Glazers' demands set to delay Manchester United takeover: reports

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - Premier League - Manchester United v West Ham United - Old Trafford, Manchester, Britain - July 22, 2020 General view of the corner flag inside the stadium before the match, as play resumes behind closed doors following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) Martin Rickett/Pool via REUTERS.
Plans for a
takeover of Manchester United could be delayed until May, with the current
US-based owners the Glazer family said to be holding out for a better offer,
according to British media reports.
The Daily
Mail reported this week that the Glazers wanted a bid of at least £6 billion
($7.2 billion, 6.8 billion euros) after initial offers from Qatari's Sheikh
Jassim Bin Hamad Al Thani and British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe were lodged at
a maximum of £4.5 billion.
The Mail
said this might mean a sale of the club, which won its first trophy in six
years by collecting the League Cup on Sunday, would not take place until May at
the earliest.
In another
report, the Guardian said there was indecision among the six Glazer siblings
because each had their own view of any takeover but that the sale remained
"under serious consideration by the family as a whole".
Sheikh
Jassim, 41, educated at Britain's elite Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst,
claims to be a long-time United fan.
He was the
first to submit a bid by the 'soft deadline' of February 17 and has promised a
"completely debt free" takeover of United.
Boyhood
United fan Ratcliffe, who was born in the Manchester area, is one of Britain's
wealthiest individuals, with an estimated net worth of £12.5 billion ($15
billion) following the success of INEOS, his global chemical company.
He is keen
to expand a sporting portfolio that already includes French football club Nice
and Swiss team FC Lausanne-Sport, as well as the cycling team Ineos Grenadiers,
formerly Team Sky.
A price tag
of around $6 billion would smash the record fee for a football club set when a
consortium led by LA Dodgers co-owner Todd Boehly and private equity firm
Clearlake Capital purchased Chelsea last year.
Russ Mould,
investment director at Manchester-headquartered stockbrokers AJ Bell, told AFP
on Wednesday: "As bidders continue to circle one of the globe's most
valuable sports franchises, it seems no party has reached the £6 billion
valuation put on the business by Manchester United's current owners."
Improvement
under Ten Hag
United, one
of the most successful clubs in English football history, have struggled to
keep pace with bitter rivals Manchester City since the retirement of legendary
manager Alex Ferguson in 2013.
But under
disciplinarian Dutch manager Erik ten Hag, United appear to be on the rise and
ended their long wait for silverware by beating Newcastle 2-0 in the League Cup
final at Wembley.
They are
also third in the Premier League, they beat Barcelona last week to progress to
the last 16 of the Europa League and were facing West Ham in the fifth round of
the FA Cup on Wednesday.
Mould said
that with United's prospects on the pitch looking rosier, the Glazers might
think twice about ceding full control of the club.
"Speculation
has been growing that should Erik ten Hag's revolution in performance that has
seen Manchester United go through an improved run of form and win their first
trophy since 2017 continue, the family could be less willing to sell the
club."
If the
Glazers do decide to hang on to all or part of the club, it would be deeply
unpopular with United's supporters, who have frequently demonstrated en masse
against the American owners who they accuse of taking money out of the club
over the years.
Want to send us a story? SMS to 25170 or WhatsApp 0743570000 or Submit on Citizen Digital or email wananchi@royalmedia.co.ke
Comments
No comments yet.
Leave a Comment