Inverness Caledonian Thistle won the Scottish Cup in 2015 and were playing in the Premiership until 2016/17; the club needed £1.6m to see out the end of this season; talks were held with investors in the United States, Denmark and the UAE

Tuesday 22 October 2024 17:55, UK

The club admitted they would have to enter administration if there was no new investment.

Image: Scottish League One club Inverness Caledonian Thistle could be hit with a 15-point deduction after entering administration

Inverness Caledonian Thistle have entered administration after a late bid to save the Scottish League One side failed.

The club launched a crowdfunding page to raise £200,000 to see out the month, but they did not reach the target by last week’s deadline.

Manager Duncan Ferguson donated his wages and has been working for free in a bit to save the struggling club who needed between £1.4m to £1.6m to continue until the end of this season.

They are now set to be hit with a 15-point punishment from the SPFL for entering administration, with the club all but certain to move to part-time football if they drop into League Two.

Inverness captain Graeme Shinnie lifts the William Hill Scottish Cup

Image: Inverness CT won the Scottish Cup in 2015 but now face relegation to the bottom tier of the SPFL

Caley Thistle were relegated from the Championship in the summer and are seventh in League One – just three points clear of bottom spot.

Talks were held with investors in the UK, United States, Denmark and the UAE over a takeover but no deal was agreed, with administrators now tasked with finding new owners. If unsuccessful – they could sell assets to raise funds for creditors.

Duncan Ferguson is working for free at Inverness

Image: Duncan Ferguson has been working for free at the club

A statement from the club said that James Stephen, Malcolm Cohen and Shane Crooks of BDO had been apppointed as joint administrators.

A spokesperson for BDO said: “We can confirm a formal appointment has been made and Inverness Caledonian Thistle is now in administration.

“We understand this will be a difficult and uncertain time for the club, its staff, its loyal fan base and the local community.

“The administrators will be in a position to provide further information and their plan to seek to secure the long term future of the club in due course.”