in

Forgotten Premier League statue branded a ‘laughing stock’ by fans is now in storage at completely different EFL club


A MICHAEL JACKSON statue which used to stand outside of Fulham’s football stadium has found its way to a new EFL football club.

However, the statue of the controversial pop singer is not on display for fans to see.

The Michael Jackson stadium was unveiled outside of Craven Cottage in 2011Credit: EPA
Fulham’s former owner Mohamed Al-Fayed blamed the club’s relegation on the removal of the statueCredit: AFP

Having been unveiled outside of Craven Cottage in 2011 under the club’s former chairman Mohamed Al-Fayed, fans were left unhappy with it’s introduction.

One fan declared: “We’re a laughing stock. It has nothing to do with football.”

While another added: “It makes the club look silly. I thought it was an April Fools joke.”

The 6ft 7in statue remained standing outside of the ground for two-and-a-half years despite Jackson’s only link with Fulham coming from 1999, when he attended a Division Two game against Wigan.

READ MORE IN FOOTBALL

Al-Fayed insisted Jackson was a “big” fan of the club, with the Daily Star claiming he was tempted to the ground following a tour of the businessman’s Harrods store.

Ex-Fulham star Barry Styles lifted the lid on the “surreal” experience of Jackson greeting the players by signing after the match.

He told the Star: “It was amazing meeting Michael Jackson… I have to say it was strange though. A lot of people thought it wasn’t actually him but it definitely was.

“He was a character in himself, I remember him walking along the line saying ‘great game’ to the whole squad but only 14 of us played, not the 30 he said it to!”

Most read in Football

FREE BETS – BEST BETTING OFFERS AND BONUSES NEW CUSTOMERS

But when Shahid Khan took over the club in 2013, the statue was swiftly removed, with Khan insisting it was “the right thing for Fulham”.

However, the Cottagers were then relegated from the Premier League in 2014, with Al-Fayed pinning the change of fortunes on the removal of the statue.

He said: “When the new owner decided to move it I said: ‘Fine, it is a lucky thing, you will regret it later.’ Now the new owner will regret it because I warned him.

“I said: ‘You will pay with blood for that,’ because it was something loved by people. It was a big mistake but he paid for it now.

“He’s been relegated and if he wakes up he’ll ask for Michael Jackson again and I’ll say: ‘No way.'”

Al-Fayed reclaimed possession of the statue before donating it to the National Football Museum in Manchester, where it remained on display until 2019.

It was finally removed with the airing of an expose documentary Leaving Neverland, though the museum insisted the decision to remove the statue had been planned months ago.

Fast forward to 2023, the statue’s whereabouts were unknown, until Manchester Evening News approached the museum to find out where it had gone.

Their investigation revealed that the stature was now in storage at Deepdale, the home of Preston North End, some 232.5 miles from its original home at Craven Cottage.


Source: Soccer - thesun.co.uk


Tagcloud:

Spain women’s team given new NAME after crisis talks following Rubiales kiss storm

How Premier League could face #MeToo-style season of reckoning after Man United stars plagued by assault allegations