Sol
Campbell could be one of a number of high earners to leave Portsmouth
in the summer. Photograph: Nigel French/Empics Sport/PA Photos
Portsmouth have admitted big-name players may have to be sold this summer whether or not the club remains in the Premier League.
Executive
chairman Peter Storrie says their uncertain future hinges on the
ownership issue, with Alexandre Gaydamak having made it clear he wants
to sell and will no longer invest.
The business tycoon financed
nearly £60m of transfers over two years under former manager Harry
Redknapp but this term players like Jermain Defoe, Sulley Muntari,
Pedro Mendes and Lassana Diarra had to be sold to help balance the
books.
Now Storrie fears remaining stars like England's Glen
Johnson and Peter Crouch and Croatia's Niko Kranjcar might also have to
be put up for sale unless a new owner comes in.
Portsmouth can
secure another year in the top-flight with a result at home to
Sunderland on Monday and will not even need that if Newcastle lose at
home to Fulham or Hull go down at Bolton this afternoon.
But with
the club reportedly £65m in debt and due to pay off a large chunk of
that to a South African bank at the end of the season, Storrie admits:
"I'd like to keep all our good players but a lot depends on the
ownership issue.
"We can bring in a new owner but it has to be
one who can put finance in because that's what is required for the club
to go forward again.
"At this moment in time what happens in the transfer market depends entirely on the ownership of the club.
"Sacha
(Gaydamak) has made it perfectly clear that although he's done some
fantastic things in the past he cannot now put in any more finance.
"At the moment various discussions are happening on that and I'm hopeful something will happen sooner rather than later."
Meanwhile,
caretaker-manager Paul Hart has a full squad - apart from the injured
Kranjcar - from which to choose his team to face fellow Sunderland and
will be odds-on to keep the job with a new contract for next season
should he keep Pompey in the top-flight.
But he could soon be
plunged into major negotiations with no fewer than 15 players out of
contract this summer including skipper Sol Campbell, 34, Pompey's top
earner.
guardian.co.uk