The sale of embattled A-Leagues membership Perth Glory to Melbourne property tycoon Robert Brij has been terminated days earlier than a proper takeover.
In October, the A-League’s governing physique Australian Skilled Leagues revealed a consortium led by Brij’s Primeland Group would take the reins alongside entrepreneur John Nekic.
However WAtoday can reveal the contract was terminated after situations weren’t met.
The deal, which was attributable to be finalised in a matter of days, marked the tip of an 11-week seek for a brand new proprietor by receivers at KordaMentha, who had been handed the membership after it was surrendered by Perth businessman Tony Sage.
KordaMentha’s receivers haven’t but responded to a number of requests for remark.
Sage’s 17-year possession of the membership was dropped at an abrupt finish in July when the APL slapped his firm Okewood with a breach discover.
The discover got here amid revelations the A-League’s governing physique had been bankrolling the membership’s participant and workers wages through secured loans for 5 months.
A receiver’s report lodged with the Australian Securities and Investments Fee exhibits it did so to the tune of $4.4 million, making it the entity’s second-largest creditor behind Okewood itself – which is claimed to have loaned the membership $33 million.
Sage, a mining entrepreneur who was additionally part-owner of Perth Trend Competition earlier than its collapse, has been mulling sale choices for years claiming he had spent $48 million attempting to maintain the organisation afloat.