Flashback... BBC - Monday, 23 July, 2001, New bid for QPRA consortium have launched a bid to buy Queens Park Rangers and keep the club at Loftus Road.
The group have tabled an offer, although former director Andrew Ellis has been granted exclusive talks with administrators until 6 August.
Ellis plans to move Rangers to a site near Heathrow Airport.
Maurice Fitzgerald, a member of the new consortium, said: "The bid is based upon keeping QPR at Loftus Road.
"We are backed by a major investment company, and believe (our offer) to be the most financially sound tabled so far.
"We have lodged our bid with the administrators and have shown full proof of funds.
"The administrators have a duty to accept the best bid and we believe that to be ours.
Our consortium is committed to the future success of QPR."
BBC- Sunday, 29 July, 2001, 13:55 GMT 14:55 UK
Holloway condemns ground move QPR boss Ian Holloway opposes ground move
QPR manager Ian Holloway has spoken out against prospective owner Andrew Ellis' plans to relocate the club to Heathrow.
Holloway said: "You can't suddenly tell someone that they have got to drive 20 miles to support their team - it just doesn't work.
"I'm very proud of this place. This is our tribe, we are strong together and this is where we live.
"I like this cave we are in and I want to keep living in it. That's as blunt as it has got to be," he added.
BBC - July 26, 2001 Council opposes QPR move
Council opposes QPR move Fans and councillers want Rangers to stay
QPR owner Chris Wright has indicated that he is prepared to snub a consortium takeover bid and sell the club to Andrew Ellis.
Ellis plans to relocate the club to Heathrow and a consortium of wealthy Rangers fans have tabled an offer in the hope of preventing the move.
Hammersmith and Fulham Council are also set to oppose plans to move the club to Heathrow.
The overwhelming majority of QPR fans say that the club is associated with the ground
Hammersmith mayor Andrew Slaughter
A motion to back QPR fans in their opposition to the move was unanimously supported at a council meeting on Wednesday.
Councillor Wesley Harcourt claimed: "We can make it very difficult for the ground to be sold at a profit."
Mayor Andrew Slaughter added: "There appears to be two bids - the Ellis bid to move QPR to Heathrow and create a kind of Chelsea-type village, while the other bid is committed to keeping QPR at Loftus Road.
"The overwhelming majority of QPR fans say that the club is associated with the ground.
"We aim to see QPR survive and thrive at Loftus Road."
But The Sun quote Wright as saying: "It would be in the best long term interests of the club to move."
Wright is in exclusive talks with Ellis in an attempt to give him the best possible chance of putting a bid together. He has until 6 August to complete the deal
BBC - Wednesday, 1 August, 2001, 13:22 GMT 14:22 UK
Ellis pulls out of QPR bidFormer Queens Park Rangers director Andrew Ellis has withdrawn his bid for control of the west London club.
The move paves the way for a fans' consortium to ease the troubled club out of administration.
Estate agent Ellis had been granted a three-week lock-out period to prove he had the cash to back up his proposal.
The only other bid tabled so far comes from the fans' consortium headed by Maurice Fitzgerald, who have pledged to keep the club at Loftus Road.
A club statement read: "Andrew Ellis has withdrawn his bid to buy QPR and the period of exclusivity granted to him no longer exists.
"With regards to other bids, the club has received the outline of a possible deal from the consortium led by Maurice Fitzgerald, which the club are also looking at."
Deeply unpopular
The Ellis bid had been deeply unpopular with fans because it proposed moving the club from Loftus Road to a new site near Heathrow, 16 miles away.
Fitzgerald's bid is apparently backed by a major investment company and private investors.
The bid is centred on around keeping the club at Loftus Road, with current manager Ian Holloway remaining in charge.