Gamble of a lifetime pays off for the ‘lizard’ as promoted Brighton prepare for life in the Premier League
Brighton complete an incredible turnaround in the club’s fortunes as they make it to the promised land of the Premier League after last season’s heartbreak

Tony Bloom is a feared presence at any poker table but on Monday the biggest wager of this renowned gambler, the £200 million investment in Brighton, paid off with their promotion to the Premier League.
The Seagulls have truly taken flight rising to a level that 20 years ago would have been deemed fantastical as they found themselves in dire straits like a character out of Charles Dickens novels, without a home and penniless.
They only avoided relegation from the Football League on the last day of the 1996-97 season and were forced to play in Gillingham, 70 miles away from their home town, for the next two years after their old Goldstone Ground was sold to pay off debts.

Bloom, despite his reputation as a poker player, is also a keen businessman and bears strong ties to the club historically – his family were involved with Brighton dating back to the 1970s when his grandfather Harry was vice-chairman.
The property investor nicknamed the “Lizard” by a rival poker player used his money to engineer a state-of-the-art stadium just outside Brighton – roughly a 10-minute rail journey – and whose reputation is such that it hosted matches at the 2015 Rugby World Cup, including the epic Japanese win over two-time world champions South Africa.