• Decision spells end of disastrous Vladimir Romanov era• Cashflow problems and £25m deficit still dog troubled clubHearts will begin next season with a 15-point penalty after their major creditor, Ukio Bankas, succeeded in installing it...
• Decision spells end of disastrous Vladimir Romanov era• Cashflow problems and £25m deficit still dog troubled clubHearts will begin next season with a 15-point penalty after their major creditor, Ukio Bankas, succeeded in installing its preferred administrator in charge of the club – the major battle for survival will now take place off the pitch as BDO looks to negotiate the club out of a £25m deficit.Ukio Bankas, which is itself bankrupt, and the joint-administrator Bryan Jackson both stated their intention to secure a quick sale after Wednesday's appointment spelled the end of the dramatic and self-destructive Vladimir Romanov era.But Jackson warned of a cashflow crisis and admitted job losses are inevitable.Hearts, who are under a transfer embargo and will start the season on 3 August at St Johnstone on minus-15 points, signalled their intention to go into administration on Monday, but their desire to appoint KPMG was overruled by Ukio Bankas, which wanted to utilise the experience of BDO.Jackson is the administrator of Dunfermline and has performed similar roles at Clydebank, Motherwell and Dundee. The business-restructuring partner will work alongside James Stephen, who has been involved in the liquidation of oldco Rangers, and Trevor Birch, who Jackson worked with recently at Portsmouth.Birch has also held chief executive roles at Leeds, Everton and Chelsea, where he helped the completion of Roman Abramovich's takeover.Jackson said: "We are acutely aware of the need for speed in this process given the uncertainty of the last few weeks and the proximity of the season's start. We will be talking to all the parties that have shown interest in the club in order to find a resolution as quickly as possible."But there are immediate problems in continuing to trade without regular income.Jackson said: "It's the worst month of the year, there's no income just now. Season ticket sales have been under way but there's a problem using that money. We need to get through June, July – there'll be a few friendlies hopefully – and then we get into the season. But right now there's a really major cashflow problem and we need to look at ways, if any, that we can get round that."The administrator of Ukio Bankas, which owns 30% of Hearts and is owed £15m, was destined to win any dispute over the administrator given the bank holds a floating charge over the club's assets, including Tynecastle, but no court hearing was needed.Gintaras Adomonis, of UAB Valnetas, said: "Unfortunately, Hearts could not be restarted and problems at the Heart of Midlothian that we inherited cannot be deleted. Despite that, we are trying to find every tiny win-win option suitable both for the creditors of the bank and the club."I believe that administrators with such a vast experience in football-related cases are one of the best options available. We do hope that it will be possible to co-ordinate the interests of all the creditors and Hearts will find its new owner soon."Hearts had admitted defeat in their battle to stay solvent after running out of money to pay wages to players last Friday, and in the face of a winding-up order over a partially-paid £100,000 tax bill.The club cited slow season-ticket sales but the inevitability of their fate was evident last month when the director Sergejus Fedotovas warned shareholders of a £2.5m funding gap for next season, which he implausibly claimed could be plugged by transfer fees and a fan membership scheme.Supporters had already kept the club afloat in December by spending more than £1m on shares, a purchase that averted a winding-up order over a £450,000 tax bill. But that merely put off Wednesday's development, although events in Lithuania with Ukio Bankas and the equally insolvent UBIG, the club's majority shareholder, subsequently put more pressure on finances.The club have been heading for administration since Romanov gradually lost interest and then his personal fortune. His eight-year reign has seen 14 managers i