Europa League final offers financial saviour for Man Utd, Spurs
Manchester United's Brazilian midfielder #18 Casemiro celebrates after scoring Manchester United's second goal during the UEFA Europa League semi final second leg football match between Manchester United and Athletic Club Bilbao at Old Trafford stadium in Manchester, north west England, on May 8, 2025. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)
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Manchester
United and Tottenham will aim to salvage disastrous domestic seasons in
Wednesday's Europa League final, with the prize of a lucrative place in next
season's Champions League as treasured as the trophy.
Both clubs head
to Bilbao for the final assailed by stinging criticism amid their worst seasons
of the Premier League era.
United sit 16th
and Tottenham are one point worse off in 17th with just one league game
remaining.
Only the
struggles of relegated trio Ipswich, Leicester and Southampton saved United and
Tottenham from an embarrassing battle to avoid crashing into the Championship.
For the loser of
the final, the hangover from this season threatens to be a long one as the lack
of European football will deal a monumental blow to their budgets going
forward.
"It really
does impact I think the next two or three years for both clubs," said former
United captain Gary Neville.
"They need
investment into their teams and if they don't get this Champions League money
then there is going to be a lot less investment, which means they might not
make the Champions League next season."
United have only
once failed to qualify for Europe in the past 35 years.
The club's
finances are already under scrutiny as co-owner Jim Ratcliffe has implemented
swingeing cuts since buying a minority stake just over a year ago.
United recently
announced a further 200 redundancies were planned after 250 jobs were cut last
year.
In defending
those decisions, Ratcliffe claimed in March that the Red Devils would have
"run out of money at Christmas" without that action.
Investment is
needed at Old Trafford both on and off the pitch.
United announced
plans earlier this year for a new 100,000 capacity stadium at a reported cost
of £2 billion ($2.7 billion).
Ruben Amorim has
been unable to save the sinking ship since taking charge as manager in
November, with just six wins in 26 Premier League games.
"For me the
Champions League is more important," said Amorim last week on whether a
place among Europe's elite or a trophy in his first season was more vital.
"The best
way to help us to get to the top in a few years is the Champions League. It is
not the title, the trophy.
"The most
important thing is how this title could help us to get back to the top
faster."
Conservative
estimates suggest victory at San Mames could be worth £70 million for the
winner.
United made £52
million from their group stage exit in last season's Champions League.
Since then a
major revamp of European competitions has increased the number of games and
prize money offered by UEFA.
"A good
season in the Champions League can be worth far in excess of £100
million," football finance expert Kieran Maguire told the BBC.
"By the
time you combine gate receipts, sponsor bonuses and the prize money available,
the numbers involved are eye-watering."
Tottenham
chairman Daniel Levy has been the target of criticism from the club's
supporters for prioritising financial sustainability over an ambition to win
trophies.
Spurs are aiming
to end a 17-year wait for silverware on Wednesday despite huge growth in
Tottenham's income over the past two decades.
A
state-of-the-art new stadium has opened up fresh revenue streams from hosting
concerts to world title boxing bouts.
Yet, Spurs have
still managed to lose over £100 million in the past two seasons.
"We cannot
spend what we do not have," said Levy when the club's latest accounts were
revealed in March.
Whoever fails to
win on Wednesday faces a long road back to European football's top table.


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