The Championship season may be drawing to a close but at Loftus Road there is a sense of a new dawn.
Queens Park Rangers have represented something of a calamity to those who assumed the arrival of Flavio Briatore and the super-rich Mittal family in late 2007 would automatically awaken a sleeping giant.
Instead, confusion reigned as six permanent managers failed to live up to expectations of promotion amid rumours of Briatore's increasingly irrational behaviour, which extended to angry late-night telephone calls and interference in team selection.
The club insist Briatore stepped down as chairman in February to "pursue other business interests" and that he remains a board member and a "committed shareholder", although they remain unwilling to divulge the stake he now commands.
It is said Briatore's passion for the club had extended to him walking through Loftus Road's corridors in slippers embroidered with the QPR badge. But for Italian's flamboyance, read new chairman Ishan Saksena's prudence and sensibility.
Lakshmi Mittal's interests have been hitherto represented chiefly by the appointment of son-in-law Amit Bhatia as vice-chairman to Briatore.
But any awkward juxtaposition of Briatore's eccentricity and Bhatia's sagaciousness that existed is dispelled by Saksena's introduction.
The 31-year-old was born in New Delhi and is a graduate of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where he met Bhatia before embarking on a 10-year career working in the finance sector, chiefly in private equity, mergers and acquisitions.
Saksena and Bhatia remained in contact throughout that time and, after moving to England in 2007, he was invited to join the board as an adviser late last year but quickly ascended to chief executive and then chairman in February.
Despite the shift in power, Saksena is determined not to paint Briatore as the villain of the piece but admits an important alteration has taken place at boardroom level. "The way decisions are made at this club has changed and that is the important thing," Saksena said.
"Flavio made whatever decisions he made in the best interests of QPR. In retrospect, perhaps certain decisions could have been made differently.
"We have done a lot in a short space of time. We have stabilised the organisation from the freefall I think it was experiencing a few months ago."
Already, more than 2,000 season tickets have been sold compared to around 550 at the corresponding stage last season as fans have responded to attempts by the club to reconnect with their core supporters.
Saksena organised a forum with 12 representatives of various fans' groups and attended by Amit Bhatia to discuss the direction they must now take.
But the most notable development to date was the appointment of Neil Warnock as manager at the beginning of March and Saksena personally negotiated the £500,000 compensation package to prise him away from Crystal Palace, who it is understood originally wanted three times as much.
Saksena is keen to emphasise the burgeoning friendship he enjoys with Warnock and promote the extension of such stability to the dugout.
"We hit it off from the day we met," he explained. "I have met his family and we are friends.
"We have very different styles but we work well together. I look forward to getting to know him better, not just over the next three years while he is manager, but much further beyond."
As if to underline the business acumen ready to guide QPR forward, the Sunday Times Rich List claims steel magnate Mittal has doubled his personal wealth from £10.8billion to £22.4bn despite a worldwide recession and it would be easy for the club's supporters to get lost in a swathe of dreamy transfer aspirations.
But as a former director in the investment banking division at Lehman Brothers in both New York and London, Saksena is well placed to preach prudence.
Any extravagance extends only to the directors' box, plush with crocodile skin walls, luxurious sofas and a lavish dining table. "The board and I will fully support Neil in what he wants to do with the team and how he chooses to shape the squad," he added.
"I can't give you numbers of what money is available. We want to be active in the transfer market but it is going to be dictated by what Neil wants.You have to balance expectations with financial prudence.
"Because of my experience with Lehman, I can relate to financial sensibilities and see the human emotion when something like this happens. I am proud to say we have no external debt in the company and we intend to keep it like that."
Briatore's four-year plan for promotion has been replaced by a more measured prediction in which Saksena is reluctant to introduce any kind of time frame. "We want to reach the Premier League and Neil would not have come on board if we weren't all sure of that vision," he said.
"There is no point saying we have a two or five-year plan to make it. It won't be a failure if we are not promoted next season. If we don't go up, I will wish we had but that doesn't mean it is failure as long as we are making steady progress."
Saksena effuses a pragmatism that should inspire supporters to believe the club are in good hands, with Briatore's contacts still a useful source to call on.
In fact, the supermodels that adorned W12 upon the Italian's arrival may not be a thing of past, even if style and ostentation are not paramount.
"I haven't even thought about viewing the business like that," Saksena said.
"The main goal for Queens Park Rangers is to do well on the pitch. If getting supermodels in the stands improves the morale of the crowd and encourages the team to score more goals, we should get them back. If it doesn't, we won't."
* To pre-order your new QPR home shirt - priced £39.99 (adults) - log on to www.shop.qpr.co.uk or call QPR Direct on 0870 240 4547 now! There are less than 1,000 shirts available at this stage - on a first come, first served basis. Order today and you'll receive your new shirt by the start of June.
Reader views (7)
Clint, Paul - I am well aware that we now have an early bird scheme which would save me and my two kids £58 if we buy season tickets before the deadline. I very much doubt the extra 5% discount will be triggered because with average gates of only just over 13000 including away support I cannot see 9000 season tickets being sold. I'm afraid that this season, like the last, I will get ST's for the kids (the day prices are extortionate) but not for myself. Like last year I will only attend Saturday and away matches. This will mean I miss 8 or 9 matches but I will save a significant sum of money.
Paul you say we can't expect cheap ST's and a team capable of promotion - why not other teams seem to have done it. The fact is since the tickets prices have shot up at the start of the previous "new era", gates have steadily fallen meaning much of the increase in revenue from those who do still attend is lost on the seats that are now empty. Like I said this years average attendance is just over 13000, if we take the average ticket as £25 the gate reciepts average at £325k if we were to get 1000 extra fans the prices could be lowered to £23.20 with no loss, an extra 1500 fans and the price could be £22.50.
The fact is the higher ticket prices have kept fans away simply because they cannot afford to attend as often, me included.
- Cliff, West London, 30/04/2010 16:46
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Cliff - If you purchase a season ticket before the 17th May then you save at least £61, my ticket has come down from £569 last year to £539 this season. with a further 5% saving if we hit the 9,000 target. We can't expect super cheap season tickets and a team capable of promotion...our ground isnt big enough and we do not get enough support for that to happen! Lets be realistic about this...
- Paul, West London, 29/04/2010 19:05
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Cliff, there is a possible 15% saving if you take up the early bird offer AND if 9000 season tickets are sold. He's been there 2 months, we wont see a whirl of change in that. wait for next season
- clint, london, 29/04/2010 17:49
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The new kit isn't hoops......? Oh dear oh dear oh dear.
- wallhimtone, Bognor Regis, UK, 29/04/2010 14:01
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The new shirt isn't hooped....oh dear oh dear oh dear.
- wallhimtone, Bognor Regis, UK, 29/04/2010 13:56
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The board claims to "have responded to attempts by the club to reconnect with their core supporters" and that they "organised a forum with 12 representatives of various fans' groups and attended by Amit Bhatia to discuss the direction they must now take".
Well they may have met with fan groups in an effort to "reconnect", but there is a big difference between talking and listening. All the fan groups lobbied for a ticket price reduction to reverse the falling gates, instead we do get a re-introduction of the early bird scheme but NO reduction in season or day ticket prices. We do however get new family deals whereby a family of one adult and two U16's get a massive £12 saving per season between them!
Now we get to see the new kit and it has one horizontal bar and ONE hoop, I can assure you this doesn't please me and won't please many other fans. In the past when designs for a new kit were submitted by a supplier the fans were shown them and asked to vote (after all it's us that buy them), and a few years back there was a resounding vote for none of the kits offered as the "hoops" were broken like the top band in this new kit, the board at the time made sure the kits were redisigned to fans satisfaction. This new board obviously didn't "connect" with any fan group over this design.
So we are told that "Saksena effuses a pragmatism that should inspire supporters to believe the club are in good hands" - well it looks like the usual butter fingers to me.
- Cliff, West London, 29/04/2010 13:54
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I remember Gordon Jago's QPR; they were London's top team for a few years, once they almost became Champions of England, bar for one drawn game etc.
Oddly enough; QPR were poor then?
- mickinlondon, london, 29/04/2010 13:23
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Afternoon:
15°c




