Chelsea's current Stamford Bridge stadium
Thursday, May 10, 2012
4:44 PM
The Blues may remain at their 107-year-old home
Chelsea chief executive Ron Gourlay has admitted that remaining at Stamford Bridge is an option for the Blues, providing their 107-year-old home can be redeveloped.
The west London club are unable to move to a new ground until they convince the Chelsea Pitch Owners to return the freehold of Stamford Bridge to the club, which they failed to do in October.
“What we’ve all got to do is keep our feet on the ground as far as Battersea is concerned,’’ Gourlay said.
“When we met with the Chelsea Pitch Owners shareholders back in October, we indicated that we were doing everything in our power to stay at Stamford Bridge, to extend Stamford Bridge, and we’ve looked at potential opportunities of a new-build around the Stamford Bridge area.
“Not only does that cause us issues with economics, it also causes us major challenges around potential planning applications and all the rest.
“We do feel, as a club, that to stay among the elite, we’ve got to have a bigger stadium. And one of the things that we discussed with the shareholders was to look at opportunities within a three-mile perimeter of the current site at Stamford Bridge.
“One of them is Battersea. There’s a long way to go, there are other bidders in there, and we just need to see where it goes from there. But if we didn’t enter into that bidding process then we would have lost that as an opportunity if we need it one day down the line. We’ve got to be in a position to make the move quickly.
“But we’ve still not said no to Stamford Bridge and we’re still looking at other alternatives and are working very hard behind the scenes to achieve that.’’
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