Judge has agreed GST's plan to pay athletes atound 70% of money owed and vendors around 14%
Judge has agreed GST's plan to pay athletes atound 70% of money owed and vendors around 14%
You can, but we wont reply to any Grand Slam person, vendor, promoter, propagandist, agent, coach, rep, etc.
Ah, you want my services, so that will be $14 000 dollars, but since you only pay 14c on the dollar i will quote you $100 000 with 20% payable immedieatly.
Terrible for entities that promoted, encouraged, advertised Grand Scam after juries found Meta, X, Amazon liable and responsible for web content. Before they had Silicon Valley Immunity for Hi Tech Gadgets. The juries ended the immunity. Meta, X, Amazon, etc. has deep deep pockets of money lawyers can collect from. Grand Scam is broke thbus the judge will collect from those entities that benefited from Grand Scam, advertisers, promoters, fan bois, letsrun, vendors, etc.
Decades of lawsuits. Decades of investigations. The future is cast for cheaters and conspirators of GST.
ld and new vendors will remember how they got screwed over. From that perspective it's actually a bad deal for the athletes as well because there will never be an event like this again.
Cristal ball reader wrote:
ld and new vendors will remember how they got screwed over. From that perspective it's actually a bad deal for the athletes as well because there will never be an event like this again.
A bird in the hand...
Hot Dog, Coke, and Toilet Paper wholesalers, etc. were ripped off. Fanbois, Agents, Coaches, Energy Bar makers, Shoe makers, swag manufacturers - pimped, encouraged, sold the scam to the public. Those with money in the bank are now being pursued by liability lawyers for the balance.
Running of any sort is just as entertaining as a purely amateur sport rather than including profiteers in a business. Should've remained for amateurs only.
70% is pretty good. Granted there are legal fees to pay and if this was taken on contingency 50% of that might go to the lawyers. Still I didn’t think athletes would see any money.
Drone shot wrote:
70% is pretty good. Granted there are legal fees to pay and if this was taken on contingency 50% of that might go to the lawyers. Still I didn’t think athletes would see any money.
Wut?? What, TF, are you talking about?
Chafford1 wrote:
Judge has agreed GST's plan to pay athletes atound 70% of money owed and vendors around 14%
I don't want to sign up for FOS and get bunch of junk mail, just so I can read this. Can someone copy/paste whatever it says into this thread?
Cheapskate wrote:
I don't want to sign up for FOS and get bunch of junk mail, just so I can read this. Can someone copy/paste whatever it says into this thread?
A judge approved the startup track league’s plans to pay back some of its debts and reemerge as a company.
Grand Slam Track is coming out of bankruptcy.
What comes next for the track startup is still unclear.
Grand Slam will pay about $4.9 million to athletes and $1.8 million to vendors. It owes those groups about $7 million and $13 million, respectively. Athletes are getting about 70% back, while vendors are getting about 14%.
The plan is funded by Winners Alliance and Johnson. Winners Alliance is the commercial arm of the Professional Tennis Players Association, chaired by billionaire Bill Ackman.
Grand Slam’s vendors include media, production, marketing, communications, track resurfacing, cable and wireless, and events companies, as well as some of the race venues themselves.
Since the settlement, the different groups of creditors voted on the plan, and it overwhelmingly passed. Thursday’s hearing was largely procedural.
“It should be a quick hearing, I think,” Owens said to open the half-hour session.
Steve Gera, Grand Slam’s COO, declined to comment on behalf of the league. Gera and Johnson will both maintain control of Grand Slam moving forward.
An attorney representing the creditors declined to comment on Thursday’s hearing, but pointed to a March letter in which they advised the creditors to vote to accept the plan. “In the Committee’s view, the Plan provides unsecured creditors with the greatest potential recovery under the difficult circumstances presented in this case and is in the best interest of general unsecured creditors,” the letter says.
Athletes will come back closer to neutral, recovering thousands of dollars they have been owed for months. Though they won’t be fully repaid. Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, who has the highest claim among athletes at more than $355,000, will still be out more than $100,000, and the next-highest claimant, Gabby Thomas, will be down about $75,000 of the $250,000 she’s owed.
Winners Alliance said in a statement: “Today, a judge approved Grand Slam Track’s Chapter 11 reorganization plan. It marks the end of a difficult chapter for athletes, the organization, investors, and everyone involved. The process reflected real capital and operational challenges that required restructuring to stabilize the business.”
Grand Slam’s collapse was hastened when a prospective investor backed out. Winners Alliance says that in contrast, it “met its funding commitments and went beyond them multiple times, not out of obligation, but because athletes were counting on it.” The company described the Grand Slam ordeal as one that applied “extraordinary pressure.”
Athletes Nearly Lose OutThe majority of the hearing was devoted to a last-minute issue that could’ve seen more than a dozen athletes lose out on tens of thousands of dollars.
During the voting process that preceded the hearing, athletes had an option to check a box that would move them from the athlete tier to the vendor tier, meaning they would have received 14% of what they were owed, not 70%, and the difference would be returned to the vendors.
On Thursday morning, attorneys for Grand Slam and Winners Alliance told the judge they learned late Wednesday that “many of the athletes incorrectly” filled out their ballots, pinning some of the errors on a language barrier. They explained that all parties agreed the athletes could amend their ballots, and 13 of the 17 athletes who checked the box had done so before the hearing. Judge Owens and the lawyers said they had never seen this happen.
Canadian Marco Arop is one of the athletes who originally checked the box but later amended his selection. He is owed $168,750 from Grand Slam, and his roughly $118,125 payout would’ve fallen to about $23,625.
Several of them, including Arop, are international athletes represented by agent Ramon Clay and John Regis of Astra Partners.
“Unfortunately, there was a clerical error from our side in our clients’ vote,” Regis, president and founder of Astra Partners, tells FOS. “This has now been rectified. All our clients voted, as all the other athletes have voted. An incorrect ticked box caused the issue.”
The agents whose athletes had checked the box were alerted on Wednesday following inquiries from Front Office Sports, a source confirmed.
Judge Owens said she has a “broader problem” with reaching out to the remaining four athletes to ask if they meant to check the box, but said she can weigh in if they do reach out indicating an error. Three of the athletes are Belgian hurdler Michael Obasuyi, U.S. distance runner Cooper Teare, and Dutch hurdler Cathelijn Peeters, who are collectively owed more than $50,000 from Grand Slam.
What’s Next For Grand Slam Track?From the beginning of the bankruptcy process, Grand Slam has said it wants to stage a comeback.
Bankruptcy filings have made it clear that the league has no money in the bank other than the funds it will get from Winners Alliance. The group is set to provide operational funding for Grand Slam through the end of the year, but a source tells FOS that Winners Alliance isn’t planning heavy involvement in the future, and won’t have any seats on Grand Slam’s board moving forward.
Now it’s up to Johnson to see if anyone would take a chance on him again.
My Momma said to check on who your'e having relations with. Just don't stick in into any girl until you know here motive or you'll be sorry. Now those who chose to bend over and let GST stick in into them are part of the conspiracy will to be sued hundreds of times, dragged into discovery hearings, negotiations, courts, keepers, etc. for 20 years unitil they are forced to pay us. A nightmare.
Liability, Criminality is the next round of lawsuits GST will be facing regardless of US Bankruptcy court outcome. Since GST admitted what it did, GST faces hundreds of liability, criminality lawsuits, local, county, state, federal, in foreign jurisdictions, foreign military tribunals, kangaroo courts, police states, religious courts. The most foolish thing that GST did is publically file bankruptcy proceedings with the PDF files placed on the public web fo every prosecutor, Junta general, police chief, religious cleric to openly read.
Michael Johnson delivers
Art of the deal
Very frustrating vendors getting hammered at the expense of athletes
Even with the money they'd already been paid, they'd been paid incredibly well. The calculation should be vs what they might reasonably have been expected to get for the races.
Advise people to take their 0.70 cents on the dollar, or whatever, and get on with it, leave the lawyers asap.
infact, adversaries should connect with representation from the get go, who are NOT lawyers. representation should be smart level headded. these delegates can engage lawyers as required, and only as required.
I really dont understand this.
Vendors have property and investments and costs. They are not just down income, they have lost huge amiunts.
The athletes simply havent been paid monry they would never have expected elsewhere, and yet they have been paid.
Wtf?
Ambulance Chasers, Class Action lawsuits, etc. to no end are coming to extract the balance from MJ, cronies, webbies, webbies, TV, etc.