You are most certainly not a million miles away but there are a few inaccuracies in there. For the most part you are correct. Anyone that believes what Alan Trump says should probably buy their own breakfast.
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Wasn't there talk that Paragon were about to land a large contract around the time "little Willy" made an appearance? Either that scared the customers off or they had carried out some due diligence and saw that Paragon were going down the drain and pulled out. Notts were never going to save Paragon, it relied on a successful Paragon to keep Notts afloat.
A big mistake I think that he made was that he was too certain that the Championship was ours after the play-off failure.
He also (to me) put too much emphasis on big crowds. Yes we did average over 7K but how many of those were free tickets? We had 18,000 for 1 game, but that was at £2.That in itself bumped the average up by around 500.
I think the whole sorry situation (and I was disappointed for him how it ended to be honest - I do think he wanted the best for Notts) can be summed up in that he was out of his depth.
His poor decision making and numerous (major) mistakes cost us our league status. Obviously he knows this already so a little surprised he's still talking about this period of his life which went so disastrously wrong in terms of both his beloved football club and his main business. But then again this is Alan Hardy so maybe it should be expected.
We've got far better owners now so it's chip paper news and nothing more
No sympathy from me. His own advisors told him not to do it but he couldn't resist his moment in the limelight. Deluded was exactly the right turn of phrase from OP in post #1 and it was this egotistical delusion that forced him down a catastrophic path of disaster for himself, his employees and the club itself.
I'm having a hard time trying to imagine how it would have worked out any better if we'd gone up. The adulation for Hardy would have inflated his ego to a whole new dimension, we'd have likely spent a lot more money on players to try and compete at that level and ended up suffering a similar scenario to the Scardino/Storrie era. The best you can say is that we might have avoided non-league by imploding in tier 3 rather than tier 4 but if points deductions had come into play I'm not so sure.
The ego is a terrible thing and has led many a person astray. In which other field would the owner of a relatively small business get so much exposure (no pun intended)? Alan Hardy tried to live the dream of wealthy football club owner, but just didn’t have the millions needed to back it up. Derek Pavis was far wealthier after selling his company, but even he reached his spending limit after a certain time.
Rule number one in life that AH fatally ignored: when you’re in a hole, stop digging (and start looking for help).