Dave Whelan

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Dave Whelan
Dave Whelan, Wigan Athletic vs Hull City, 3rd May 2010.jpg
Whelan watching a Wigan Athletic match from the owner's box in May 2010.
Personal information
Full name David Whelan
Date of birth (1936-11-24) 24 November 1936 (age 87)
Place of birth Bradford, England
Position(s) Full back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1956–1960 Blackburn Rovers[1] 78 (3)
1962–1966 Crewe Alexandra[2] 115 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

David "Dave" Whelan (born 24 November 1936)[3] is an English former footballer. During his football career, he played for Blackburn Rovers and Crewe Alexandra. Whelan is the owner of League One club Wigan Athletic, having also been the chairman of the club for twenty years, before passing the position over to his grandson, David Sharpe.[4] He is also owner of the DW Stadium, home to League One club Wigan Athletic and Wigan Warriors. In July 2015 Dave Whelan received an honorary degree from the University of Bolton, making him a Doctor of Business Administration. [1]

Early life

Whelan was born in Bradford, and raised in Wigan. His forebears hailed from County Tipperary, Ireland.

Football career

Whelan was a member of Blackburn Rovers' 1960 FA Cup Final team, which lost 3–0 to Wolverhampton Wanderers. Whelan himself did not complete the game, a feisty challenge from Whelan culminated in the Blackburn man being withdrawn before half time due to a broken leg. Whelan's injury is one of many serious injuries suffered by players in the 1950–60 era and was known as the Wembley hoodoo.[5] Following his leg break, Whelan was sold to Crewe Alexandra F.C. where he played for several years before retiring to concentrate fully on his chain of supermarkets, Whelan's Discount Stores, which were sold to Ken Morrison for over a million pounds.

Ownerships

Whelan Discount Stores

Whelan started out a market stall on Wigan market after working with Howard Brothers on their stall in Blackburn. He later progressed into a grocery store, before visiting America where he studied the self-service supermarket. He returned to England and set about creating a supermarket chain. By the late 1960s the business had 10 stores based across Lancashire.[6] In 1978 Whelan sold the business to Morrisons for £1.5 million.

JJB

Whelan acquired Wigan fishing and sports store JJ Bradburns (even though JJB are the initials of previous owner John Jarvis Broughton) in 1977. He renamed the company JJB Sports and soon focused purely on sports goods. By 1980, JJB had become a chain of 7 stores, and went on to expand throughout the 1980s and 1990s. It went on to be the UK's second biggest sports retailer.

In 2005 JJB Sports were fined £5.5 million by the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) for fixing the price of the English National Team and Manchester United shirts in 2000 and 2001.[7] Which? (the Consumers' Association) issued proceedings against JJB Sports to sue the high street retailer for damages on behalf of consumers who were affected by the price fixing. Whelan gradually scaled down his interests in the company and in 2005 he stepped down as chairman.[8] However, in October 2006 he personally intervened to overturn the settlement of a pay dispute at JJB's Wigan warehouse negotiated by new chairman Tom Knight, branding it "the equivalent of Communism", prompting a two-day strike.[9]

In January 2007 he sold £50m of shares in JJB,[10] before selling his remaining 29% stake in June 2007. This action was in contradiction of a statement that Whelan made to the stock exchange on 26 January 2007 whereby he undertook to make no further disposals for the following 12 months.[11][12]

DW Sports Fitness

In March 2009, Whelan confirmed his acquisition of JJB Fitness clubs and the stores attached to them. Instead of Wigan Athletic's JJB sponsorship "the club's new stadium sponsor will be DW Sports-Fitness.Com, the 75-year-old's latest sports retail venture, and the JJB Stadium has now become the DW Stadium, taking the name of its owner and his new company."[citation needed]

Wigan Athletic F.C.

Whelan funded the DW Stadium, home of Wigan Athletic and Wigan Warriors

Whelan bought Wigan Athletic in February 1995, when they were a Division Three team.[13] After Whelan took the reins he announced that he would get Wigan Athletic into the Premier League, a promise he fulfilled in 2005. This began with the Division Three title in 1996–97, the Division Two title in 2002–03 and promotion to the Premiership as Championship runners-up in 2004–05. He funded the £30 million construction of the club's new JJB Stadium (now the DW Stadium) which opened in 1999 and on its completion was one of the largest football stadiums outside the Premier League.[14]

Wigan, who were tipped to be relegated from the Premier League in their first season, not only managed to stay up (and remained in the top flight for eight years), but claimed a 10th place league position[15] and also reached the final of the Football League Cup.[16]

In 2005, Whelan threatened to quit the club unless the price of policing games was reduced.[17]

In 2007, he called for the relegation of West Ham United as punishment for their incorrect registration of Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano.[18] He subsequently called for Premier League Chairman Dave Richards and chief executive Richard Scudamore to resign.[19]

An arbitration committee met to consider the affair. It ruled in favour of the Premier League. Wigan managed an end-of-season victory at Sheffield United, a 2–1 win with the goals being scored by Paul Scharner in the 14th minute and a penalty from David Unsworth in injury time of the first half, after Jon Stead had equalised for Sheffield United in the 38th minute. It was a dramatic final-day Premiership survival story, with the result saving Wigan and condemning Sheffield United to the Championship.[20]

On 11 May 2013, in a dramatic ending to the FA Cup Final against Manchester City, Ben Watson scored a header in the 91st minute to win the game 1–0. This was Wigan's first major trophy in their Premier League history and gave Whelan the chance to hold the FA Cup trophy, 53 years after breaking his leg as a 1960 finalist.[20] Three days later, a defeat to Arsenal saw Wigan relegated to the Championship, ending a spell of eight years in the Premier League. On 3 March 2015, Whelan stepped down as chairman, appointing his 23-year-old grandson, David Sharpe, as the new chairman.

Wigan Warriors

After the announcement of Maurice Lindsay's intention to retire immediately from the club after the Warriors' loss at the hands of Catalans Dragons on 29 July 2007, Whelan managed to persuade him to stay on until the end of the season. After the announcement of Lindsay's retirement however, Whelan said he would be willing to sell the club after a proposed takeover from a "genuine Wigan fan" earlier in the year.[21]

On 24 October 2007, it was announced that Ian Lenagan, former owner of Harlequins RL, had completed his takeover of Wigan Warriors, buying out Whelan's 89% stake in the club with the deal taking effect from 1 December 2007.[22]

Politics

A supporter of the Conservative Party, Whelan has donated in total £1.5 million to the party since 2007, with his most recent donation of £100,000 made in August 2014.[23] He said David Cameron had his full support.[24]

In 2013, he called for a mandatory minute's silence at all football games to mark the death of Margaret Thatcher. The F.A. rejected the proposal.[25]

Controversies

Whelan was accused of making antisemitic statements, following an interview he gave The Guardian, defending his decision to hire Malky Mackay as manager of Wigan. Mackay was under investigation by the FA for alleged racism and antisemitism in e-mails and text messages he sent when he was the manager of Cardiff City at the time. During the interview, Whelan was quoted as saying "Jewish people chase money more than everybody else."[26] The statements were condemned by West Ham United co-chairman David Gold and former FA and Premier League executive Simon Johnson, both of whom are Jewish.[27] Whelan was also accused of racist attitudes by defending Mackay's alleged referral to Chinese people as "chinks". Cardiff City owner, Vincent Tan, who is Malaysian Chinese, said of Whelan, "I think he has insulted the dignity of the Chinese".[28] Whelan later apologised for his remarks.[29] Anti-racist organisation Kick It Out offered support to Whelan, saying that they had a responsibility to ensure that people of his age would understand "modern expectations".[30]

Whelan threatened to leave his position at Wigan, if the FA found him guilty of racism.[31] At the first Wigan match since the controversy, against Middlesbrough on 22 November, Wigan fans applauded Whelan as he took his seat at the DW Stadium.[32]

On 27 November 2014, the FA charged Whelan with an aggravated breach of FA Rule E3 [2] as his comments had included "a reference to ethnic origin and/or race and/or nationality and/or religion or belief".[33] He was given a six-week ban and fined £50,000 on 31 December, although the FA investigation stated that he was neither a racist nor had intended to cause offence.[34] Shortly after, in March 2015, Whelan resigned from his position as Wigan chairman, naming as his replacement his grandson, David Sharpe (born c. 1992), with the Whelan family remaining as majority shareholders.[35]

References

  1. Profile, neilbrown.newcastlefans.com/blackburn; accessed 9 December 2014.
  2. Profile, neilbrown.newcastlefans.com/crewe; accessed 9 December 2014.
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  5. Wembley Hoodoo Guardian Online
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  23. "Dave Whelan controversy: Wigan chairman threatens to resign if he's punished by FA" by Rory Dolland, Manchester Evening News, 22 November 2014
  24. "Wigan tycoon gives £1m to Tories", BBC News, 27 September 2007
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  27. Dave Whelan: Wigan owner accused of anti-Semitism
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  35. "Dave Whelan resigns as Wigan chairman and names grandson as successor", The Guardian, 3 March 2015

External links

  • Brief bio, Manchesteronline.co.uk; accessed 9 December 2014.