Yorkshire have reported a staggering £7.1million annual loss, despite hosting a lucrative Ashes Test match last year.

In his chairman’s statement, within the club’s annual accounts released on Friday, Colin Graves said while 2023 ‘should have been productive and profitable…in the event there was a huge trading loss’, and branded it ‘Yorkshire’s annus horribilis’.

In the finance report, Paul Cooke, Yorkshire’s acting finance director, wrote that a number of factors ‘including exceptional items and a writedown in the value of the stadium have contributed to an overall loss of £7.1m for the year’.

That figure incorporates a trading deficit of £2.8m plus a depreciation of £4.3m in the club’s assets — including the valuation of their Headingley home and a forecast of future cashflows, including international matches allocated to Yorkshire up until the 2031 season — to £24.2m.

While England’s victory over Australia last July resulted in a surge in revenue year on year, from £14.1m in 2022 to £18.2m, and saw Yorkshire make a profit of £4.1m for a match that lasted only four of the five scheduled days, the balance sheet was pushed into the red by spiralling costs.

Yorkshire had reported an crushing £7.1 million loss in their latest set of annual accounts

Yorkshire had reported an crushing £7.1 million loss in their latest set of annual accounts

Yorkshire had reported an crushing £7.1 million loss in their latest set of annual accounts 

England's Ashes win over Australia did provide a surge but the club still finds itself in debt

England's Ashes win over Australia did provide a surge but the club still finds itself in debt

England’s Ashes win over Australia did provide a surge but the club still finds itself in debt 

Exceptional expenditure alone — including a compensation bill for the unlawful sacking of 16 members of staff during Lord Patel’s tenure as chair of the club — was logged at £1.9m.

A review of the club commissioned by Graves when he returned as the board’s figurehead earlier this year concluded an overspend in multiple areas of a business now saddled with around £23.5m of debt.

Change has already taken place within the club executive in 2024, with Darren Gough ending his £250,000 role as director of cricket last month and Stephen Vaughan, the chief executive, understood to be working his notice period.

The accounts also showed Yorkshire had received some of their payments from the ECB ahead of schedule to aid cash flow, the trustees of the Graves Trusts had agreed in principle to extend the repayment date of the club’s secured loans from October 2024 to October 2025 and Graves himself had pledged £1m to cover costs for this season, with a promise to cover financial liabilities if additional funding was not obtained.

Read More: World News | Entertainment News | Celeb News
Mail Online

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Trump hush money trial begins in New York: Why is the case so significant?

Former United States President Donald Trump is set to face his first…

Rachel Catherine

Table of Biography Rachel Catherine is a famous Australian Internet Personality. Rachel…

BAFTA-Winning Director Hassan Akkad Prepping Asylum-Seeker Film ‘Matar’ With Stars From ‘The Swimmers,’ ‘Dune’ (Exclusive)

A film examining the plight of asylum seekers in the U.K. is…

TIFF: Excited Filmmakers, Party Hosts Embrace Film Fest In-Person Return

As the Toronto Film Festival marks a big post-pandemic return to the…