Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

Ron Noades

Ronald Geoffrey Noades (22 June 1937 – 24 December 2013) was an English businessman and executive who owned and chaired multiple clubs, including from 1976 to 1981, from 1981 to 1998, and from 1998 to 2006. Under his leadership, advanced from the Southern League to the , secured promotion to the First Division in 1989 and reached the as runners-up, and won the Third Division championship in 1999 after Noades assumed the manager's role. Noades began his involvement in ownership with non-league in 1974 and later served as manager at and in a caretaker capacity at , demonstrating a hands-on approach to club operations despite lacking a playing background. His tenure across these clubs was frequently contentious, particularly due to public statements expressing preferences for "hard men" to complement "athletic black players" in handling winter conditions and physical demands, which drew accusations of racial stereotyping in player selection. Noades defended such views by citing his employment of black players and observed performance patterns, though they contributed to his reputation as a polarizing figure among fans and media.

Early life and pre-football career

Background and initial business ventures

Ronald Geoffrey Noades was born on 22 June 1937 in . Noades built his initial fortune through property development, accumulating millions prior to entering the football sector in the early 1970s. His approach emphasized acquiring undervalued opportunities, enforcing rigorous cost management, and extracting value via resale or redevelopment, reflecting a pragmatic, results-oriented strategy grounded in direct market observation rather than theoretical models. These ventures were primarily self-financed, relying on personal capital and calculated risks to scale operations without external backing, which established the foundation for his later commercial expansions. Noades channeled profits into entities such as Altonwood Limited, which served as a for his holdings and demonstrated his focus on asset optimization for sustained profitability.

Involvement in football

Ownership of Southall FC

Ron Noades entered football club ownership in 1974 by acquiring Southall FC, a non-league team in the based in the London Borough of . The purchase, which included the club's shares, cost £2,800, providing a low-risk introduction to the sector amid his existing business interests. Noades appointed Geoff Taylor as manager and adopted an experimental management style, utilizing primarily as a talent nursery. The club focused on and developing young players, who were subsequently loaned to higher-division teams to gain experience and potentially generate value through transfers or fees. This approach emphasized cost efficiency over immediate competitive dominance in the non-league pyramid. During Noades' tenure, achieved some on-field success, though details are limited to general improvements under Taylor's rather than specific promotions or deep cup runs. The ownership period, lasting until approximately 1976, served as a practical testing ground that informed Noades' subsequent moves into professional football, without reported major financial windfalls or deficits beyond the initial modest investment.

Ownership of Wimbledon FC

In 1976, Ron Noades acquired a majority shareholding in for £2,800, taking control of a club competing in the Southern League as it sought to transition to professional status in the Football League. Under his chairmanship, the club submitted a successful application for to the Football League in June 1977, securing entry into the Fourth Division ahead of established non-league rivals. This marked a pivotal step in stabilizing the club's finances and professionalizing operations, with Noades emphasizing disciplined investment in squad quality over expansive infrastructure spending at the existing ground. Noades demonstrated results-oriented decision-making by appointing as manager in January 1978 after the resignation of Allen Batsford, a move that yielded promotion to the Third Division at the end of the 1978–79 season through focused recruitment of capable players suited to the lower divisions' physical demands. However, the 1979–80 campaign saw relegation back to the Fourth Division, prompting Noades to explore relocation to in 1979–80 as a pragmatic means to boost attendances and revenue, though he ultimately abandoned the plan upon assessing insufficient crowd potential. In a further tactical shift, Noades orchestrated Gradi's departure to join him at while installing assistant as Wimbledon manager, enabling an immediate return to the Third Division via promotion in 1980–81. Reflecting an investor's exit strategy rather than custodial commitment, Noades sold his stake to in 1981, capitalizing on the club's elevated standing to redirect resources toward acquiring for £600,000 and pursuing higher-profile opportunities. This period underscored Noades' approach of short-term value extraction through targeted managerial appointments and competitive positioning, transforming a non-league entity into a sustainable club without long-term sentimental attachment.

Ownership of Crystal Palace FC

Ron Noades acquired Crystal Palace Football Club on 23 January 1981, shortly after the team's relegation from the First Division, assuming control of a financially strained outfit in the Second Division. Over the initial years, the club faced challenges, including mid-table finishes and the need for squad rebuilding under manager Steve Coppell, whom Noades appointed in 1984. Noades emphasized cost-effective recruitment, scouting non-league and lower-division talents to stabilize finances amid limited resources. By the late 1980s, Noades' strategy yielded results, culminating in promotion to the First Division via a third-place finish in the 1988–89 Second Division season. The following year, Palace reached the , losing 1–0 to Manchester United after extra time, while securing a respectable sixth place in . Squad composition included diverse players, with black athletes like and providing critical pace, athleticism, and goal-scoring prowess; Wright, signed from non-league Greenwich Borough in 1985 for a nominal fee involving a set of weights, netted 118 goals in 277 appearances, underpinning the team's counter-attacking style and defensive transitions. The 1990–91 season saw Palace embroiled in a relegation battle, finishing 20th with 40 points, but surviving due to Town's 10-point deduction for financial irregularities, which dropped Luton below them. Noades balanced this with financial prudence, routinely trading players—such as selling to for £2.5 million in 1991—to offset operational costs and avoid accumulating debt, maintaining a "hand-to-mouth" approach that prioritized over heavy spending. Despite a 10th-place finish in 1991–92, relegation followed in 1992–93 from the inaugural season. Subsequent years involved yo-yo status: demotion to the Second Division after 1994–95, followed by playoff promotion back to the top flight in 1996–97, only for another relegation in 1997–98. Noades leveraged player sales and to navigate these fluctuations, ensuring the club's viability without external bailouts. In 1998, after a brief caretaker managerial stint, he sold the club to Mark Goldberg for £22 million—providing a £5 million in the process—explicitly excluding stadium to allow valuation of the team's operations. This transaction marked the end of his 17-year ownership, during which experienced peak competitiveness alongside recurrent financial and competitive volatility.

Ownership of Brentford FC

Ron Noades acquired a majority shareholding in in June 1998, purchasing the club from previous owner Martin Allen Webb for approximately £650,000. He immediately appointed himself as both chairman and manager, implementing wholesale operational changes to stabilize the club, which was then competing in the Third Division amid financial constraints typical of lower-tier English . Under his leadership, secured the Third Division championship in the 1998–99 season, achieving promotion to the Second Division with 94 points from 46 matches, marking an immediate turnaround despite a limited playing budget that prioritized cost-effective squad building over high expenditures. Following promotion, Noades resigned as manager in November 2000 after a 4–2 home defeat to non-league Kingstonian, shifting focus to his chairmanship role while appointing successors like and to pursue further advancement. The club experienced mid-table stability in the Second Division, finishing in 2001–02 with 52 points from 46 games, but faced persistent operational hurdles, including the 2002 collapse of , which resulted in an estimated £183,000 revenue loss for and exacerbated cashflow issues across the division. Noades publicly criticized Football League executives for oversight failures in the ITV deal, arguing they bore responsibility despite not negotiating it directly, as the agreement's fragility threatened smaller clubs' viability. His financial support included securing the club's £3.9 million through his company Altonwood, preventing immediate amid these external shocks. Noades' tenure emphasized pragmatic resource allocation, with investments directed toward squad competitiveness rather than extensive infrastructure upgrades, given the club's £4.5 million facility and lower-division limitations. Efforts to push for additional promotions yielded playoff contention in subsequent seasons, but fan dissatisfaction grew over perceived lack of ambition, culminating in organized protests and abusive treatment toward Noades, including posters accusing him of "murdering" the club. He stepped down as chairman in March 2003 amid this pressure but retained majority ownership until January 2006, when Bees United, supported by loans, donations, and investor , acquired his 60% stake for around £4.5 million in a deal that cleared debts and transitioned control to supporters. Noades attributed his exit to relentless supporter hostility, describing it as a factor overriding his accountability-focused approach to club stewardship.

Property investments and stadium management

Control and leasing of Selhurst Park

In 1986, Ron Noades arranged for Football Club to sell the freehold of to his company, Altonwood Limited, thereby decoupling ownership from club operations and enabling separate streams from leasing. This structure persisted after Noades sold the club itself to Mark Goldberg for £23 million in 1998, retaining Altonwood's control of the ground while the club entered a lease agreement that included fixed rent plus a percentage of matchday ticket sales, reported as 10% initially. The arrangement generated verifiable lease income for Altonwood, such as £1.052 million in the 2004-05 season when Palace competed in the , dropping to £848,718 the following year in the . Altonwood's ownership facilitated groundsharing opportunities that bolstered revenue, including historical leases to Charlton Athletic from 1985 to 1991 amid The Valley's closure and to starting in 1991 following Charlton's departure, with the latter arrangement extending into the club's relocation era. Post-1998, the primary lessee remained , but the independent freehold allowed Noades to negotiate terms prioritizing asset preservation over club solvency, exposing the latter to escalating costs amid fluctuating attendance and league status. Sale negotiations underscored Noades' focus on maximizing value from the property. In , Altonwood agreed to sell the freehold to property developer Structadene for £12 million, a valuation reflecting the stadium's commercial potential independent of the club's fortunes, though the deal shifted when chairman intervened to secure it through an intermediary entity, One. During 's 2010 administration, administrators pursued joint acquisition of the club and stadium , highlighting ongoing vulnerabilities from the bifurcated model, as unresolved obligations compounded the club's £30 million debts. This separation yielded financial security for Noades through diversified income and a lucrative exit, with the £12 million sale providing a return on the 1986 acquisition amid rising property values, while imposing structural risks on the via non-contingent burdens that correlated with repeated administrations in 1998, 2000, and 2010. The model exemplified asset ring-fencing, insulating personal holdings from operational volatility but constraining reinvestment in infrastructure or debt reduction.

Broader commercial property interests

Prior to his involvement in football, Noades built his fortune as a property developer. In later years, Noades served as chairman of the Altonwood Group, which acquired and developed multiple golf courses in south-east as commercial leisure properties. The group purchased The Addington Golf Club in 2006. Its portfolio included Surrey National Golf Club (formerly ), where Noades had earlier bought land for course construction between 1993 and 1997, and Golf Club as a primary asset. Altonwood reported net assets of nearly £18 million in the 2007-08 financial year, reflecting returns from these holdings. This focus on investments represented diversification into recreational , separate from his sports-related ventures.

Public statements and controversies

Remarks on racial dynamics in teams

In a 1991 Channel 4 , Ron Noades articulated observations on racial differences in player attributes, stating that black players possess "great " and are "great athletes" who "love to play with the ball," contributing skill and flair to teams, but that successful multi-racial squads require white players to "balance things up and give the team some brains." He emphasized the need for such balance to address perceived deficiencies in discipline and tactical organization among black players, drawing from patterns observed in English scouting during the era. These remarks reflected Noades' approach to team construction at Crystal Palace, where he prioritized empirical performance over ideological constraints, signing black talents such as Vince Hilaire in 1979—one of the earliest prominent black players in English top-flight football—and Mark Bright from Leicester City in July 1988. Hilaire featured extensively in Palace's squads through the 1980s, while Bright formed a prolific striking partnership that propelled the club's 1988–89 promotion to the First Division, finishing third in the Second Division with 81 points from 46 matches. Palace's success extended to the 1990 FA Cup final appearance, bolstered by multi-racial lineups integrating black forwards for speed and finishing alongside white midfielders for structure, yielding empirical results like a 3–3 draw against Manchester United in the final replay. Noades' hiring record, including up to six in the first team at times, contradicted accusations of malice, as he defended his statements by highlighting practical in a diverse environment where recruits from local non-league scenes drove competitive outcomes. Contemporary critiques framed his views as akin to historical "racial stacking" in —where dominated flair positions (e.g., wingers, strikers) due to physical advantages in speed and power, while white filled central roles requiring positional discipline—rather than prescriptive , evidenced by Palace's promotions (1979 to Third Division, 1989 to First Division) under his ownership without regard for demographic quotas. The comments sparked media backlash, with outlets decrying them as insensitive amid rising awareness in 1990s , yet Noades maintained they derived from on-field causation and data, not , as his clubs outperformed peers reluctant to field players despite available talent pools. Defenses noted similar era-specific tropes among managers, where empirical overrepresentation of players in sprint-dependent roles (e.g., 43% of English professional players by early 2000s but concentrated in attack) validated balanced compositions for holistic team dynamics, aligning with Palace's sustained top-flight competitiveness from 1989 to 1993.

Fan and media relations

Noades' ownership of from 1998 to 2006 was characterized by escalating conflicts with supporters, who transitioned from initial acclaim—evidenced by fans donning white wigs in his likeness—to widespread hostility over perceived self-interest amid mounting club debts. Following a 3-1 home defeat to non-league Kingstonian on January 15, 2000, Noades resigned as manager, directly citing abusive fan reactions as intolerable. In April 2003, after the Football League rejected his proposals to groundshare with and Kingstonian—plans opposed by fan groups like Bees United—he stepped down as chairman, stating, "I’ve had enough... The abuse I’ve received from one section of supporters has been very upsetting for my wife and I," and decrying "foul mouthed verbal insults." Supporters increasingly branded him the "white haired mercenary," reflecting resentment toward his reluctance to fund uneconomic expenditures in a financially precarious lower-division club. These tensions culminated in a September 2005 agreement where Brentford's supporters' trust assumed control effective January 2006, alongside a takeover led by , prompting Noades' complete withdrawal. Relations with Crystal Palace supporters during his 1981–1998 chairmanship similarly frayed due to decisions prioritizing financial separation, such as his 1986 proposal to merge the club with , which fans outright rejected as undermining local identity. Further discord arose in 1998 when Noades sold the club to Mark Goldberg for £22.8 million but retained —purchased by him from the club in 1986—opting instead for lease arrangements that left fans decrying the divorce of stadium assets from club fortunes, a move widely criticized as self-serving. Media coverage frequently cast Noades as a controversial, profit-driven operator in football's volatile economics, where owner realism clashed with supporter expectations for unchecked spending, though his exits often aligned with stabilizing transitions for the clubs involved. In interviews, Noades voiced personal anguish over fan vitriol, framing his approach as demanding fiscal accountability in an insolvency-riddled sector rather than courting acclaim through unsustainable outlays.

Personal life and death

Family and private affairs

Ron Noades maintained a low-profile , largely shielding his family from the public scrutiny associated with his business ventures in and . He was married to Novello Noades, a Wales-born businesswoman, , and former French teacher, for 33 years until his death in 2013. The couple had two sons, Ross and . Noades was also father to a daughter, Kelly Jane, from an earlier relationship. Overall, he fathered five children across his marriages, though details of any prior unions remain undocumented in public records. Noades avoided extensive personal disclosures, aligning with a detachment that kept separate from his commercial and sporting activities. Novello occasionally appeared publicly with him, such as at events, but the family resided privately in , emphasizing discretion over media engagement.

Illness and passing

In November 2012, Ron Noades was diagnosed with shortly before embarking on a planned holiday to . He underwent , , and radiotherapy targeting both the lungs and over the ensuing year. Despite these interventions, Noades died from the disease in the early hours of 24 December 2013 at the age of 76, following a prolonged battle that left him reliant on oxygen support in his final months. Crystal Palace, where Noades had served as owner and chairman from 1981 to 1998, issued a statement expressing deepest sympathies to his wife Novello and family, acknowledging his significant tenure at the club. , which he majority-owned from 1998 to 2006, released a concise confirmation of his passing, noting the battle had persisted for most of 2013 but offering no further personal tributes. No public reports emerged of major disputes over his estate in the immediate aftermath.

References

  1. [1]
    Ron Noades: Football club owner | The Independent
    Dec 27, 2013 · Ronald Geoffrey Noades, football club owner, chairman and manager: born London 22 June 1937; chairman of Wimbledon 1976-81, Crystal Palace 1981 ...Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
  2. [2]
    Remembering Noades' impact on 40-year anniversary - Crystal Palace
    Jan 22, 2021 · January 23rd marks the anniversary of Ron Noades officially signing the deal which made him owner of Crystal Palace Football Club in 1981.Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
  3. [3]
    RON NOADES 1937-2013 - Brentford FC
    Dec 24, 2013 · The former owner of Southall, Wimbledon, and Crystal Palace, bought Brentford in 1998 from David Webb, and installed himself as Chairman and ...Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
  4. [4]
    Ron Noades - Manager profile - Transfermarkt
    Brentford FC · Brentford Owner, 98/99 (01.07.1998) / 05/06 (31.01.2006) ; Crystal Palace Caretaker Manager, 97/98 / 97/98 ; Crystal Palace President, 81/82 (01.07 ...
  5. [5]
    Ex-Derby player Craig Ramage's comments showed the battle to ...
    “I don't think too many of them can read the game. When you're getting into the mid-winter you need a few of the hard white men to carry the athletic black ...
  6. [6]
  7. [7]
    The top 5 greatest apologies for being racist in soccer | SB Nation
    Aug 26, 2014 · ... racists despite saying racist things. The racism apology is a bizarre and black art, but here are a few top examples that Mackay can use ...Missing: controversies | Show results with:controversies
  8. [8]
    Remembering Ron Noades, the Itinerant Entrepreneur of London ...
    Jan 26, 2017 · Noades' first foray into club ownership came in 1974 at Southall, a team based in the London Borough of Ealing who at the time played in the ...Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
  9. [9]
    BRENTFORD 1998-99 DIVISION THREE CHAMPIONS
    Dec 22, 2019 · Noades, who made millions as a property developer, first entered football ownership with Southall in 1973, then Wimbledon, Milton Keynes City ...Missing: early | Show results with:early
  10. [10]
    Jordan makes it crystal clear: life at the Palace has become ...
    Oct 1, 2008 · Selhurst Park, Crystal Palace's home since 1924, remained under the ownership of Ron Noades' company, Altonwood, after he sold the club to Mark ...Missing: construction | Show results with:construction
  11. [11]
    Ron Noades: Football club owner | The Independent
    Dec 27, 2013 · ... bought for £600,000 in 1981 and sold 17 years later for almost £23m. Managed by Steve Coppell – to whom Noades had entrusted control in 1984 ...
  12. [12]
    THE HISTORY OF WIMBLEDON F. C. Part Three. From the Southern ...
    Mar 20, 2024 · The 1974-75 season started with a loss to Nuneaton Borough but the Dons then went on a run of 22 successive victories in the league and various ...Missing: achievements | Show results with:achievements<|control11|><|separator|>
  13. [13]
    History - MKDSA
    In 1980 Chairman Ron Noades claimed that the Borough of Merton did not want the club and that he was in talks to take Wimbledon FC to Milton Keynes. Chairman ...
  14. [14]
    Former Dons managers join forces to support the move back home
    Feb 12, 2020 · In 1981 Dario Gradi and Ron Noades went to Crystal Palace and I was appointed manager and we got promoted immediately. A year later we were ...
  15. [15]
    Ron Noades - The Times
    Dec 30, 2013 · Ronald Geoffrey Noades became chairman of Wimbledon, then in the Southern League, in 1976. At the time clubs were only elected to the Football ...Missing: biography | Show results with:biography<|separator|>
  16. [16]
    Value for money: How Coppell and Noades built Palace's most ...
    Nov 26, 2020 · “The club was about one-and-three-quarter million in debt,” then-Chairman Ron Noades explained, recalling the years before Coppell's arrival. “ ...
  17. [17]
    Ron Noades, former Crystal Palace and Brentford owner, dies aged 76
    Dec 24, 2013 · Crystal Palace have confirmed the death of their former owner Ron Noades after a battle with lung cancer.Missing: Southall | Show results with:Southall<|separator|>
  18. [18]
    Happy birthday Ian Wright! Watch his best Palace goals - News
    Nov 3, 2023 · More than six years, 277 games and 118 goals: Ian Wright's Crystal Palace career places him in the category of bona fide legend, ...
  19. [19]
    The bizarre thing Crystal Palace traded to sign Ian Wright in 1985
    Oct 12, 2025 · Crystal Palace traded a set of weights to sign Ian Wright from Greenwich Borough back in 1985. He went on to become a club legend.<|separator|>
  20. [20]
    History has a way of repeating itself. Ian Wright made the switch from ...
    Aug 26, 2025 · ON THIS DAY: In 1991, Ian Wright joined Arsenal from Crystal Palace for £2.5m, and scored 185 goals for the club.
  21. [21]
    Mark Goldberg: I am not embarrassed about my time at Crystal Palace
    Nov 11, 2011 · I'm not embarrassed about Palace." Goldberg paid Ron Noades £22m for Palace in 1998, in a deal which included a £5m loan from the outgoing ...
  22. [22]
    Ron Noades: Former Crystal Palace chairman dies aged 76 - BBC
    Dec 24, 2013 · After selling Palace in 1998, Noades bought Brentford and guided the club to the Division Three championship after becoming manager.Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
  23. [23]
    History | Brentford FC
    The Ron Noades Era. Ron Noades bought the Club from Webb in June 1998 and installed himself as Chairman and Manager, Brentford winning the Third Division title ...
  24. [24]
    Brentford FC - Historical league placements | Transfermarkt
    Second Division (- 03/04), Third Tier, 13, 13, 20, 47:61, -14, 52, 17, Ron Noades. 97/98, Second Division (- 03/04), Second Division (- 03/04), Third Tier, 11 ...
  25. [25]
    Cash-strapped Bees face £183k loss after ITV Digital collapse
    Apr 7, 2002 · THE IMPACT on cash-strapped Brentford FC of the collapse of ITV Digital will be immeasurable', it was claimed this week.
  26. [26]
    Brentford boss lambasts critics of league chiefs - The Guardian
    Aug 6, 2002 · He said that although they were not responsible for signing the ITV Digital deal, they were to blame for presiding over it knowing it was not ...
  27. [27]
    Deal with Noades can save Brentford going under - News Shopper
    Jun 5, 2002 · "Brentford has an overdraft facility of £4.5 million - at present the overdraft is £3.9 million, which is secured by Ron's company Altonwood. He ...Missing: financial | Show results with:financial<|control11|><|separator|>
  28. [28]
    New Bees United directors for Brentford FC | Bees United
    At a board meeting of Brentford Football Club on Monday 31 March 2003, Ron Noades stood down as chairman, and resigned as a director of the club.
  29. [29]
    Ron Noades: How I did it my way | Soccer - The Guardian
    Jul 25, 2006 · Ron Noades talks to Matt Scott about Niall Quinn's chances of succeeding as chairman and manager at Sunderland.Missing: financial | Show results with:financial
  30. [30]
    Ron Noades - the "white haired mercenary" | Bees United
    May 26, 2023 · Brentford Chairman Ron Noades spoke of his torment at being forced out of the club by abusive fans, there were few tears in my house.Missing: biography | Show results with:biography
  31. [31]
    Crystal Palace complete their incredible journey - FootballFanCast
    Jun 26, 2010 · In 1981 Ron Noades bought Crystal Palace from Ray Bloye. Noades is an astute businessman who was successful in bringing trophies to Selhurst ...
  32. [32]
    Is Ron plotting palace return? - News Shopper
    Apr 16, 2003 · Noades was chairman of Palace for 17 years until he sold the club (without the ground) to Mark Goldberg for £23million in 1998. When Jordan took ...
  33. [33]
    Brentford, Palace, Oldham | When Saturday Comes
    ... Selhurst Park, for which they pay Noades's company Altonwood a substantial sum in rent. Altonwood also receives ten per cent of ticket sales (reducing to ...
  34. [34]
    Could Selhurst Park be sold for housing? | Soccer - The Guardian
    Jan 30, 2007 · The Deloitte document notes that £1.052m rent was paid to Noades' company in 2004-05, the season Palace were in the Premiership, then £848,718 ...
  35. [35]
    As Bad As Things Got; Charlton Athletic, 7th September 1985
    May 8, 2024 · Charlton Athletic were leaving their home to ground share at Selhurst Park with Crystal Palace. ... football during that decade that Ron Noades ...
  36. [36]
    [PDF] Scrutiny of London's Football Stadiums June 2003
    1.4 The loss of Wimbledon FC demonstrates the problems London's football clubs face ... Ron Noades – ex-Chairman, Brentford FC. Robert Scott - Islington Stadium ...
  37. [37]
    FOOTBALL SPY: SIMON PULLS OFF PARK DEAL - Mirror Online
    Feb 21, 2012 · Property developers Structadene agreed a £12m deal with former Palace owner Noades, who had retained the leasehold on the stadium. But the ...
  38. [38]
    Crystal Palace sale hinges on joint deal for club and Selhurst Park
    Mar 30, 2010 · ... Palace were sold by Ron Noades to Mark Goldberg without the ground in 1998. The company which now owns the ground, a subsidiary of Rock ...<|separator|>
  39. [39]
    Ron Noades - The Times
    Apr 26, 2009 · He then invested £1.75m in buying Brentford football club. The Palace sale did not include Selhurst Park stadium, which Noades later sold for £ ...
  40. [40]
    The Addington: Unveiling the past - Golf Course Architecture
    Mar 16, 2023 · She died in 2002, and in 2006 the course was bought by local businessman Ron Noades, famous as the chairman and owner of football clubs ...Missing: development | Show results with:development
  41. [41]
    The Altonwood Group Upgrades with E-Z-GO - Golf Business News
    Sep 18, 2017 · The Altonwood Group opened its first course at Westerham in 1997 after former Crystal Palace Owner Ron Noades purchased the land to build a golf ...Missing: construction development
  42. [42]
    [PDF] Black Representation in English Professional Football
    In 1991, Ron Noades, then chairman of Crystal Palace, famously said: “The problem with black players is they've great pace, great athletes, love to play with ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  43. [43]
    'I was a racist - but football changed me' | Soccer - The Guardian
    Nov 28, 2004 · Does this make me racist or a hypocrite? That is for you to decide.' He has no doubt that football has changed the racists, rather than the ...Missing: quote | Show results with:quote
  44. [44]
    'Of course he is not a Nazi. He is a man who likes history' | Sport
    Jan 19, 2003 · Crystal Palace were one of the first teams to fully integrate black players into their club, with names such as Vince Hilaire in the 1970s ...
  45. [45]
    Noades: 'I'm quitting' - News Shopper
    Mar 28, 2003 · BRENTFORD F.C. chairman Ron Noades revealed yesterday that he had had enough of being abused by fans and would be quitting the club between ...Missing: 2006 | Show results with:2006
  46. [46]
    BBC SPORT | Football | Brentford | Bees fans agree deal with Noades
    Sep 30, 2005 · The agreement with Noades' company Altonwood enables the trust to exercise its option to acquire the 60% majority shareholding in the club. The ...
  47. [47]
    2006-2016: An incredible decade for Brentford Football Club
    Jan 20, 2016 · As a result of the takeover in 2006 Greg Dyke became Chairman of Brentford FC ... Ron Noades left the Club. During those ten years, Greg became ...
  48. [48]
    Who could take on crisis club Crystal Palace now?
    Feb 1, 2010 · Ron Noades. Despite being widely criticised by fans for holding on to Selhurst Park when he sold the club to Mark Goldberg in 1998, most ...
  49. [49]
    Novello Noades brings Footballers' Wives glamour to knitting
    Sep 14, 2013 · Novello went to Warrington teacher training college and moved to London University to continue her studies, graduating in 1981 and marrying Ron ...
  50. [50]
    English businessman Ron Noades with his wife Novello and ...
    Jul 3, 2018 · English businessman Ron Noades (1937 - 2013) with his wife Novello and daughter Kelly Jane at the 'Dons', the headquarters of Wimbledon FC.Missing: marriage | Show results with:marriage
  51. [51]
    Wife pays tribute to former Crystal Palace chairman Ron Noades
    Jan 6, 2014 · Ron Noades passed away on Christmas Eve after a battle with lung cancer. His wife Novello Noades wrote the below tribute for her husband on the day of his ...
  52. [52]
    Former Crystal Palace chairman Ron Noades reveals cancer battle
    Oct 15, 2013 · The former Eagles chairman was diagnosed with the tumour in November 2012 before he was about to go on holiday to Barbados.
  53. [53]
    Former Palace owner Noades dies, aged 76 | Reuters
    "Ron was diagnosed with lung cancer just over a year ago and received chemotherapy, brain radiotherapy and radiotherapy." Noades, who also had spells as ...
  54. [54]
    Ron Noades dies: Crystal Palace pay tribute to former owner who ...
    Dec 24, 2013 · The club, who Noades owned between 1981 and 1998, said its thoughts and deepest sympathies are with his wife Novello and their family.