Showing posts with label Horizon_Sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horizon_Sports. Show all posts

2/04/2015

McIlroy Free to Master New Horizons


Rory McIlroy and his former management company have reached an out-of-court settlement over their contract dispute.

The dispute between McIlroy and Horizon Sports Management was due to reach Dublin High Court this week, but Mr Justice Cregan postponed the case on Tuesday after hearing the two sides were "making progress" in discussions.

Those discussions have now yielded an agreement that proved beyond them for 18 months.

A joint-statement read: "The legal dispute between Rory McIlroy and Horizon Sports Management has been settled to the satisfaction of both parties who wish each other well for the future. The parties will be making no further comment."

McIlroy was suing the company for £4.5m, alleging he was coerced into signing an "unconscionable" contract at a Christmas party.

The Dublin-based agency counter-sued for £13m, alleging breach of contract and unpaid fees for helping to negotiate some lucrative sponsorship deals.

It was estimated the lawsuit could total £40m, and the case was scheduled to last eight weeks, during which time the world's top golfer would have faced the prospect of having his finances laid bare during cross examination.

The joint statement read: "The legal dispute between Rory McIlroy and Horizon Sports Management has been settled to the satisfaction of both parties who wish each other well for the future. The parties will be making no further comment.”


2/02/2015

Heartbreak Ridge For McIlroy


Rory McIlroy, fresh from a weekend victory in Dubai, is suing Conor Ridge's Horizon Sports Management over the cut his firm was taking from his on and off course earnings.

On Tuesday the world number one is in Dublin to contest the case in court. 

The bitter row over £4.2million in fees has taken the pair all the way to the big business division of the Irish High Court.

The case centres on McIlroy's contract with Dublin-based Horizon and two other linked companies, the Malta-based Gurteen and Canovan Management, also based in the Irish capital.

The golf star, who took up the game as a youngster in Holywood, Co Down, and now has a home in Florida, claims the terms were inferior to those given to other top 10 players including fellow countryman and major winning friend Graeme McDowell, who was in the same stable.

In court papers when the case was launched in late 2013, it was claimed McIlroy signed up with Ridge's agency at an informal meeting on the day of Horizon's Christmas party in 2011.

The golfer, whose address at the time was given as Avenue Princess Grace in Monaco, alleged he was exploited, misled and taken advantage of when he joined the Dublin agency.

The court heard he had no legal advice or knowledge of negotiating before he signed up, and trusted them to charge the appropriate rates.

McIlroy's case will be heard before the president of the High Court, Judge Nicholas Kearns, unless the two sides attempt an 11th hour settlement.

The dispute involves McIlroy's claim that Horizon charged almost four times what top 10 golfers pay to agents.

The pre-tax rates were set at 5% of prize winnings and 20% of sponsorship and appearances money, a charge his lawyers claim is reserved for an "inexperienced or unproven golfer'', the court heard last year.

McIlroy's business interests are now overseen by Rory McIlroy Incorporated, which is headed by Donal Casey, formerly of Horizon, his father Gerry and family friend and business executive Barry Funston, who also oversees much of the golfer's charitable work under the Rory McIlroy Foundation.

Another dispute in the case is an alleged 166,000 euro (£141,000) donation to Unicef on the eve of a trip to Haiti when McIlroy was an ambassador for the charity.

There was another row over Horizon using complimentary airline seats on a flight to Abu Dhabi booked by tournament organisers in McIlroy's name.

The young golfer's career soared in the year after he signed for Ridge from Chubby Chandler's stable, earning more than £10m in 2012 before hitting a slump to earn about £2m in prizes.

He was with the company when he won the 2012 PGA Championship, rose to number one in the world and signed a five-year sponsorship deal with Nike, said to be worth in excess of £60m.

A dip in form followed and his engagement to tennis star Caroline Wozniacki ended, but the Northern Irishman has four majors to his name.

And if recent form on the course offers any insight into his demeanour in the face of a potentially ugly court case, McIlroy appeared focused when picking up his latest trophy.

Sunday's win at the Dubai Desert Classic is a repeat of his first as a professional back in 2009.

He is now favourite to complete the career grand slam of golf, aiming to have the commercial dispute over before vying for a famous green jacket at the US Masters in Augusta in April.

Unless both sides agree to last minute mediation - a plea for which already failed last December - the relations between arguably the world's most marketable sports star and a Dublin-based agent are set to play out in public over the next four to six weeks.

Ridge's Horizon is counter-suing McIlroy for at least £1.65m after breaking his contract early.



1/28/2015

No Line on the Horizon - McIlroy

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Rory McIlroy is hoping for a swift court case between himself and Horizon Sports Management so that he can get back to doing what his does best on the golf course.

McIlroy took action against his former employers, claiming he is entitled to repudiate a December 2011 agreement with the three companies, on grounds that it was improvident.

Horizon Sport Management Ltd, Gurteen Ltd and Canovan Management Services deny his claims and have counter-claimed for damages.

"I want to put in a good performance this week, try to win and then turn my attention to the court case - hopefully it won't take too long and we can get it over and done with," said McIlroy ahead of the Dubai Desert Classic.

"It's not something you want hanging over your head and it's not something I'd want anyone to go through, it's not a nice process.

"It's a shame it's gone this far and that two sides see things completely differently. The only way to sort it out is to get a judger to come in and tell us what to do."

McIlroy is fully focuses on the week's action however.

"I am disappointed if I don't win, to be honest," he added. "You're not here to try to finish in the top five.

"I'd definitely like to break the runners-up duck the right way than the wrong way. We'll see. But I'm comfortable on this golf course, and I have good memories here, and I seem to play the course very well."

McIlroy was runner-up in the World Tour Championship in November, the Alfred Dunhill Championship in December, and the Abu Dhabi Championship two weeks ago in his first start of the year.

To finish the tour's desert swing a winner again, he will have to beat the likes of world No. 2 Henrik Stenson, No. 5 Sergio Garcia, No. 12 Martin Kaymer, and two-time defending champion Stephen Gallacher, who is a remarkable 55-under par in his last three tournaments on the Majlis course at Emirates.

Then he has a date in a Dublin court next week, as his legal battle with Horizon Sports, his former management company, inches toward a final judgement.

McIlroy said he was trying not to think of the court case until after the tournament.

"To be honest, I've been concentrating on my golf and practice, and that stuff is much more important to me than what's going to happen next week," he said.

"I will be relieved when this (case) is over. It's not something that I would want anyone to go through. I'm going to be heading to the States regardless, with it off my mind and not having to deal with it or think about it anymore."

The classic also marks the first start of the year for Europe Ryder Cup stars Lee Westwood and Graeme McDowell. Ernie Els, a three-time classic winner, and holder of the course record of 11-under par 61, is also entered.


1/09/2015

Judge Refuses Horizon McIlroy Phones

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The High Court has refused Rory McIlroy's former management team Horizon Sport Management Ltd applications for orders seeking inspection of the golfer's mobile phones.

The applications had also been made by two other companies Mr McIlroy had signed a representation agreement with, Gurteen Ltd and Canovan Management Services.

Mr Justice Raymond Fullam also refused orders seeking discovery of the golfer's telephone bills and inspection orders of the mobile phones of consultant Donal Casey, who later became CEO of Rory McIlroy Inc, and of Sean O'Flaherty, the golfer's personal assistant.

Judge Fullam said in a reserved judgment that the three companies had been looking for expert inspection of eight mobile phones and any computers used by the golfer at any time between October 2011 and December 2013.

The judge said the proposed inspection included "unspecified devices of which there is no evidence of use" by McIlroy.

"The proposed forensic examination of the phones is a speculative exercise which goes beyond the parameters of the evidence."

The applications had been made last year in advance of the hearing of the golfer's claim he is entitled to repudiate a December 2011 agreement with the three companies, on grounds that it was improvident.

Horizon Sport Management Ltd, Gurteen Ltd and Canovan Management Services deny his claims and have counter-claimed for damages.

The companies claimed Mr McIlroy deliberately "wiped clean" up to eight mobile phones, which may have contained important information relating to his legal action against his former sports management company.

It is claimed this "factory resetting" of phones was also done to devices of Mr Casey and Mr O'Flaherty, and of the golfer's father, Gerry McIlroy.

Judge Fullam said Mr Casey and Mr O'Flaherty were not parties in the case, and making inspection orders without their consent would be oppressive.

The judge also refused that Gerry McIlroy, the golfer's father be compelled to provide a further affidavit.


12/11/2014

Horizon Claims Implausible - McIlroy


There is "not a shred of evidence" Rory McIlroy was involved in a conspiracy to plan his exit from a contract with his former sports management company, Dublin High Court has heard.

Counsel for the golfer said such a claim by a lawyer for Horizon Sports Management and two other companies was "inherently implausible".

Horizon Sports Management wants orders from court for further disclosure.

These include for documents and the inspection of electronic devices.

Mr McIlroy, who first signed the representation agreement in December 2011, signed a third agreement with Horizon in March of 2013.

That agreement was shortly afterwards repudiated by Mr McIlroy who then brought legal proceedings.

His counsel said Horizon's application to court for the right to forensically inspect the phones held by Mr McIlroy over a three-year period had effectively been dealt with during another hearing earlier this year seeking disclosure of documents.

This latest application was "dressed up" as seeking inspection of phones when it was in fact an application for further and better discovery of documents previously dealt with by Mr Justice Peter Kelly in July, counsel said.

Horizon has claimed Mr McIlroy and others close to him deliberately wiped data on their phones that could be relevant to the case.

Mr McIlroy is suing Dublin-based Horizon, along with Gurteen Ltd, with a registered address in Malta, and Canovan Management Services, also based in Dublin, claiming the representation agreement is unenforceable on grounds including alleged undue influence.

He claims he was just 22 at the time with no business experience and without the benefit of legal advice.

The defendants deny the claims and have counter-claimed for some US$3m allegedly outstanding under the agreement for off-course revenues.

Counsel for the defendants said at the opening of the hearing that the March 2013 agreement had barely been signed when Mr McIlroy had set up his own sports management company, Rory McIlroy Inc.

His personal assistant Sean O'Flaherty left Horizon to work for the new company as did Donal Casey who later became CEO of Rory McIlroy Inc.

It was part of Horizon's case that Mr McIlroy and a number of others were instrumental in bringing about the unlawful attempt to repudiate the contract, the counsel said.

Despite the existence of legal proceedings, Mr McIlroy, his father Gerry, Mr O'Flaherty and Mr Casey destroyed relevant data on their mobile phones by "factory resetting" them, counsel also said.

On the second day of the defendants' application to inspect those people's phones and seek better disclosure, the counsel for Mr McIlroy said the application was "wholly misplaced" and should be refused.

Mr McIlroy had done nothing wrong and Horizon's criticism of him was wholly misplaced.

It was criticism "made against a backdrop of an allegation of conspiracy that he planned his exit from Horizon for which there is not a shred of evidence", counsel said.

In reply, counsel also for the defendants, said there had been significant destruction of data and this was not an inference or speculative assertion.

The hearing continues.


12/09/2014

McIlroy Lawyers on Horizon

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Rory McIlroy is entitled to see documents concerning fellow golfer Graeme McDowell's involvement with a sports representation agency which Mr McIlroy is suing over a representation deal, a High Court judge has ruled.

Mr Justice Peter Kelly made the ruling when dealing yesterday with various pre-trial discovery applications in the action by Mr McIlroy challenging the validity and enforceability of representation agreements involving allegedly “unreasonable” fee rates and commissions.

The case, against Dublin-based Horizon Sports Management Ltd; Gurteen Limited, with a registered address in Malta, and Dublin-based Canovan Management Services, is listed for hearing from January 27 next.

Mr McIlroy disputes claims he had a representation agreement with Gurteen or Canovan rather than with Horizon.

He alleges a representation agreement signed by him in December 2011 is not valid and is unenforceable on grounds including alleged undue influence.

He alleges the agreement resulted in his paying more than US $6.8m based on “unreasonable” fee rates and the defendants are not entitled to be paid fees into the future related to his US$20m a year sponsorship deal with Nike.

Yesterday, Mr Justice Kelly also ruled that information from Mr McIlroy to the effect no data is available from various mobile phones held by him over a number of years, including a phone used by him while moving from one agency to another, should be put in a sworn statement.

While the defendants complained about the absence of data, and might criticise Mr McIlroy about this at trial, the court could do no more now than direct Mr McIlroy swear an affidavit concerning various phones and devices he had held, the judge said.

The judge also noted the court had been informed, because Mr McIlroy had not backed up his previous devices, no data on those could be retrieved.

The judge said he could not compel Mr McIlroy, as the defendants sought, to require his caddy JP Fitzgerald to produce any documents in Mr Fitzgerald's possession which may be relevant to the legal case.

It was open to the defendants to bring a non-party discovery motion seeking any such material from Mr Fitzgerald, he said.

Among some documents discovered were emails from businessman Dermot Desmond to Mr Fitzgerald, including an enclosure from Mr Desmond concerning legal advice, the court heard.

The court heard Mr McIlroy's claim of undue influence is based on grounds including alleged representations by Conor Ridge of Horizon he would get similar representation terms to Grame McDowell.

Mr Fanning said his client had relied on those representations which turned out to be untrue as his client's terms were significantly inferior to Mr McDowell's.

Mr McIlroy was also unaware, either when discussing the representation agreement with Conor Ridge in October 2011 or signing it, that Mr McDowell had a shareholding in Horizon.

Lawyers for the defendants previously told the court it was never represented to Mr McIlroy the terms to apply to him were identical to those of Mr McDowell. It was rather agreed the terms would be similar to those under an agreement with his former agent, International Sports Management (ISM), and he had indicated he was satisfied with that.

Ciarán Lewis BL, for the defendants, contended there was a "stark lack" of documents from Mr McIlroy in three categories crucial to his side, including documents leading up to Mr McIlroy signing a representation agreement in December 2011.

In court documents, Mr McIlroy insisted he had discovered what he could, that he rarely communicates in writing, had not backed up his phones and laptops and has no further documents.

His counsel Rossa Fanning BL said there was "nothing sinister" in Mr McIlroy regularly changing mobile phones and laptops. As a professional golfer in the public domain moving across different jurisdictions, Mr McIlroy has more reason than most to change his phone and having eight different handsets in a four year period was not unsual, he said.

Mr McIlroy should not be criticised because it was not anticipated a phone would be a source of "a battleground" in the Commercial Court.

The defendants are denying Mr McIlroy's claims and have counter-claimed for some US $3m dollars.

They alleged these are for outstanding off-course gross revenues and other sums allegedly outstanding under the December 2011 and a March 2013 agreement. They also seek damages for alleged past and continuing breaches of the agreements.

The judge ruled Mr McIlroy was entitled to all documents held by the defendants related to Mr McDowell's involvement with Horizon, including concerning Mr McDowells shareholding in that company.


McIlroy Devices in Dublin Discovery


The High Court in Dublin has been told that golfer Rory McIlroy deliberately wiped clean up to eight mobile phone and electronic devices, even though they may have contained important information relating to his legal action against his former sports management company.

Lawyers for Horizon Sports Management and two other companies said the "factory resetting" of devices was also done to devices belonging to three other key figures in the case, including Mr McIlroy's father Gerry.

Senior Counsel Paul Sreenan said this resetting was "incredible" for a person in Mr McIlroy's position.

Horizon wants orders from the court for further disclosure of documents and inspection of electronic devices.

Mr Sreenan said his clients had to bring the application because Mr McIlroy had refused or failed to respond to requests for better disclosure.

He said Rory McIlroy and three others close to him had also wiped their devices before passing them on to others or to charity.

Mr McIlroy is suing Horizon, along with Gurteen Ltd, with a registered address in Malta, and Canovan Management Services, also based in Dublin, claiming a representation agreement signed by him in December 2011 is invalid and unenforceable on a number of grounds including alleged undue influence.

The defendants deny the claims and have counter-claimed for around US$3m allegedly outstanding under the agreement for off-course revenues.

Mr Sreenan said Mr McIlroy had given no satisfactory explanation for the destruction of electronic data on his devices.

He said if his side's experts gets the devices, it may be possible to recover some of the information sought or other information of assistance to the case.

He said it was a very serious matter for the administration of justice where someone involved in court proceedings had failed to preserve material, he said.

Mr McIlroy had initially claimed he changed his devices regularly because of his "transient lifestyle".

But today he had stated he changed them to avoid phone calls from journalists, the court was told.

The defendants believe he could not have changed phones and devices without backing up data and conversations because it would mean, for instance, ongoing conversations about who would be on the Ryder Cup team would be wiped.

Earlier, Mr Sreenan said difficulties over the December 2011 agreement arose "when the ink was barely dry", counsel said.

Mr McIlroy had set up his own company called "Rory McIlroy Inc" essentially to manage himself which was resisted by Horizon.

Around the same time, key figures who had worked for Horizon, including Mr McIlroy's personal assistant and a consultant, started working for the golfer's new firm, counsel said.

Mr Sreenan said the amount of lost commission to his clients is now estimated at $9m.

Mr McIlroy, in his claim, says Horizon charged commission "many times greater" than is standard in the sports agency industry including one agreement in which he must pay 20% of his sponsorship and 15% if the contract is renewed after 2017.

He also alleges Horizon is not entitled to be paid certain fees into the future related to his $20m a year sponsorship deal with sportswear giant Nike.

He says he has paid more than $6.8m to Horizon based on commission rates of some 5% on his pre-tax on-course earnings and 20% for off-course.

This agreement was entered into when he was 22, with little business expertise and without the benefit of legal advice, he says.


9/19/2014

Mediation On Horizon for McIlroy


Rory McIlroy has welcomed the court-ordered mediation between him and his former management company Horizon.

The world number one says attempts made in the past to resolve the issues out of court have been “knocked back”, but he is keen to end the legal dispute so he and Graeme McDowell can focus on their golf.

McDowell has been involved in the dispute with Horizon by McIlroy’s lawyers, who requested the Portrush golfer’s contractual details with the management company, and the four-time major winner is grateful for how his old friend has handled the awkward situation.

“We have tried over the past six months to get to that point of mediation and resolution and every time we have tried to engage it’s been knocked back,” McIlroy told The Times. “It’s great the judge has forced us into this mediation because it’s the best way to do it. The last thing we both need is a day in court.

“G-Mac has tried to stay out of it as much as he can - it’s none of his business, it’s nothing really to do with him. I know that it has placed him in a tough position but he’s done incredibly well in trying to be as impartial as possible.”

Before the mediation takes place, both McIlroy and McDowell will tee up for Europe in the Ryder Cup at Gleneagles next week and it will be a welcome distraction for both players, whose relationship has become “strained” at times as a result of legal wrangling.

“At times it has been strained, of course, because he’s managed by people I used to be managed by, and if he’s with them then I don’t want to go over and start chatting,” McIlroy said. “But we’re still very close. We went out to dinner in Denver a couple of weeks ago. G-Mac’s in a great place in life - he’s just had his first baby - and we’re great, we really are.

“I will always be grateful to him for showing me the ropes when I came out on tour and I still feel I have a really good friendship with him, regardless of whatever else is going on.”

The pair have played together six times on Ryder Cup duty and 2014 captain Paul McGinley has said he would be “very surprised” if they don’t team up at some stage against the USA next week.