No, we would have no extra money at all, if that money was repaid SD would have wanted more for the club when he sold it to KLD. When SD owned the club, only SD could sanction money being spent on players. If he used money from SAFC or another company makes no difference. Ellis Short often funded players with money outside of SAFC.
When he sold the club to KLD, it would have been £28m cheaper than it would have been that if the money was left in. Either way, SD ended up with the money.
Here's and example to demonstrate with example figures. I've also not included any residual shares SD owns to keep it simple.
Scenario A. Parachute payment £28m money moved by SD
- SD ends up not having to pay the £28m to Ellis short, as the parachute money is used
- Club is worth £28m less, say £10m
- KLD pays £10m for club to SD.
- SD ends up with £10m
Scenario B. Parachute payment £28m money remained in SAFC Ltd
- SD ends up having to pay the £28m to Ellis short from his own money.
- Club is worth £28m more as it has kept the parachute money, so £10m + £28m = £38m
- KLD pays £38m for club to SD.
- SD ends up with £38m less the £28m he paid Short = £10m
SD had the full and final say on investing in players whilst he owned the club, so if he decided to do that, he would have. The only difference between the two scenarios is that in scenario B, SAFC Ltd has more money in the back
IF KLD decides he wants to invest that in players, but remember he's paid £38m in scenario B. In scenario A, he's only paid £10m, so can easily invest more if he wants to.
Have a look at my above post. It all boils down to how much of the personal wealth of the owner is willing to invest. The parachute payment is a distraction. The owner can invest money by a share issue quite easily.
We can still invest in players. When short bought players at lot were funded by him loaning the club the money, it wasn't in the SAFC accounts. This is the point, where the money is doesn't matter, all the matters is how much money is the owner willing to risk/invest.
I've explained how it doesn't. This is basic business.
If I sell you a car with £100 in the glove, it's worth a £100 more. If I take it out, it's worth a £100 less.
Do you not think anyone with enough money to buy the club would be able to correctly value it through due diligence done prior to any sale?