THE Bakrie Group were last night considering their future as Brisbane Roar owners after being given a Football Federation Australia ultimatum to sell the club or fix the franchise’s current financial mess and properly fund the three-time A-League champions.

Owner Nirwan Bakrie, club chairman Rahim Soekasah and director Demis Djamaoeddin were among those who met in Indonesia after earlier being thrown under the bus by the club’s managing director Daniel Cobb

Already offside with the club’s football department, Cobb further alienated himself by blaming the Bakries for the ongoing financial problems, including the Roar’s failure to meet this month’s payday deadline, as revealed by The Courier-Mail on Monday night.

Regardless of whether the Bakries decide to sell the club or recapitalise, Cobb’s time at the Roar seems surely over after refusing to accept any blame for the club’s current plight and his damning comments against the people that employed him in June.

PAYROLL: Gallop roars over ‘unacceptable’ late payments

Daniel Cobb has blamed Bakrie Group - the club’s owners - for the continuing financial woes. Source: News Limited

Cobb fronted FFA chief executive officer David Gallop in Sydney yesterday, and later released a statement that said the meeting was “brought about by a default from the Bakrie Group on the recapitalisation of the club”.

“I agreed to come in as managing director in order to stabilise the club on the condition that a 1.1 million dollar injection in to the club was provided on July 1st 2016,” Cobb said.

“As of today in regards to that payment, only $405,000 has been provided. This has a significant impact on the club moving forward and in particular our move to Ballymore.”

Cobb claimed that all of the due wages had now been paid, but the Roar still must pay $300,000 in rental fees to Ballymore owners the Queensland Rugby Union by the end of the week to be able to move to the Herston venue for training on Monday, as has been planned.

Bakrie Group CEO Nirwan Bakrie. Source: Supplied

Gallop called for Cobb, who claims to have a consortium ready to buy the club, and the Bakries to resolve the situation that continues to derail the Roar.

“While the payments have now been made it is clear that relations between the Bakries and Mr Cobb need to be resolved one way or the other as soon as possible,” Gallop said.

“If the club is to be sold, sell it. If not, then the current owners must restore confidence in the operations by adequately resourcing the club.”

The Bakrie Group have poured more than $20 million into the Roar since first buying into the club in October 2011.

The Indonesian conglomerate took 100 per cent ownership of the club in February 2012, but financial mismanagement almost led to the Roar being wound up last year.

Put on notice by FFA, the Bakries seemed to have at least steadied the ship before this latest drama involving Cobb and late payment of wages and superannuation.