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‘It could do huge damage’ – fears and bills mount as EFL players’ wages shrink

https://theathletic.com/1832595/2020/05/24/efl-wage-cuts-fears-quit-football/

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On February 20, 2018, Connor Simpson arrived from the substitutes’ bench in the 89th minute at Villa Park. The Preston North End forward, only 18 years old at the time, was about to face one of England’s most decorated defenders. “The next thing I knew,” he recalls. “I was backing in and trying to hold off John Terry.” For Simpson, now 20, it remains his only glimpse of Championship football.

A 6ft 5in striker, Simpson (pictured top playing for Carlisle United) first emerged from the Hartlepool United youth team as a 17-year-old, breaking into the first team and becoming the first player born in the 21st century to score for the club.

He impressed sufficiently to move up from the National League to England’s second tier and join Preston. He resisted the advances of West Ham United, where he enjoyed a successful trial, in favour of the promise of playing time. Since signing for Preston, however, it has been tough going. There have been loan spells, with varying success, at Carlisle and Accrington Stanley, as well non-League detours to Hyde United and Lancaster City.

In the coming weeks, however, Simpson’s time at Preston is likely to be over. His contract is up in June and, although he is still to be officially informed, he is wise enough to know “the signs are there”.

“I don’t think I am in the plans,” says Simpson, residing with his parents at their family home in Hartlepool.

“Preston are doing the testing for the virus (in preparation for Championship’s restart) and I am not in that group, so I am guessing I won’t be part of training. So, it looks like they’re not going to give me a new deal.”

Simpson will be one of those colliding head-on with a “train coming extremely quickly down the tunnel”, to quote the EFL chairman Rick Parry. During an evidence session to the UK parliament earlier this month, Parry revealed that 1,400 EFL playing contracts are due to expire in June and as the clock ticks down, players grow more fearful.

Over the past week, the Professional Footballers’ Association (PFA) revealed alarming results of a members’ survey. Among the 111 current players who responded, 24 said they are depressed or considering self-harm. Among the 262 members surveyed — including current and ex-players — 69 per cent of respondents said they worried about their livelihood and 72 per cent admitted they are experiencing feelings of “nervousness or anxiety”.

In the Premier League, concerns centre on the safety protocols and squabbles over wage deferrals. Yet further down the ladder, livelihoods are at risk. Over the past few days, The Athletic has spoken to several players in the lower echelons of the Football League: within WhatsApp groups, players are already organising mortgage holidays, worrying how they will fund household bills and dreading unemployment.

Little wonder, therefore, that the former Liverpool midfielder Graeme Souness this week predicted the following doomsday scenario on Sky Sports. He said: “There are going to be tragic cases. There will be players who are professional footballers today who will not be in six months. There is a correction coming across the country.

“For all the different money (the chancellor) has handed out, he now somehow has to come up with taxes in an acceptable way to get that back. Football will fall into that category. Clubs will find themselves in dire financial straits and may end up going out of business. The consequence of that will be players on the dole.

“The talk is of the mother of all recessions. This is the time when the big guys in football have to think of everybody involved. There has to be a sharing of the incredible riches of the Premier League. There will be so many casualties and we have to take care of the little guys.”


As the summer months approach, it is usual for a high number of players to move freely around clubs in the Football League and the National League. Yet the upcoming transfer window is mired in uncertainty.

First, leagues in England are ending in varying circumstances at different times. League Two has been curtailed, but relegation and play-offs are still to be finalised. In League One, discussions continue over how to conclude the campaign, while the Premier League and Championship attempt to play the season to a finish.

This creates a distinction between end dates for the current season. In the meantime, every club in English football is awaiting a start date for the new campaign. Until then, nobody knows how or when to offer new contracts.

In League One and League Two, where the majority of clubs concluded that the cost of testing and the expense of hosting home games without match-day revenue cannot be justified, there are even question marks as to whether the divisions can return before a vaccine is found for coronavirus.

As clubs seek to stay afloat, it is no surprise, therefore, that the many players due to be out of contract are hearing next to nothing about future opportunities. On top of the 1,400 EFL players, there will also be numerous younger players and scholars released from Premier League clubs amid the pandemic, who may ordinarily find solace in the lower tiers.

On top of the saturated market, further issues arise. Lost match-day revenue equals less lucrative contract offers for players and the Football League is also extremely close to approving new financial regulations for a salary cap in League One and League Two. It is reported that League One clubs will be restricted to a salary limit of £2.5 million to £3 million while League Two will be between £1.25 million £1.5 million.

On top of this, clubs may be forced to have no more than 20 first-team players over the age of 21 on their books.

Gary Neville, the co-owner of League Two Salford City, this week spelt out the “major reset” for lower league salaries. He told Sky Sports: “It is going to be the biggest game-changer for lower-league players in the last 30 or 40 years. No matter what club, crowd or income you have, you will be restricted in the money you can spend.

“The PFA is sleepwalking at this moment. I don’t think they recognise that coronavirus is an issue for players and a crisis for clubs. There will be deferrals and cuts in the immediate term but there is a major reset coming in terms of player wages at League One and League Two level and, potentially, the Championship if the salary cap extends there, which I believe it may do in the future.”

It adds up to one harsh reality for players: lower wages. Neville added: “The salary cap will be severe, well below average salaries being paid at the moment. It is a game-changer for clubs at that level but also players, who will be earning a lot less.”

Adam Collin, Carlisle’s 35-year-old first-choice goalkeeper in League Two this season, is one of those players who has already been told he will not receive a renewal. He tells The Athletic: “It is a tricky period. Clubs do not know what they are doing financially. Some do not know which league they will be in, so it is very hard for clubs to go out and offer contracts.

“It is a waiting game for teams and players. We have never seen anything on this scale. It will play into the hands of clubs, who will get players at a cheaper rate. More players are being released than normal and the market is going to be flooded.”

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In the bleakest terms, those who ply their trade in the third and fourth tiers of English football have little idea when they may next play competitive football. If clubs are unable to fund training and matches in socially-distanced circumstances, players might be forced to contemplate an extended period away from football.

“This is the uncertainty,” Collin says. “There was a decision to call off League Two, as it was deemed infeasible to do all this testing and not play in front of crowds. There is a lot of work that needs to go on behind the scenes.

“It is worrying as we are not sure if we can even play in January or February. Coronavirus is not disappearing. The testing has to be there to play on and I don’t know whether clubs can afford to do it.”


Gridlocked by a pandemic, lower-league players are now examining the financial repercussions of football grinding to a halt. One report this week claimed that some players may need to accept terms reduced by over 50 per cent at their next employers.

Is that the noise, too, within the game? Collin says: “Most players understand the situation. It is going to be the case all over English football.

“It could do huge damage. We do not earn £20,000 per week. We earn decent money but not enough so that we can go for six months without earning or working. We have bills and mortgages to pay. Those who are out of contract have no idea if we will get one or when it will start. It will be very damaging and a lot of players will be very worried.”

Adam Osper, who works closely with many footballers in financial planning at Tilney Sports, warns that players should already be discussing mortgage holidays with their advisors and banks.

He explains: “Lower down, it is much more problematic. These players have footballer status but they are earning £50,000 to £100,000 a year. It’s a good amount of money but a lot of these guys are married, with a mortgage and have children. They do not have much disposable income. In those cases, you have to speak to them about talking to banks for mortgage deferrals and mortgage payment holidays. We hope, also, that they don’t have too many cars on finance. That can be a problem.

“Sometimes, footballers do not have advisors around them. They have agents to do deals but some players will then just step away, not get involved and not be aware of the mortgages, credit cards and loans they have. They are the biggest outgoings for these guys. People also may not realise that footballers tend to get much shorter mortgages with higher repayments than the average person.

“Whereas you or I would get a 25-year mortgage, a footballer would get a five-to-10-year mortgage. To pay it off in time, they have larger monthly rates. They have shorter careers, especially lower-league players, and they don’t want to get to 35 with lesser job prospects and a chunky mortgage outstanding.

“This is one of the things that gets missed a little bit when people say, ‘Oh, footballers should take wage cuts, they earn lots of money’. Yes, but they have very big mortgages and it is common for them to pay their parents’ mortgages, or their brother’s or sister’s. They may have family members furloughed, so they are supporting them at the moment, too.”

At Crawley Town, central defender Jamie Sendles-White is in a more privileged position and expects to remain at his club. As with many League Two clubs, he and his team-mates were furloughed. In their case, Crawley topped up the furlough grant to ensure players received maximum pay during this period.

Yet it is unclear how long the government will continue to contribute — as it stands, clubs will be asked to pay part of furloughed staff’s wages from August. Should the Football League’s postponement outlive the grants, players know they may not be immune to the redundancies shattering lives across the world.

Sendles-White, 26, knows the challenges. He says: “We were extremely grateful to be topped up. We have heard some stories in our league and the league below where finances are incredibly tight, where it must be so stressful to not be able to get even 80 per cent of their pay.

“I have heard people who live near me thinking it is all fun and games and that we are earning fortunes. We are in a more privileged position than most people but I have a mortgage, based on what was affordable to me, according to my basic pay and bonuses. We do not get bonuses at the moment as we are not playing, making it a bit tighter.

“I also budget my life for the coaching company that I run but we have hardly earned anything there during the pandemic as we have had to pay people back. It is not what people think football is down at our level. It is not the Premier League or Championship.

“The lower down you go, the more incentivised the contracts become. You have your basic pay, then your appearances, goals, win bonuses. They make a massive difference to your end-of-month pay, and you budget to that. When you are then furloughed, it is quite tough.

“We get 100 per cent of our basic pay but when you know the bonuses are not coming, it changes your monthly planning. In other ways, you do save money. I usually spend £80 per week on petrol. The first six weeks of lockdown, I filled my tank once. It probably does almost even out. But it is still the stress of the mortgage and bills. In the coming months, there will be players forced to take contracts they would never ordinarily do, just to make sure they are earning.”

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Has the worst-case scenario — where football does not return until an effective vaccine is developed — crossed his mind? He says: “I have tried to not think too much about the worst-case. But there would be so many footballers at this level in serious financial issues. If football does not come back for months and months, I don’t even want to think about the situation a lot of players will end up in. ”


When football supporters ask why the sport cannot simply wait until it is safe to return, these concerns provide an insight into the severe economic pressures. At the PFA, the union oversaw a 100 per cent increase in benevolent grants between March and April this year as players scramble to secure their futures. The 24-7 well-being helpline is available, in addition to WhatsApp and emails for those who require support for both their mental health and practical contractual services.

However, many would like greater support to be in place, with clear planning for the worst eventualities. Players are aware that the PFA chief executive Gordon Taylor earns more than £2 million per year while the current chairman Ben Purkiss claimed previously that the union has £50 million of capital in the bank.

Should a pandemic hardship fund be put in place? Sendles-White says: “We get a few emails sent out and there’s a free mental health app called Headspace. This is where the PFA will need to look after players more so than ever. The money we hear they have — there should be something in place for players who are not getting new contracts and are finding it hard to get another club.

“They need to sit down and have a serious conversation about that. There are going to be so many players who will need massive help in the coming months.”

Collin, the PFA representative in Carlisle’s squad, explains: “There’s always some sort of help. The PFA is fantastic for players, they will help as much as possible and especially those without a club or contract will receive support. But it is the uncertainty. The EFL and the leagues are not making decisions quickly.

“I am pleased the season has been finished but now we need to get promotions and relegations sorted. It seems to be dragging on. Once decisions are made, people will know what is happening. The big thing is not knowing, which causes anxiety. If we get decisions by the end of this month, and play-offs done in June, then everyone will know where they stand and can sort out deals. If pre-season can start in July, with a view to starting in September, everyone has a date to work towards.”

Sendles-White adds: “It is all ifs, buts and maybes. Until we have a date for the season and understand the damage caused, it is so hard to see how deep the trouble could go.”


In the meantime, individual players can only train alone. Simpson has trained every day in a field in the north east since the start of lockdown. He has football friends in his age group who are talking about other careers, maybe even walking away from the game altogether.

Collin, 15 years older than Simpson, has heard similar: “It is logical. It is going to be so tough for players to get contracts. Teams will run with smaller squads. They will use the loan market as much as they can. A lot of players will be out of work or unhappy with wages on offer, and maybe start looking at other options or avenues for income.”

Some in the sport are starting to fear a generation aged between 18 and 21 may be lost. Ordinarily, younger talents from the Premier League would be released and picked up lower down the food chain.

“It could not come at a worse time for players coming through from under-23 level,” Sendles-White says. “They are looking to kick on their careers and make their names at first-team level. It will be hard enough for experienced pros in League One and League Two.”

The transfer market is stagnant. One agent says his clients who have contracts expiring in the summer “have absolutely no idea what is going on”.

Sendles-White has discussed the issue with friends in the game. He says: “I don’t think there’s much going on at all, in terms of clubs looking for players. It is going to be so hard. There will be a date set for next season and then it will be chaos: managers, agents, players phoning everyone.

“The players I have spoken to who are out of contract have not heard anything. Until there is a date, I cannot see anything getting sorted. It is so important to get a date. There needs to be a plan from the EFL, the FA and the PFA. The longer it goes on, the harder it becomes for clubs. It could become impossible for some players to get through this.”

Young striker Simpson remains committed, filming his lone training sessions and preparing videos to show prospective employers.

“I don’t see it in quite the same way,” he says. “The money will not be as high but I view it this way: as a young player wanting experience, it may give me a chance instead of taking on older guys with higher demands. It may work out OK. I have to be optimistic. Every day, I go for a run and then go to the field.

“I do a lot of fitness, speed and agility training, and a lot of finishing from different areas. I bought a ball machine that fires balls out to you at different speeds. You press the remote control and it acts as a player on the pitch. It crosses balls for me to head, or it does it on a timer. I can also replicate receiving the ball with my back to goal. I then watch back my videos and analyse what I can do better. I am doing runs, wearing weighted vests to spice it up a bit. I need to be ready for trials. I am a fighter.

“I came through at 17 at Hartlepool, they were struggling and needed to look at youth players. I washed my kit, cleaned my boots. There was no money there, so everything was off your own back. I got a lot of kicks early on in men’s football. They wanted to bully me and throw me about. I was only 17 and quite weak at the time. I had to fight for myself. The defenders in that league are quite mad and the refs are not watching as much.

“I got the move to Preston and this was mad; my first time on the bench was Villa away in front of 30,000. I had played in front of 4,000 at Hartlepool but it was surreal really against Villa, against John Terry. I want more of that.

“The level matters less to me but the main thing is playing games. There won’t be footage of me recently in action, so I want to show clubs I care, that I’m not sat at home doing nothing. I have to give myself a chance.”

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4 minutes ago, Vesper said:

drop acid time

Shitty's 3rd kit

Manchester City's supposed third kit for the 2020-21 campaign has been leaked on Twitter

Quite like it! Bit to much going on though...

Liam Gallagher loves it...

''Who ever is responsible for that new Man City kit needs putting on the nxt flight to WUHAN and who ever buys it needs to be on the 1 after''

 

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1 hour ago, Laylabelle said:

Quite like it! Bit to much going on though...

Liam Gallagher loves it...

''Who ever is responsible for that new Man City kit needs putting on the nxt flight to WUHAN and who ever buys it needs to be on the 1 after''

 

looks like a likkle army of sperm

4d288de7ed4c1fca0a654c8ccf1885a2.png

Fap fap fap - Drawception

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NOT CHO

I do not know if thsi has already been posted, it is the first I heard about it

Premier League ace accused of gang rape at lockdown party as woman claims drink spiked

EXCLUSIVE: The woman at the centre of the complaint has been interviewed by detectives. It comes days after Chelsea's Callum Hudson-Odoi was accused of rape in an unrelated alleged incident

https://www.dailystar.co.uk/sport/football/premier-league-ace-accused-gang-22076060

A Premier League footballer has been accused of taking part in a gang rape at a lockdown party.

It comes just days after Chelsea player Callum Hudson-Odoi, 19, was accused of rape in an unrelated alleged incident. The woman at the heart of the new complaint claims her drinks were spiked with drugs.

She also believes she may have been assaulted by “a number” of the star’s friends. The alleged incident came ­following a lockdown-busting party in a rented flat.

The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, complained to officers the day after the alleged attack.

She was interviewed by detectives and has been examined by forensic medical staff as well as by doctors. Detectives have launched an investigation into the ­alleged incident. They would not comment on if the player had been interviewed yet.

A friend of the woman said her pal had no recollection of the night’s events.

snip

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https://www.espn.com/soccer/afc-bournemouth/story/4100278/bournemouths-aaron-ramsdale-tests-positive-after-shopping-trip

Ramsdale tested negative for COVID-19 in the first round of PL testing but a few days later, he tested positive for it in the second round of testing. This after going to a supermarket within a week.

And people wonder why people are cautious or don't want the league to restart...

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On 24/05/2020 at 9:23 PM, Vesper said:

looks like a likkle army of sperm

4d288de7ed4c1fca0a654c8ccf1885a2.png

Fap fap fap - Drawception

Hahaha not sure that was the look was aiming for..

Used to love that print! Had a few skirts..dresses.. tops. Wouldn't say it suits a football top though lol. Guess wont be worn much though.

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The Glazers

https://theathletic.com/1833452/2020/05/26/glazers-malcolm-joel-avie-avi-manchester-united-bryan-green-gold-red-knights-solskjaer/

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In the seconds after Wayne Rooney swept Manchester United into a Champions League lead over Debrecen on a balmy August evening in 2005, a question asked in the directors’ box caused unique confusion.

“It was, ‘What happens to the baaall?’” says a former United executive, mimicking the drawl of an American accent.

Toxic takeover completed a few months before, the Glazer brothers — Joel, Avie and Bryan — were attending their first match at Old Trafford as owners of Manchester United and a new way of thinking was evident. Bryan was the one to vocalise the mindset that everything, especially a Rooney goal, could now be ripe for marketing.

“He thought, as in baseball or American football, ‘They must have loads of balls’ and when they hit a home run or score a touchdown, it becomes an item,” continues the executive. “That concept just didn’t apply in England. I think it was chief executive David Gill who said, ‘They put it back and we start again’. The story is the incomprehension on everyone’s face. And we were genuinely at a loss. It wasn’t people laughing at them. It was people not understanding.

“It shows two things: one, that you need cultural grounding to run a football club. And two, that these guys were considering every possibility.”

It was a disposition for considering every possibility that got the Glazers the club in the first place. The leveraged buyout, the eye-watering interest rates, the hundreds of millions of pounds of debt may have been unpalatable to many, including numerous financiers, but the Glazer family, helmed by father Malcolm, was lasered on a capitalist course that culminated 15 years ago today.

On May 26, 2005, Manchester United’s board wrote to the few remaining shareholders to outline their intention to sell up and they advised the recipients to do the same. The resistance was over.

To coincide with the date, The Athletic has retraced the events that led up to an unprecedented takeover and delved into what life has been like at Manchester United in the years since. Findings include:

Prophesying that enormous financial hit was the context to the letter sent on May 26, 2005, when United chairman Sir Roy Gardner and non-executive directors Ian Much and Jim O’Neill also offered their resignations.

Just 11 days earlier, a different resignation had been the subject of conversation when Sir Alex Ferguson picked up the phone to one particular United fan. Andy Walsh was an activist with the Independent Manchester United Supporters Association (IMUSA) and the evening after United’s final-day victory at Southampton, he rang British football’s most garlanded manager with a Hail Mary of a proposition.

“My call to Alex Ferguson was to ask him to consider resigning,” Walsh tells The Athletic. The two men had built up a relationship during conversations over many months; a mark, Walsh says, of Ferguson’s “focus on detail and integrity”.

“He genuinely believed the supporters should be heard in the takeover,” Walsh says, and in November 2004, Ferguson told a fans’ forum: “We don’t want the club to be in anyone else’s hands.”

But six months later, the Glazers had strengthened their grip and those working to stop them believed only a dramatic intervention would succeed. “Our last throw of the dice,” Walsh admits. There was a theory, though.

“It was a highly leveraged takeover and major corporate financiers were already shying away based on what was being proposed,” Walsh says. A club free of debt since 1931 would be placed £580 million in the red, with risky payment-in-kind notes (PIKs) meaning the interest alone in the first year stood to reach £63 million.

“We felt any loss of support from senior management executives — Ferguson and Gill — would have dealt a fatal blow.”

Walsh was among a group of fans working with Shareholders United and the Japanese bank Nomura on a rival bid for the club and, in a way, he was an idealist. “If the deal collapsed, Ferguson would then be carried back into the stadium on the shoulders of supporters,” he says.

But he was also a realist. “Ferguson politely declined, on the basis that he had a responsibility not just to himself and his family, but also all the people he had brought to Old Trafford and were working under him.

“We were asking him to take a huge risk. There was no legal undertaking we could give him. Just a word. We believed the club would then be controlled by fans rather than people, in our opinion, draining it for personal profit. That was the point I made to Alex Ferguson in that call. But I fully respect and understand his decision.”

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Sir Alex Ferguson is flanked by (l-r) Bryan, Avie and Joel Glazer during a pre-season training session in Portugal in July 2005 (Photo: John Peters/Manchester United via Getty Images)

 

And so, the most acrimonious ownership war in British football history ended with the Glazers in charge at Manchester United. Malcolm was joined on the board by his six children: Joel, Avie, Bryan, Kevin, Darcie and Edward.

Resentment simmered among significant sections of supporters. Some formed their own club, FC United of Manchester, instead of setting foot back in Old Trafford. A wealthy collection of supporters christened the Red Knights launched a takeover attempt in 2010 that gained visible backing in the stadium through the green and gold campaign. The publicity meant the consortium lost the element of surprise, which it believes made the Glazers raise the asking price, The Athletic has learned.

This year, as January seemed to be passing by without any signings, chants against those in the boardroom made a fierce return. Games against Norwich City, Burnley and Tranmere Rovers carried the noise of protest and a militant core sparked a criminal investigation by attacking Ed Woodward’s house with fireworks.

Those scenes are why some former directors spoke to The Athletic on condition of anonymity, with memories still fresh of the occasion in October 2004 when Maurice Watkins, United’s club secretary, had his car vandalised with red paint after it emerged £2.5 million worth of his shares had ended up in Glazer hands. At one point, an effigy of Malcolm was hung from the Stretford End.

Similar strength of feeling was witnessed on June 29, 2005, the day Joel, Avie and Bryan visited Old Trafford for the first time. The Athletic has spoken to colleagues who recall the brothers being “shaken up” when several hundred angry United fans blocked the exits, meaning a police van was enlisted to secure their departure.

However, the Glazers will feel their gamble has paid off. Annual dividends total roughly £84 million at the latest count, to which you can add £75 million banked from the New York Stock Exchange listing together with soft loans to some of their other companies between 2005 to 2012, as well as further share sales. All in all, it means they have collected about £200 million.

Dividends are paid twice a year and the latest tranch of £11.3 million went to shareholders in January. As owners of 78 per cent of the club, the six Glazer siblings split £8.8 million equally. A further cash dividend of $0.09 per share will be paid on June 3 — equating to a similar windfall — despite the impact of the coronavirus crisis, perhaps giving context as to why player wage deferrals have not been on the agenda at United.

United never countenanced furloughing staff either. But they have taken up the special government option to delay paying their £10 million VAT bill for a year while still finding £3.6 million to buy shares and prop up the stock price during this period of uncertainty. No plans on further dividends are being made at this stage, however.

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It was also announced in the quarterly results released on Thursday that United’s net debt had risen to £429 million, mainly due to cash reserves going down from buying Harry Maguire and Bruno Fernandes. The gross USD debt principal remains unchanged at $650 million (around £530 million).

Transfer spending and player wages have risen to record levels under the Glazers through the enormous rise in broadcast and commercial revenues. But with no genuine Premier League title challenge since Ferguson retired in 2013, doubts remain over their wherewithal to govern for success on the pitch.

Questions also linger about their intentions over any sale. This season saw Saudi Arabia emerge as a genuinely interested party, only for the nation-state to turn to Newcastle United instead. Investors contacted by The Athletic believe the pool of potential buyers is shrinking as the multi-billion-pound price continues to rise.

“People underestimate how attached the owners are to Manchester United,” says a former director. “I’m sure there have been people in the past who have been prepared to wave some notes at them but it would take a lot to get them out. Not just because they’d want to maximise their return but also because being the owner of Manchester United means something.”


Despite fighting tooth and nail to take ownership of Manchester United, several sources say Malcolm Glazer never set foot inside Old Trafford. The Glazer patriarch died on May 28, 2014, and in truth, very little came to be known about the man who altered the course of United’s history so drastically. The only crumb of insight given by the family remains Joel’s interview with MUTV from that visit to Old Trafford in June 2005, in which he stressed communication with fans was “extremely important”. He said: “Fans are the lifeblood of the club. People want to know what’s happening. We will be communicating.”

Instead, when United lodged accounts one year later, the accompanying note from Tehsin Nayani, the Glazers’ PR at the time, read: “There will be no press release, there will be no press briefing, there will be no press interviews.”

Nayani would go on to write a book called The Glazer Gatekeeper — Six Years’ Speaking for Manchester United’s Silent Owners, which is the most extensive record of the family in publication, albeit far from revelatory. Nayani detailed how the brothers deliberately wore red ties for the Debrecen game and also described being introduced to Malcolm before a match involving the Glazers’ NFL team, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers: “Malcolm’s wispy ginger hair was finely groomed and, holding my gaze with his piercing blue eyes, he offered the silkiest, softest handshake I had ever experienced.”

Responsibility for communication was passed to Woodward who, sources say, “speaks to the family every single day, without fail, and sometimes more than once”.

United’s executive vice-chairman shares a close relationship with Joel in particular and Woodward has been known to tell of the occasion the pair ended up in a heap together in the stands of Moscow’s Luzhniki Stadium while celebrating the Champions League final victory over Chelsea.

Joel also has a photograph hanging on his wall from the Manchester derby held on the 50th anniversary of the Munich disaster in 2008, when sponsors were shorn from the shirts. His offices in Washington DC hold a replica of the United dressing room, with all of the first-team shirts hanging up on the benches, and the boardroom is dominated by a huge picture of George Best in the 1968 European Cup final.

Despite the Buccaneers winning the Super Bowl in 2003, Malcolm’s affection for sport was never quite as evident. One account into this aspect of his life comes from Allen St John, a journalist who met the head of the Glazer family over a possible book commission in 2000.

Glazer had owned the Bucs for five years to this point but St John tells The Athletic: “I don’t recall us talking about (American) football at all. He didn’t say, ‘This is why I love the team’. Most owners of sports franchises love to talk about their teams.”

Glazer did provide some indication of his NFL allegiance, however. “He gave me this Buccaneers pin, very ceremoniously,” says St John. “I’m sure I tried to ‘Ooh’ and ‘Aah’ over it. I came across it recently and thought, ‘That’s kind of funny’. It reminded me of this slightly weird afternoon.”

The hour and a half St John spent in the company of Glazer in a New York hotel room was curious for the fact there were few discernible traces that the man proposing the book was a billionaire. Bryan was also in attendance.

“It was something my agent set up,” St John says. “It was at the Hilton and both of them were sharing a reasonably small room. There were two twin beds. I was sitting in a chair between — we were perched around.

“Malcolm ran the meeting. He had ideas about the stories he wanted to tell, money-making ventures from when he was a kid. There was a long story about watch parts. He was talking about his early life, going back to the Depression, and seemed very proud of it, his work ethic, how hard he had it. It is what we think of now as quaint. But he proved his cleverness, his thrift, his ingenuity.

“I was a little bit surprised. I thought the book would be, ‘Hey, I’m a billionaire, you’re not’ but we never got into the bit about him going from nickels and dimes to billions. I mostly exchanged pleasantries with Bryan. He was sitting there pretty quietly and listening. I got the impression he had heard these stories before.”

Then came a curious episode that, again, St John felt Bryan was used to. “A valet had dropped off a pair of Bryan’s pants from dry cleaning. It caught Malcolm’s attention. He said, ‘Those are Hugo Boss pants, do you know how much they cost? $200. But I like my pants better than his’ and he points to them. ‘I bought these at JC Penny, $19.95, and I remember what it was like not to be able to afford $20’.

“I remember feeling really kind of bad for Bryan. My father might have joked about that at a family gathering but not at a business meeting with a stranger. Bryan was squirming a little bit. We are roughly about the same age — at that point, in our late 30s.”

There was one final thing that left St John perplexed. “Towards the end of the conversation, he asked me if I thought we could do this without my agent,” he says. “I was confused because the fact is my agent was bringing me to the project but also, more importantly, he would actually go and sell the book. If we did this around him, it would have derailed the process. I didn’t get the impression Malcolm had his own agent. It seemed to be mostly about the money. At that point, I was like, ‘I’m not sure’.

“I have collaborated with other people and you have to work hard. You need a level of trust. That he was willing to discuss having the person who set this meeting up out of the venture didn’t make me feel very good about my own security in those circumstances.”


There is no autobiography on the bookshop shelves, so we can only wonder what Glazer might have said about Manchester United and whether he would have included a chapter on the day his sons required a police escort out of Old Trafford.

In the final week of June 2005, Joel, Avie and Bryan embarked on a charm offensive in England, travelling to London for meetings with Richard Scudamore and Brian Barwick, the chief executives of the Premier League and FA respectively, and Richard Caborn, the sports minister.

“It was hush-hush that they were visiting the UK because of the protests,” says a source. The meetings were only set up a day or two in advance, with David Gill, United’s chief executive, calling the FA and Premier League himself.

Gill would accompany the Glazer brothers every step of the visit, just five months after opposing their takeover. In December, he sold £1.3 million worth of shares to Jim O’Neill, a lifelong United fan and board member, to keep them away from the Glazers, and privately offered a donation to Shareholders United that activist Nick Towle said was worth £25,000. Although, when asked, Gill’s recollections were that the sum was not that high.

The previous autumn, Gill had called the Glazers’ proposals “aggressive” and potentially “damaging”, although The Athletic has learned Gill now denies stating “debt is the road to ruin”, the words that are stretched across a famous green and gold banner. At the time, he said he had been taken out of context and when confronted with the quote by a fan at Birmingham University in 2010, responded only that “the model changed”.

Some speculated Gill’s previous stance would see his job in jeopardy but the Glazers, according to sources, “were very keen to keep David on board to provide that continuity, not just for staff but for regulators”. One source describes that as a “shrewd move” because of Gill’s influence in the corridors of power and the following summer, he was elected to the board of the FA. What is more, The Athletic understands Gill staying put increased the chances of Ferguson remaining at the club, too.

Over the next five years, Gill’s pay rose from £1 million to £1.95 million and upon leaving United in 2013, he was elected to UEFA’s executive committee.

That future was unclear when he introduced the Glazers to England’s football authorities, whose main concerns pertained to the collective selling of TV rights. Scudamore, Barwick, and Caborn all asked whether the Glazers would blaze an individual course but they provided reassurances. “We come from a much more egalitarian distribution system than you guys,” they said. “All the marketing and TV rights are centralised in the NFL, then they get dished out evenly among all the members.”

Caborn tells The Athletic: “They weren’t aggressive. They weren’t in-your-face Americans. I got the impression they were looking for a synergy between what was happening in the US through sport, television, and commercial, and whether that could be applied to Manchester United. The Premier League is big but in terms of basketball or American football turnover, we are nowhere near.”

Supporter groups feel Caborn could have done more as a government minister to protect United from the financial risk of the Glazer takeover, and even Solskjaer signed up to the resistance movement in February 2005 after doing extensive background research. He remains listed as a patron on the Manchester United Supporters Trust website.

Concerns came not only from the debt placed on the club but also from the Glazers’ PIK loans (worth £220 million) which allow borrowers to pay interest with additional debt, rather than cash. The three hedge funds — Perry Capital, Och-Ziff Capital Management and Citadel — who lent the money were entitled to demand seats on the board and a share of capital in United if payments had been late.

“One of the big gripes we had was that in an NFL franchise, you can’t leverage more than around 15 per cent in a takeover,” says Sean Bones, who was a key member of Shareholders United 15 years ago. The current limit is a flat rate $350 million leverage, with the average NFL team valued at $2.86 billion, which equates to around 12 per cent. The Glazers leveraged close to 66 per cent of United.

Bones worked in a factory half a mile from Old Trafford and on match days, would canvass for support in the alcoves of the stadium, trying to get ordinary fans to buy shares. “I was devastated when the Glazers took over. I thought we were really close to our own takeover,” he says. “We were attending regular meetings in the Old Trafford boardroom on Friday afternoons to discuss how we felt with Gill and others. And I can remember coming back from one particular meeting in London pretty convinced.”

Bones is talking about the Nomura deal and the group’s confidence was buoyed by having Russell Delaney in their ranks. Delaney had a contact into the Coolmore horseracing group, which owned 28.7 per cent of United shares.

Coolmore, led by John Magnier and JP McManus, had amassed their holding during friendship with Ferguson, who wished to solidify his power-base when United was a plc, but their relationship soured over a dispute for the stud rights to Rock of Gibraltar. “That bloody horse”, as Michael Crick, the respected author and United fan, decries to The Athletic.

As the legal arguments escalated and spilt into the public, Magnier and McManus applied pressure on Ferguson in January 2004 by issuing 99 questions on United’s transfer dealings, buying more shares and hiring private investigators. Ferguson complained about people going through his son Jason’s bins. Coolmore have always denied any of this was to do with them.

Ben Hatton, who was United’s head of commercial enterprises for 10 years up until 2007, says Ferguson’s job came under threat, too. “This enormous acrimony developed between two parties, which led the Irish investors to want to use their shareholding at the time as leverage to put pressure on Sir Alex,” Hatton tells The Athletic. “It became clear some kind of white knight shareholding was going to be necessary to prevent what we expected to be a full takeover.”

So Magnier and McManus were kingmakers for potential buyers and through his connections, Delaney believed supporters would be allowed the chance to offer a counterbid should the Glazers make a satisfactory offer but that did not happen. To Delaney’s surprise, on May 12, 2005, Red Football, the Glazers’ investment arm, announced it had reached an agreement to purchase the shares of Magnier and McManus.

By the time the £790 million takeover was complete, it is believed the Glazers had put in £270 million of their own money — although some City of London sources are “dubious” it was that much — borrowing the rest and using the club as collateral. “They took a risk with the whole club’s future that shouldn’t have been allowed by the government,” Bones argues.

Caborn counters: “We couldn’t have put blockers on it. That would have been the regulators of the Premier League and FA. Once they’d passed the fit and proper person’s test, then there is little any government can do.

“I’ve been a Sheffield United fan since I was eight. I know what a club means to a city or a town. We were interested, as a government, to make sure the ownership of Manchester United wasn’t falling into bad hands and was going to continue to play a big role in the community. And to be fair, they have basically done that.”

David Davies, a three-time FA chief executive, was an outgoing director when he took a call from the incumbent Barwick on Tuesday, June 28, 2005. He says, “Brian, a true Liverpool supporter, said, ‘Hey, these guys the Glazers are coming to the FA. You must meet them’. I was a well-known Man U person.

“I was aware the takeover was controversial but I was also aware that people like Ferguson were supportive. It was a very affable meeting. I was keen to establish, ‘Did these people care about Manchester United?’ It appeared to me there had been some work done on their history.

“I have been a United season ticket holder since the day I left the FA. I sit in the South Stand and would have to be living on planet Zog to not be aware the ownership remains controversial.

“If Manchester United had stopped buying great players, I would be more critical than I am. It was always going to be difficult to follow Ferguson but some of us are long enough in the tooth to know what it was like following Matt Busby.

“I clearly have views on the fit and proper person’s test. Is it all satisfactory? I wouldn’t pretend there are not still questions to be answered. You can argue about ownership regulations and who should have those powers, for sure.”

The Glazers’ final meeting on their London trip was with Caborn in his offices by Trafalgar Square. He had business that evening at the House of Commons and the brothers asked if he would provide a tour once he was done. “Americans love it because they’ve not got history like we’ve got,” Caborn says.

The Glazers were driven in the ministerial car while Gill walked down Whitehall and queued up at St Stephen’s entrance. The group then dined together in the Churchill Room.

In a series of statements, all parties expressed satisfaction with the meetings. But easing the concerns of the establishment was one thing. Winning over United’s supporters would be quite another.

At 6.15pm on Wednesday, June 29, the brothers arrived at Old Trafford in silver people carriers to meet executive staff members. Word got out. Reporters and photographers arrived. So, too, did around 400 United supporters, who gathered throughout the evening on the stadium forecourt to sing anti-Glazer songs. “We’ll be running round Old Trafford with his head,” was at the softer end of the spectrum.

United’s security team erected a steel gateway around the directors’ entrance and fans responded by building barricades on the road.

Riot police arrived with dogs and inside the stadium, staff wondered how on earth they were going to get out. “It was quite scary,” says an individual in the Platinum Lounge with the Glazers that night. “We had to wait inside.”

Around 10.25pm, an engine roared and the doors of the players’ entrance at the Stretford End was flung open. Two police vans, with the Glazers inside, sped through. Some fans tried to pelt them with stones. Two people were arrested.

The following day, Sir Bobby Charlton, who had expressed concerns about the takeover, arrived at Old Trafford to meet the Glazers. Afterwards, he told reporters he had apologised to the club’s new owners for the scenes the previous night. “I tried to explain they couldn’t ignore the fans, who are so emotionally involved in the club but sometimes do go a bit too far.”

Charlton’s first impressions of the Glazers were positive. “Like any other football fan, I’ve been waking up in the night wondering what was going on,” he said. “But they allayed a lot of my fears.”


Such sentiments were not enough for some fans, who formed breakaway club FC United instead of sending their money in the direction of the Glazers. Andy Walsh was 43 thinking back on 38 years of memories following United when he sat in his car outside Old Trafford preparing to withdraw his season ticket renewal. “I cried,” he says. “It’s irrational, isn’t it, but those feelings make us human. If you turn it into a purely transactional relationship, you undermine the emotion and damage the sport.

“It caused a lot of hurt to walk away. People would ask me what they should do. One fan turned up to my house, distraught, wringing his hands. He’d lost jobs through following United and here he was considering giving it all up. I saw him a few months later at FC having time of his life.”

Walsh could not square his love for the team with what the club would become. “Yes, the Glazers have squeezed more revenue through the commercial deals but in doing that, they’ve suffocated the soul of the club, in my view,” he says. “They are leeches.”

On the business model page of United’s investor relations website, two pie charts are displayed below. One shows how commercial revenue stood at £66 million in 2009, accounting for 24 per cent of the overall turnover. Another from 2019 puts that figure at £275 million and 44 per cent of the total income. Industry sources say this shift means no club is better incubated from the current crisis than United, whose wages-to-income ratio is 53 per cent – one of the lowest in the Premier League.

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“There is a bigger argument about the shape of the game,” argues a former director. “United didn’t change the face of football on their own. Barcelona, Real Madrid, AC Milan, Bayern Munich; all those clubs were chasing sponsorship money.”

Still, nobody does it quite like United, who pioneered the proliferation of sponsorship categories. Listed currently on their official website are 25 global partners, eight regional partners, 14 media partners and 14 financial partners — a total of 61 sponsors. It is the realisation of the Glazers’ ambition when buying the club. According to sources, they were incredulous that Tampa Bay Buccaneers had larger commercial revenue than United, despite NFL regulations limiting team sponsorships to a 75-mile radius. “If you go to Tampa Bay, you can see sponsors plastered all over the place: a DIY chain, a chicken restaurant, a car dealership; they’ve got tonnes,” says a former executive.

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The Glazers transposed the model to United on a global scale. “The first new deal the Glazers did was with the Saudi Telecom — £5 million with no signage rights; just the branding in Saudi,” says an executive. “That’s when we realised there might be something to their approach.”

Another former director says: “The stock market struggled with a company whose revenue is dependent on success on the pitch. It was undervalued. That’s what allowed somebody who did see the value in a global brand to buy it. Woodward sold it to the Glazers and they took the risk. I know they leveraged the deal but they did put their money into it. If it had all gone wrong, they would have been wiped out. Their view was, ‘We took the risk, we should get the rewards’.”

Woodward, according to a separate former colleague, was “the architect of their business plan and central to its implementation”. Once the takeover was complete, he left JP Morgan, the bank facilitating the Glazers’ lending, and “wrapped his arms” around United’s corporate side. Richard Arnold reported to Woodward, not Gill, when he joined as commercial director in 2007.

The Glazers only ever explained their intentions in one meeting with all staff. “They said, ‘Look, we’ve bought this club because we saw an opportunity’,” says a former executive. “They never came with, ‘We are fans of the club forever and always will be’. They didn’t claim to be anything other than businessmen and they are very good at what they do.”

There are other figures well-versed in football marketing who offer a different view. Edward Freedman was described as one of United’s most important signings of the 1990s by former chairman Martin Edwards. As managing director of merchandising, he took United’s merchandising operation from a turnover of £1.2 million in 1992 to £28 million when he left five years later.

Freedman is scathing of the approach taken by the Glazers. “They haven’t got a clue what a brand is,” he tells The Athletic. “It’s a very clever money-making move for them to get those deals. However, I’m sorry to say that, as far as enhancing Manchester United, it doesn’t work.”

United became associated with Japanese noodle firms and Indonesian tyre manufacturers, while players did promos holding out Mister Potato crisps. One high-profile agent privately complained that the club was “obsessed with commercialism” and “one big money-making machine”. After arriving back in the early hours following a match at West Ham, some stars were required to drive mini kids’ Chevrolets in a sponsored stunt the next day instead of resting.

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“I really can’t deal with it,” Freedman says. “We were offered all that long ago and never would accept any of it. Not for all the money in the world. Then, of course, the people who understood the brand left and people came in who saw only the recompense of taking money.

“But taking money for things that aren’t compatible with your brand will eventually ruin your brand. That’s what I can see them doing. The whole charisma, the whole glory of Manchester United, seems to have gone.”

Ben Hatton can remember “pouring scorn” over the Glazers’ approach while relaxing with colleagues in the pub after work but since leaving United 13 years ago, his opinion has changed. He says: “Actually, working a lot more in American sport, they are a different breed. The business of sport in the US is exactly that: it is a business. That is why their sports franchises are, in the main, sustainable and ours are not.

“They do have that focus to say, ‘That is a pretty good business idea and, you know what, if you take a step back out of the parochial view on English football, it is a great idea’. If Manchester United score four goals at Old Trafford, who is not going to bid for the four balls?

“There were a lot of ideas like that and I often look back and think it must have been so very frustrating in the early days for these guys, looking at us little English folk from a northern town running what was, at the time, a small business.”

Supporters like Walsh and Bones would strongly argue that football clubs are community assets rather than franchises as in the US, but United’s focus off the pitch had already turned towards the balance sheets before the Glazers arrived.

Hatton explains the club’s thinking from the time he joined in 1997. “We were the first to go into the market to get some sense in numbers of what our fanbase was,” he says. “The survey went to 23 markets — researchers, statistical samples — and we came up with 623 million fans. Our business plan and how we started to communicate with the analysts half-yearly was, ‘We will understand more about them: where they are, what they like, what they follow. We are going to enfranchise them and sell them stuff’. ‘Turning fans into customers’ was a line we created and the ethos of our business.

“The Glazer strategy was fundamentally different: it was all about selling an association with Manchester United. Their strategy was, ‘How finely can we slice this?’”

When the Glazers came in, United had been trying to streamline their sponsors, not expand them. “We had our main relationship with Vodafone and eight platinum partners,” says a former executive. “But we actually wanted to go in a more strategic, ‘fewer but bigger’ direction. Instead of having eight sponsors at £1.2 million a year, we’d have four at £5 million. But they weren’t into any of that.”

Another director says: “It was just very different. It’s not right or wrong. The club, in terms of its marketing function, had been set up for relationship management. The whole aim was to make our sponsors feel they were getting a service that was second to none. So when the time came for renegotiation, they were ready to say, ‘We want to pay you more’.

“But that was a very different philosophy to the Glazers. They came with a view which was, ‘There are hundreds of companies in the world you’ve never heard of, all of which would be prepared to pay 10 times more than your current sponsors, so we are not really in the market to cultivate. We are looking to take the best offer on the table’.”

However, the line would be drawn at some companies whose ethical values “were not compatible”, such as payday lenders, even if the numbers were higher.

To begin with, Woodward and Arnold worked together on these sales deals in a small office in Mayfair. Arnold had known Woodward for many years but his suitability for the role quickly became apparent. “He won’t leave the room until he gets the answer he wants,” says a source. That mentality spread to his staff, and one worker even followed the equivalent executive at a potential sponsor on a family holiday to Bali to get the contract signed.

Joel, Avie, and Bryan paid keen attention to progress, leaving Gill to immerse himself in the football side and the brothers then committed to a bigger space housing 40 to 50 employees in Pall Mall at an annual rent of £5 million. The entire marketing budget had been £600,000. “Sanctioning that was a ballsy move. It was probably the biggest sponsorship salesforce in London,” says an insider.

Another adds: “It was a much more structured approach. They would maybe look at 100 countries in the world, take the top 200 companies in each, do research on them, and then approach them.” United’s London headquarters expanded again to Green Park, while a Hong Kong office was opened to cater for Far East customers. It is a commercial approach that has been followed by the likes of Liverpool and Manchester City.

Industry sources say talks over a new shirt sponsor are currently “advancing very well” despite the pandemic. The club remains attractive thanks to what the club’s investor website calls United’s 1.1 billion “followers”. Despite their worldwide supporter base, United’s commercial revenues have flatlined for the last four years and the club are moving away from the regional partners model to focus on global sponsorships.

“They have paid a lot less attention to client relationships than we did, which could come back to bite them,” says a former executive. “For a long time, their pitch was pretty simple: ‘Manchester United is the greatest football club in the world, why wouldn’t you want to be associated with that?’ But every year they go without success on the pitch, that will become a bit harder.”


The Glazers have been accused of indifference towards silverware as long as the profits continue. “Do they really want to win? I don’t know,” says a former colleague. “They wear the Super Bowl rings they won with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. But they haven’t looked like winning since, so perhaps once was enough.”

The Glazers would scoff at the suggestion. There is a genuine belief within the club that Solskjaer is building a team to challenge for trophies.

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On the commercial side, the shirt sponsorship struck with Chevrolet, worth £450 million over seven seasons, was a major success. But the deal will not be renewed past 2021 and the person responsible for the deal at General Motors, Joel Ewanick, was dismissed soon after its announcement in 2012, with a spokesman saying he had “failed to meet the expectations the company has of an employee”.

There has been turbulence at United, too, with several marketing executives leaving United after struggling to fit in with the Glazers’ strategy. Hatton says: “They were very demanding and it was clear quickly that a strategic divergence of that magnitude was always going to require different people. We did some great deals but we were never sales guys.”

Other members of staff inherited by the Glazers moved on. Even some they hired did, too. In April 2007, Lee Daley, a lifelong United supporter, left a prestigious role as chief executive of Saatchi & Saatchi UK to become United’s group commercial director. He arrived at Old Trafford with a long-term vision to revolutionise the club’s commercial strategy by exploiting the social media boom but resigned after just four months, disillusioned at becoming what one source described as “a glorified sponsorship sales manager”.

Hatton defends the Glazers’ style. “They were no more demanding than you would expect them to be, having walked into a football club where they knew the senior management and executive committee had actively criticised everything they were about for 18 months,” he says. “They didn’t create a hostile environment. They are really nice people and phenomenally smart, Joel, Bryan and Avie particularly. They had a real understanding of the business of sport.”

A different colleague echoes that impression, saying how the brothers are good at remembering the names of relatives when gathering for cup finals. Others describe Joel as “thoughtful and measured”, continuously asking questions. When the coronavirus crisis began, he was closely involved in decisions on goodwill payments to casual workers and the non-furloughing of staff. He is said to be “proud” that the club have never been investigated for financial fair play breaches or banned for transfer transgressions.

“Joel wants to weigh up other people’s opinions before coming to a conclusion,” adds a source.

Another former executive familiar with their methods on the business side paints a slightly different picture, however. “Joel would do most of the talking but Bryan was the loudest. Avie was meant to be the finance guy. They were all a bit like Donald Trump. Loads of bluster.”

In the beginning, some staff suspected the Glazers “decided everything around the family dining table” — a view established when Darcie’s husband Joel Kassewitz attended board meetings, and fuelled further after Kevin Glazer was given the job of updating the club website from its 2005 version despite never showing any interest in United. There was talk of getting Microsoft or Apple involved but it didn’t change until 2018. In the same period, Manchester City had upgraded theirs on four separate occasions.

In the board’s current guise, Joel is regarded as “the big boss” and spends most of his working day on United — around eight hours. Avie still takes an interest but Bryan stepped back after getting married in 2015. Sources say Joel wants to be kept informed of everything and genuinely has an interest in football, watching lots of Premier League games on NBC, not just United’s.

That outlook is why multiple sources say the Glazers have, from the start, wanted the final say on “every little detail” but that their decisions often move glacially. “There is so much analysis done on the back of every commercial decision,” says a source. “But that also meant I was never accountable if those decisions didn’t work out because I could always point to the fact it was the Glazers who ultimately signed it off.”

One example came when United were changing shirt sponsor and got close to Nike’s production deadline. “You’re planning 18 months in advance,” says a source. “There were several companies but we hadn’t decided yet. There was a danger it was going beyond the schedule to allow for stock to be made, with the right logo on, ready for the start of the new season.

“They were in discussions with Nike, who were saying, ‘We need a decision now’ and the Glazers said, ‘Well, what’s the cost of making the problem go away?’ They looked at the logistics, trying to find a way to give us more time to make a decision. They weren’t afraid of spending more money if there was a good reason.”

The Athletic can reveal that one potential shirt sponsor was Etihad Airways, the Abu Dhabi-based national airline of the United Arab Emirates, which has adorned Manchester City’s shirt and stadium since 2009. The deal with United was “very close”, sources say, only for the Glazers to have a change of heart.

Elsewhere at the club, one insider describes an expenses system attuned to the bottom line, saying it can take weeks “jumping through all the hoops” just to get £10 back.

An agent says this approach has seeped into the football side, with chief negotiator Matt Judge, who worked with Woodward at JP Morgan, allowed minimal latitude: “The Glazers micro-manage everything. That’s why it all takes so long to sign players or offer new contracts. It’s no coincidence numerous players have got down to the final year of their deals. It goes from Matt to Ed to Joel to Ed to Matt. It’s excruciating. And in that time, Liverpool have signed a player.”

United, however, believe it is better to carefully consider the right player rather than rush in and Joel’s interest in the analytics of the scouting system provides balance.

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The Glazers, back in America, have been known to request a presentation on prospective transfers via video link at United’s London headquarters. The system, an immersive big-screen set-up, also connects to Manchester. Once the money is justified, the signing is sanctioned.

On a smaller scale, some agents have spoken of difficulties obtaining welfare packages to assist parents driving academy children to Carrington. “The response would be, ‘We have to run it through the board’,” says one agent. “It is peanuts compared to what they are spending on transfers and salaries — a couple of hundred quid a week that would make a massive difference. But I do accept that once one player gets it and others hear, then you’re fighting a fire.”

In the process, details can be missed in negotiations. One source tells of a player who was due a new contract —  but the initial offer from Woodward and Judge was £10,000 lower than his salary at the time. “It wasn’t a deliberate ploy,” insists the source. “Because 30 minutes later, they ended up doubling his wages.” Woodward denies this.

Other agents close to United say talks can progress smoothly, while Woodward has been true to his word when promising renegotiation promptly for emerging players.

There was, though, internal agitation as negotiations dragged on with Sporting Lisbon for Bruno Fernandes in the winter window. Sporting demanded €80 million (£71.5 million). Woodward went in much lower but stipulating that United will pay the full asking price if certain performance clauses are met. Most likely, United will end up paying about €65 million (£58 million). Fernandes signed on January 30.

Having been stung before, there is a definite sense the Glazers do not want to be exploited by United’s status as a rich club.


Others have a different interpretation. “They can actually be accused of backing managers too much,” says a source. A transfer outlay of nearly £900 million since Ferguson retired attests to that, although suspicions linger that the modest expenditure in the market between 2005 and 2013 (around £150 million net in total) came as a result of needing to service the debt. In documents relating to their 2006 refinancing, seen by The Athletic, the Glazers outline a £25 million net spend per summer, a sharp contrast to Manchester City’s splurge. United never said no to Ferguson, sources stress.

“As an outsider looking in, I think they have executed pretty well against the strategy they laid down all those years ago,” says Hatton. “The only thing I would say, which they would perhaps agree with if you spoke to them, is that the level of leverage in their business plan and the initial debts service in those first two or three years as they got their feet under the table was hard.

“The step-change in television income, which came out of nowhere and could not have possibly been projected in a business plan, helped them massively.” In the UK alone, Premier League rights rose from £1.024 billion to £1.706 billion in 2007 and reached £5.136 billion in 2016. Sources insist the Glazers did project such an increase due to their experience in US sports.

Raising ticket prices was certainly part of the Glazers’ initial strategy. In those 2006 documents, they outlined their belief that tickets at Old Trafford remained “undervalued” despite having implemented increases of 12.5 per cent on average in their first season in charge. In particular, they suggested that United’s ticket prices were too low compared to those at the various London clubs and that “while Premier League teams in the north of England have historically been viewed as having a lower-wealth fanbase”, the club’s research showed that “the perceived gulf in fan wealth is not enormous”. Their projections included a further 36 per cent increase by the start of the 2012-13 campaign. “They introduced theatre-style pricing,” as one director described. “The better the view, the more you pay.”

But United have frozen general admission ticket prices since 2012 and that, in part, explains why annual match-day revenue has plateaued at around £115 million.

Those attending games are thankful for the club resisting rises but a persistent complaint has been a lack of renovation on the stadium itself. Although the Glazers have been credited with the decision to increase Old Trafford’s capacity to 76,000 by developing the north-west and north-east quadrants of the stadium, planning permission and construction contracts were already in place before the takeover. Sir Roy Gardner, the plc chairman, stated in 2005 accounts that the estimated £43 million costs of the development would be paid back within six years. As it transpired, with the Glazers raising ticket prices, it was repaid far quicker than that.

The Glazers did agree to a little extra spend on the quadrants, though. “When they first took over, the quadrants were still in the planning stage,” says a former colleague. “There was an option to clad the quadrants with corrugated sheeting instead of using glaze. It would save half a million pounds. I remember the Glazers saying, ‘No, don’t spoil it if that’s what it costs to make it look right’.”

“It certainly was our aspiration to do more with the stadium,” Hatton says. “They seemed to pick that up early on and share the view it should be one of, if not the best, stadiums in the UK.”

Another source says: “When they first came, they had the intention of rebuilding Old Trafford. They were desperate to buy up all the land around the ground. And the only bit they didn’t buy was where Gary Neville and co put their hotel, and nobody thought you could do anything with that scrap of land back then.

“But they have given up on the stadium. I think they realised the cost, probably £1 billion, is too much to justify. It’s not like the Emirates or Tottenham, where you can sell boxes for big money — there just isn’t the market for that in Manchester. But their neglect of Old Trafford is still very disappointing. The concourses are very tired and the customer service is terrible. At Manchester City, the security guards treat you like a valued customer. At United, they just growl at you. That’s a culture thing and it comes from the top.”

United strongly refute this characterisation and point to £20 million spent in the past year on upgrades, including £11 million on disabled facilities. In November, Woodward told United We Stand fanzine: “We’re looking at an investment plan while maintaining what makes Old Trafford special.”

The club are engaging with fans in other ways, too. A robust quarterly fans’ forum resulted in rail-seating being approved for trial, with 1,500 seats installed in time for the 2020-21 season, and the introduction of a singing section in the Stretford End which led to an improved atmosphere in the ground. (Ironically, it is in the place where protest chants originated against Norwich.)

Woodward’s salary of £3.16 million — the highest for a Premier League director — had been revealed the day before the Norwich game. When Burnley claimed victory against a United side desperately short on creativity on January 22, the mood was dark.

The Glazers were not there for Burnley, an atmosphere that was as mutinous as any in the past decade. Avie is the only brother to attend a game all season, but the family are sent regular bulletins, so will have been aware of the similarities to 2010, when the green and gold campaign was as its most visceral.

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The “Love United Hate Glazers” motto was plastered around Manchester at the time but in truth, the Glazers were unperturbed by stickers, scarves, or songs. The only meaningful intervention to their ownership could come from a takeover bid and for a fleeting few weeks, that seemed a genuine possibility when a group of wealthy United fans gathered as a consortium to make an approach. The Red Knights were serious businessmen but did not get very far with the Glazers.

“Once everyone started talking about them, the Glazers upped their price,” says a source. “Their strength was that there were 50 of them — there were some big players that the media never found out about — and they were philanthropic. But that was also their weakness.

“There were a lot of egos and some were more up for it than others but they all had a limit as to how far they would go. The Glazers made it very clear that they wanted more than the group were willing to pay and that was it.”

After the failed bid, one member told a friend: “It really depresses me. They’re the bane of my life and it’s probably my biggest failure. I failed to get these awful people out of the club I love.”

Some in the group are said to joke they are “dormantly active or actively dormant”. Talk occasionally lands on what would motivate the Glazers to sell United.


When the Red Knights formed, the Glazers still had an estimated £220 million owed on the personal PIK loans used to take over the club, accruing interest at a punitive rate of 16.25 per cent. But that pressure was alleviated in November 2010 when Joel wrote to lenders to say the outstanding balance would be paid back within seven days.

Some industry sources say the Glazers’ were “very fortunate” to benefit from the timing of the credit crunch, which eventually encouraged the global economy to lend at low interest, but they did have to hold their nerve through the 2008 crash.

The Glazers’ status at United has been solid since the 2012 public offering (IPO) launched on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Once banks bought shares, it gave validation to their model and crystallised a value vastly in excess of the takeover price. On the first day of trading, shares closed at $14 each, valuing United at $2.3 billion.

“The war was lost,” sighs one United campaigner.

The Glazers initially planned to float the club in Hong Kong or Singapore in late 2011 but City of London sources say those plans were shelved by a combination of the exchanges wanting full financial disclosure, discomfort over the Glazers’ proposal to take most of the proceeds, and a lack of buyers at the kind of price they had in mind. This led them to the NYSE, then eager for new companies, and a modest sale in the summer of 2012.

Having once hoped to tempt Asian investors to part with more than £600 million for the privilege of being associated with United, the Glazers had to settle for £150 million in New York, half of which they banked. The rest was used to pay off some of the takeover debt they had put on the club’s books.

Many fans thought all of the proceeds should have gone to the club. But The Athletic understands the original plan was for the Glazers to take the entirety. It is understood the NYSE expressed reservations, forcing a rethink, while industry sources describe the whole process as “problematic”. United say there were “zero issues” with the NYSE.

The flotation itself was a mixed bag as the share price debuted at $14, below the target range of $16 to $20. But that still represented a significant profit for the Glazers at very little cost in terms of transparency. Classed as an “emerging growth” company, United were exempted from having to reveal all their financial data to the market, a position they reinforced by moving company registry from Old Trafford to the Cayman Islands.

As United’s latest annual report notes, a company registered overseas is not required to follow the standard corporate governance practices of the NYSE. “Accordingly, we follow certain corporate governance practices of our home country, the Cayman Islands,” the report states. “Specifically, we do not have a board of directors composed of a majority of independent directors, or a remuneration committee composed entirely of independent directors.”

The Glazers’ grip on United’s future remains secure because they split the shares into class A and class B. They retain all of the class B shares that have 10 times the voting rights as the class A shares available on the NYSE. Overall, they own 78 per cent of the club.

By the close of play last week, the share price was $15.69, which would value United at $2.7 billion. United sources feel the Glazers have added £3bn in value to the club. At such a figure on paper, let alone what the Glazers would demand, it raises a question: who can afford to buy United now?

“Nation-states,” says one industry insider. A reported £1.5 billion offer from Qatar found little traction in 2011; last November, talks were held with Saudi Arabia, prompting a flurry of speculation when Arnold visited the country.

But sources say the Glazers were only prepared to give up 20 per cent of the club. Saudi Arabia wanted control and have now turned their attention to Newcastle United. The club insist conversations never went on to ownership, remaining solely on sponsorship opportunities.

“I am sure they would walk if someone offered them $5 billion and I suspect $3.5 billion would start a conversation… there are just not many people around with that sort of cash,” adds an informed source.

“It will have to be a state, unless Jeff Bezos fancies it,” says another. “It is never going to provide any sensible return on the investment for the next owner, is it? That is for sure. The reason for purchase is not, ‘I will spend X and dispose of it for Y in 10 years’, so there are a handful of potential owners. That said, do I expect it to change hands in the foreseeable future? Yes, probably.”

That is because the Glazers, the source speculates, will want to “realise their investment” — cash in their chips, so to speak.

“Valuation-wise, it may be on the downturn in the short term, given the pandemic, but it will be a short-term blip. I would imagine them wanting to liquidate at some point. They may say, ‘You’re talking rubbish’, but it struck me what they did in Tampa in the close season, by signing Rob Gronkowski and Tom Brady. It looks like they are refocusing in Tampa.”

Another source believes the Glazers may be waiting to see if there is another jump in broadcast revenues. “They want a ridiculous amount of money to get lost and there just aren’t many buyers out there at that price. I can only assume they are hanging around to see if Apple, Netflix, Facebook or someone like that really gets into live sport and supercharges the valuations again.”

There is still scope for a wealthy collection of individuals to gather, perhaps if the Red Knights could reorganise in the manner of Fenway Sports Group, who own Liverpool and the Boston Red Sox. However, such an endeavour would require coordination, compromise, and lots and lots of cash.

So, 15 years on, all indications suggest the Glazers will be Manchester United owners for some time yet.

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15 minutes ago, Atomiswave said:

JM just confirmed that Bergwin Son and Kane are all fit and ready to game.Just what we needed man.

 

7 minutes ago, NikkiCFC said:

Pogba and Rashford as well.

Sweet. We have Ruben, Pulisic, Kante, and a fully fit Tammy back. 

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JM just confirmed that Bergwin Son and Kane are all fit and ready to game.Just what we needed man.
If Mou continues to play those players like crazy, they will get other injuries sooner or later. Kane is a very injury prone player

Gesendet von meinem SM-G920F mit Tapatalk

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