No doubt Crowe will also want his loan of $1.65m back for souths as well as selling his shares for at least the $3m that he bought them for.
No profit for soiuths as per the DT report
An EBITA profit is earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation.
According to the club's last annual report, the club recorded an $864,225 loss last year, amassing $10.6 million in liabilities against $4.6 million in assets.
A large portion of the liabilities was a $6.15 million loan - $4.5 million from Peter Holmes a Court, $1.65 million from Crowe - which came on top of their initial $3 million investment to buy 75 per cent of the club in 2005.
"There are loan facilities with the investors in addition to the $3 million sum with the shares," Pappas said.
"They invested, between 2006 and 2008, another $6 million loan to the club. Those funds were given to the club on loan on very preferential terms. They are not repayable until 2024 and they have no interest. Not a cent of interest has been paid."
While it has been stated often recently that Crowe and Holmes a Court have poured $11 million "of their own money" into the club, the $6.15 million was a loan, at more than 9 per cent interest, initially due to be paid in September 30 this year.
Unable to meet payments, the club renegotiated the loan. Repayments are now to begin on October 31, 2015, and continue for the decade after that.
Before renegotiation, if Crowe and Holmes a Court had insisted in calling in the loan - and there is no suggestion they ever would - it almost certainly would have sent the club broke.
Already Holmes a Court's loan has accrued interest of $441,834, while Crowe's loan has accrued interest of $162,000, according to auditors KPMG.
Souths juniors will probably be the only interested buyers