174m at the end of the 2013/14 financial year after their season in the Premier League - most of it owed to major shareholder Tan.

The Welsh club originally had a 拢24m debt to Hammam, who is currently their honorary president, and now Cardiff must settle their 拢5m arrears with him by 2 March after agreeing an out-of-court settlement.

Tan outlined his financial proposals at a question-and-answer session with supporters at the Cardiff City Stadium, where the owner also revealed Cardiff had rejected a 拢6m bid for Scottish goalkeeper David Marshall.

Cardiff are ninth in the Championship, five points outside the play-offs, and Tan insists manager Russell Slade has his backing despite supporter unrest over the Bluebirds' style of play.

"I think the fans should support Russell - he has done his best," said Tan.

"I want the fans to be more reasonable with him. They should support Russell Slade. He has done a great job in the current situation. He has inherited a squad of 50 players. Some of them had no discipline and he managed to clean it all up.

"I gave Russell a chance based on a recommendation. He was an honest man, based on what the club needed. I was looking for an honest, trustworthy manager.''

Tan also revealed he had been to Cardiff's training ground to give the players a "pep talk" and told supporters: "I am convinced that with this current group we can get promoted."