Coventry City: League One club forced out of home as legal battle over Ricoh Arena continues

The League One club will have to leave the Ricoh Arena again next season because of the legal battle between their owners, SISU, and Wasps, the rugby team that owns the ground

Jack Pitt-Brooke
Friday 12 April 2019 08:17 BST
Comments
Coventry don't know where they'll be playing next season
Coventry don't know where they'll be playing next season (Getty Images)

Coventry City have been forced out of Coventry for a second time.

The League One club will have to leave the Ricoh Arena again next season because of the legal battle between their owners, SISU, and Wasps, the rugby team that owns the ground.

Coventry City’s five-year tenancy at the Ricoh ends this summer and months of talks have failed to find an agreement on a new deal. Coventry City must confirm to the EFL where they will play next season and a statement released on their website on Thursday afternoon announced that they have found two groundshare options, neither of which are in Coventry.

“The Football Club confirmed to the EFL that it is close to the Head of Terms stage with two groundshare options. Coventry City will now progress to working on finalising terms with the Clubs and Stadiums involved.

"While it remains our number one priority to stay, we can confirm that unfortunately the Ricoh Arena is not one of the venues above.”

“This is not an easy situation,” the statement continued, “and we apologise to supporters that it has reached this stage and for the heartache which has been caused.”

Coventry City played at the Ricoh Arena from 2005 to 2013 before being forced to play the 2013-14 season at Northampton Town’s Sixfields Stadium. They eventually moved back to the Ricoh as tenants, as the ground was sold to Wasps amid legal turmoil with SISU, the private equity fund which owns the club.

SISU are still pursuing legal action against Wasps concerning the stadium, which has proven a barrier to any new tenancy deal for Coventry City to stay at the Ricoh.

SISU have had the opportunity to sell the club, with former vice-chairman Gary Hoffman leading a consortium that offered more than £7million as recently as last month. But SISU have refused to sell or to end their legal action, meaning that agreement with Wasps is impossible and now Coventry City are facing a second spell in exile.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in