logo
#

Latest news with #JordanGroup

London Irish return on course despite death of Jordan
London Irish return on course despite death of Jordan

BBC News

time28-03-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

London Irish return on course despite death of Jordan

London Irish remain on course for a 2026 return despite the death of former Formula 1 team owner Eddie Jordan, his son Exiles were bought out of administration by a consortium led by Jordan last who also worked as a TV pundit, died in Cape Town, South Africa, on Thursday 20 March, having had aggressive prostate cancer. He was 76."Our strategy remains firmly in place. We're on track to return to competitive rugby by September 2026 and nothing has changed in that pursuit," said interim London Irish chief executive officer Kyle Jordan, son of Eddie Irish set out their plan to return under a fan ownership model in 2026 six days prior to Jordan's Jordan Group said their core aims were to secure a league for the club to compete in, as well as a home ground in west London, and to establish a women's team and academy, before handing over to fan ownership. 'Mission is to build something lasting' "London Irish was never about one person. Our mission is, and will always be, to build something lasting - something rooted in Irish identity, global ambition and community," Kyle Jordan said in a statement, external on LinkedIn. "While Dad was a huge inspiration behind this journey, our plans were always built to move with him in the background."Jordan's Formula 1 team won four grands prix in its 15 years and gave seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher his debut in came in from across the motor racing world in the wake of the Irishman's death and his son described his "huge" loss."He was my mentor, my hero, and the person who helped shape how I see the world - through competition, culture and relentless belief," Kyle Jordan added. "His passing leaves a huge void in my life and in the spirit of the sporting world we both loved." When did London Irish go into administration? London Irish filed for administration with debts of £30m in June 2023, after they had been suspended by the Premiership for failing to meet a deadline to pay their players or agree a sale of the financially stricken then moved on and the club has been inactive and Worcester also went out of business during the same along with Wasps and Worcester, applied to join the expanded Championship for the 2025-26 plans of a 2026 return would rule them out of entering the league but former administrator Lee Manning said the Jordan Group had explored the possibility of joining the United Rugby Championship, in which sides from Ireland, Wales, Scotland and South Africa compete, rather than restarting lower down the English pyramid.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store