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    Uefa open disciplinary proceedings against Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus over failed European Super League plot

    UEFA have opened the way to ban Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus from the Champions League after beginning formal disciplinary charges against the rebel trio.Euro chiefs are determined to bring the three Super League ringleaders to heel after the collapse of their breakaway plan.
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    Unlike the Prem Big Six, the two Milan sides and Atletico Madrid, the three clubs have refused to pull the plug on their scheme.
    That has infuriated Uefa President Aleksander Ceferin.
    He is out for revenge and wants to impose two season bans.
    And now that prospect had moved a step closer after Uefa announced its first move.
    In a statement, Nyon officials said: “Following an investigation conducted by UEFA Ethics and Disciplinary Inspectors in connection with the so-called ‘Super League’ project, disciplinary proceedings have been opened against Real Madrid CF, FC Barcelona and Juventus FC for a potential violation of UEFA’s legal framework.
    “Further information will be made available in due course.”
    Uefa has put the screws on all three who now know they face serious sanctions unless they apologise and finally give up the ghost on their concept.
    Despite all six English rebels backing out within 48 hours of the ESL announcement, Real, Barca and Juve have still not backed down.
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    Earlier in May, the trio released a joint statement vowing to go to war with the European chiefs.
    The waffling press release also aimed a dig at the nine clubs who initially formed the ESL but pulled out amid fan fury across the world.
    Days later, the threat of a two-year suspension from European tournaments was thrown down.
    Uefa boss Alexander Ceferin is determined to throw the book at the wantaway rebelsCredit: AFP

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    Sky and BT pundits Neville, Carragher and Co demand radical changes to football with independent body running game

    GARY NEVILLE and five other former England stars have united to call for an independent regulator – to change the way football is run.Neville, Gary Lineker, Rio Ferdinand, Jamie Redknapp, Jamie Carragher and Micah Richards were among the signatories to an open letter urging fans from across the country to sign a Parliamentary petition backing the idea.
    Neville and Carragher have been two of the leading voices in calling for changeCredit: Action Images
    Lineker has also put his name on the proposal for an independent regulatorCredit: PA:Press Association
    They hope to persuade former Sports minister Tracey Crouch to recommend the appointment of an all-powerful regulator as part of her “fan-led review” of the game.
    The letter, also signed by other media figures and supporter groups, states that “as football fans, we were appalled by the attempt to set up a European Super League”.
    They add: “It was a direct threat to the integrity of the game; destroying the concept of sporting merit and open competition.
    “Supporters came together with one voice to oppose the cynical power-grab by a group of wealthy owners. 
    “The furious protests were heard and the breakaway fell apart.
    “Now we must make sure this never happens again. 
    “Without swift and direct intervention, the return of a European Super League will be a constant threat.
    “We welcome the fan-led Government review of the game and hope it leads to lasting change on an array of important concerns.
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    Redknapp and Richards are also a part of the six leading pundits pledging for a regulatorCredit: Getty
    BT Sport pundit Ferdinand has joined Lineker in aligning themselves with the Sky Sports punditsCredit: Alamy Live News
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    “That includes co-ordinated strategies to deal with racism, supporters’ representation within clubs, LGBTQ issues, ticket costs and the distribution of income. 
    “All of those aims can be realised if we take decisive action now.
    “It is time to act. 
    “We support: Government legislation to block any Premier League clubs attempting to abandon the country’s football pyramid.
    “The appointment of an Independent Football Regulator.
    “This regulatory body would have a duty to represent the interests of supporters, protect against bad practices, adjudicate as the overarching body on matters involving the FA, Premier League and EFL and, generally, seek to prioritise the wider good of the game, rather than allow clubs to act solely in their own self-interests.”
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    Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus face two-year Champions League ban after Uefa launch probe into Super League plot

    REAL MADRID, Barcelona and Juventus are facing two-year Champions League bans – after Uefa launched a formal disciplinary probe into the failed Super League plot.Uefa President Aleksander Ceferin is determined to make the three rebel leaders pay a heavy price unless they dissolve the breakaway competition.
    Uefa could hit Juventus, Real Madrid and Barcelona with two-year Champions League bans
    That means two-season bans from playing in any European competitions is on the Uefa agenda.
    And Ceferin demonstrated he is playing hardball by giving the green light to the next stage of Uefa processes.
    In a statement, Euro chiefs in Nyon announced: “In accordance with Article 31(4) of the UEFA Disciplinary Regulations, UEFA Ethics and Disciplinary Inspectors have today been appointed to conduct a disciplinary investigation regarding a potential violation of UEFA’s legal framework by Real Madrid CF, FC Barcelona and Juventus FC in connection with the so-called ‘Super League’ project.
    “Further information regarding this matter will be made available in due course.”
    That article relates to the absolute power and discretion of the Uefa President, general secretary or the ruling executive committee to launch disciplinary proceedings.
    The confirmation of action is proof of Ceferin’s desire to make the three rebel clubs publicly recant and apologise for their attempts to broker the elite ESL competition.
    Ceferin publicly welcomed the withdrawal and apologies by the Prem Big Six, along with Atletico Madrid, AC Milan and Inter.
    They were hit on Friday by agreeing to each pay £1.44m up front and then five per cent of their next season’s Uefa competition earnings, taking the potential fine to £7m.

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    But there will be no further action and the nine clubs will be welcomed back into the Uefa fold and allowed to rejoin the European Club Association.
    Madrid, Barca and Juve, though, have refused to fall into line and accused Uefa of applying ‘unacceptable pressure, threats and offence’ to make them ‘abandon the project’.
    The trio said Uefa’s actions were ‘intolerable under the rule of law’ but the very real threat of missing out on more than £250m of income over two years may be enough to bring them to heel.

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    Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus hit back at Uefa and ‘threats’ and refuse to abandon European Super League dream

    REAL MADRID, Barcelona and Juventus have vowed to go to war with Uefa over threats to throw them out of European competition for sticking to the Super League plans.The three clubs have been warned by the governing body they face a two-year ban from their competitions unless they finally give up their intention to play in the rebel tournament.
    Andrea Agnelli, Florentino Perez and Joan Laporta are desperate for the European Super League to still go ahead
    But in a joint statement released this morning, the football superpowers doubled down on their refusal to give up on the project and made it clear they think the law is on their side.
    Real, Barca and Juve are all now prepared to fight it through the courts to challenge any Uefa ban as they desperately try to cling on to the ESL dream which will save them from the financial turmoil they have left themselves in.
    The statement said: “The founding clubs have suffered, and continue to suffer, unacceptable third-party pressures, threats, and offenses to abandon the project and therefore desist from their right and duty to provide solutions to the football ecosystem via concrete proposals and constructive dialogue.
    “This is intolerable under the rule of law and Tribunals have already ruled in favour of the Super League proposal, ordering Fifa and Uefa to, either directly or through their affiliated bodies, refrain from taking any action which may hinder this initiative in any way while court proceedings are pending.
    “The Super League project was designed jointly by its 12 founding clubs: (a) with the aim of providing solutions to the current unsustainable situation in the football industry.
    “The 12 founding clubs shared the same concerns – as do other stakeholders in European football -, particularly under the current socio-economic context, that structural reforms are vital to ensure our sport remains appealing and survives in the long-term.
    “To that effect, on April 18th, they announced their intention to create the Super League and establish a channel of communication with Uefa and Fifa, in the constructive spirit of collaboration between the parties, as it was so notified to each of them on such date;
    “(b) with the utmost respect for the current football structures and ecosystem. The founding clubs expressly agreed that the Super League would only take place if such a competition was recognised by Uefa and/or Fifa or if, in accordance with applicable laws and regulations, it was deemed to be a competition duly compatible for all purposes with the continuity of the founding clubs in their respective domestic competitions.
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    “However, despite being aware of the above terms, Uefa and Fifa have so far refused to establish any adequate channel of communication;
    “(c) and to bring financial stability to the entire European football family, currently under the effects of a deep crisis that threatens the survival of many clubs.
    “Testament to that was the announced commitment to establish annual solidarity payments of guaranteed amounts that multiply those distributed by Uefa in real terms, and the obligation to reinforce financial sustainability rules, through the creation of a clear, transparent and effective control system verified by experts.”
    The waffling statement also aimed a dig at the nine clubs who initially formed the ESL but pulled out amid fan fury across the world.
    That includes Manchester United, Manchester City, Liverpool, Arsenal, Chelsea and Tottenham – who are all still trying to legally get their way out of the Super League contracts.
    And it seems Real, Barca and Juve are determined to make it as hard as possible for their contract to be broken, driven by the knowledge it would leave them exposed to their mounting debts which threaten their position at the top of the game.

    The statement added: “We are fully aware of the diversity of reactions to the Super League initiative and, consequently, of the need to reflect on the reasons for some of them.
    “We are ready to reconsider the proposed approach, as necessary.
    “However, we would be highly irresponsible if, being aware of the needs and systemic crisis in the football sector, which led us to announce the Super League, we abandoned such mission to provide effective and sustainable answers to the existential questions that threaten the football industry.
    “We regret to see that our friends and founding partners of the Super League project have now found themselves in such an inconsistent and contradictory position when signing a number of commitments to Uefa yesterday.
    “However, given that the material issues that led the 12 founding clubs to announce the Super League weeks ago have not gone away, we reiterate that, to honour our history, to comply with our obligations towards our stakeholders and fans, for the good of football and for the financial sustainability of the sector, we have the duty to act in a responsible manner and persevere in the pursuit of adequate solutions, despite the unacceptable and ongoing pressures and threats received from Uefa.
    “Furthermore, we reiterate to Fifa, Uefa and all football stakeholders, as we have done on several occasions since the announcement of the Super League, our commitment and determination to discuss, with respect and without intolerable pressure and in accordance with the rule of law, the most appropriate solutions for the sustainability of the whole football family.”
    Statement in full
    IN RESPONSE to the statement released by UEFA on the 7th May in respect of the Super League and the position taken by 9 of its founding clubs, Fútbol Club Barcelona, Juventus and Real Madrid Club de Fútbol make the following statement:
    (i) The founding clubs have suffered, and continue to suffer, unacceptable third-party pressures, threats, and offenses to abandon the project and therefore desist from their right and duty to provide solutions to the football ecosystem via concrete proposals and constructive dialogue. This is intolerable under the rule of law and Tribunals have already ruled in favour of the Super League proposal, ordering FIFA and UEFA to, either directly or through their affiliated bodies, refrain from taking any action which may hinder this initiative in any way while court proceedings are pending.
    (ii) The Super League project was designed jointly by its 12 founding clubs:
    (a) with the aim of providing solutions to the current unsustainable situation in the football industry. The 12 founding clubs shared the same concerns — as do other stakeholders in European football -, particularly under the current socio-economic context, that structural reforms are vital to ensure our sport remains appealing and survives in the long-term. To that effect, on April 18th, they announced their intention to create the Super League and establish a channel of communication with UEFA and FIFA, in the constructive spirit of collaboration between the parties, as it was so notified to each of them on such date;(b) with the utmost respect for the current football structures and ecosystem. The founding clubs expressly agreed that the Super League would only take place if such a competition was recognised by UEFA and/or FIFA or if, in accordance with applicable laws and regulations, it was deemed to be a competition duly compatible for all purposes with the continuity of the founding clubs in their respective domestic competitions. However, despite being aware of the above terms, UEFA and FIFA have so far refused to establish any adequate channel of communication;(c) and to bring financial stability to the entire European football family, currently under the effects of a deep crisis that threatens the survival of many clubs. Testament to that was the announced commitment to establish annual solidarity payments of guaranteed amounts that multiply those distributed by UEFA in real terms, and the obligation to reinforce financial sustainability rules, through the creation of a clear, transparent and effective control system verified by experts.
    (iii) The 12 founding clubs also acknowledged that the Super League was a unique opportunity to offer fans around the world the best possible show and to reinforce global interest in the sport, which is not a “given” and is challenged by new generational trends. Moreover, one of its main objectives was to promote women’s football on a global level, a tremendous, but currently undervalued, opportunity for the sector.
    (iv) We are fully aware of the diversity of reactions to the Super League initiative and, consequently, of the need to reflect on the reasons for some of them. We are ready to reconsider the proposed approach, as necessary. However, we would be highly irresponsible if, being aware of the needs and systemic crisis in the football sector, which led us to announce the Super League, we abandoned such mission to provide effective and sustainable answers to the existential questions that threaten the football industry.
    (v) We regret to see that our friends and founding partners of the Super League project have now found themselves in such an inconsistent and contradictory position when signing a number of commitments to UEFA yesterday. However, given that the material issues that led the 12 founding clubs to announce the Super League weeks ago have not gone away, we reiterate that, to honour our history, to comply with our obligations towards our stakeholders and fans, for the good of football and for the financial sustainability of the sector, we have the duty to act in a responsible manner and persevere in the pursuit of adequate solutions, despite the unacceptable and ongoing pressures and threats received from UEFA.
    (vi) Furthermore, we reiterate to FIFA, UEFA and all football stakeholders, as we have done on several occasions since the announcement of the Super League, our commitment and determination to discuss, with respect and without intolerable pressure and in accordance with the rule of law, the most appropriate solutions for the sustainability of the whole football family.

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    Solskjaer pleads for peaceful Man Utd protests as 10,000 fans plan to march on Old Trafford before Liverpool clash

    OLE GUNNAR SOLSKJAER has made a plea for peace with up to 10,000 Manchester United fans set to march on Old Trafford in protest.The mass gathering will take place outside the Red Devils ground ahead of Sunday’s match against rivals Liverpool which kicks-off at 4.30pm.
    Man Utd wil make their anti-Glazers stance known at Old Trafford on SundayCredit: Getty
    Solskjaer has urged fans to remain peaceful when they carry out the protestCredit: AFP
    Extra police and security have been called in with fears the match may not go ahead if things spill over.
    But Man Utd manager Solskjaer said that while the fans should be heard, he has been backed by the Glazers and any protests should remain peaceful.
    Solskjaer said: “It’s important that the fans’ views are listened to and we communicate better. My job is to focus on the football side and that we have the best possible team.
    “As I’ve said before I’ve been backed, I’ve had great support from the club and the owners and I’m sure I will get the backing again to go one step further. But I’m so happy all the clubs have agreed that this shouldn’t be the way of moving forward.
    “Then again, when the protests are on, it’s important they go in a good fashion and that we keep it peaceful.”
    The protest has been ignited by United’s owners the Glazer family and most significantly co-chairman Joel Glazer trying to move the club into a breakaway European Super League.
    Solskjaer, however, now says his job is to keep his players’ minds focused on the job in hand against Liverpool to cement their place in the Champions League next season.
    Solskjaer said: “The players are focused on the game and nothing else. They’ve handled difficult situations before. Of course it was a strange week before the Leeds game, after the Super League announcement.
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    “But I’ve got to say, I’m not worried one second that our mind is not on the football when it happens.”
    The Glazers were already unpopular amongst fans having laden the club with debt following their takeover in 2005.
    But this move has reignited their opposition to the owners.
    Around 1,000 fans gathered outside Old Trafford last Saturday chanting ‘Glazer Out’ but this will be on a whole different scale.
    On Thursday of last week Solskjaer was confronted by 20 fans who invaded the club’s Carrington Training Ground in protest.
    A number of the United players made their opposition to the proposed European Super League known too.
    The whole ESL plan collapsed just 48 hours after being launched and United’s executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward resigned in the wake of the controversy.
    But feelings are still raw among fans.
    United were joined by Manchester City, Spurs, Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool in their attempt to join a proposed 15 strong breakaway European Super League.
    ⚽ Read our Football live blog for the very latest news from around the grounds

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    Man Utd legend Paul Scholes’ passionate rant about the Glazers in full as he accuses billionaires of using club as ‘toy’

    Paul Scholes has accused Manchester United owners the Glazers of using the football club as a ‘toy’ in a furious rant.It comes in the wake of the ‘Big Six’ attempting to form a breakaway European Super League, before the idea fell apart within 48 hours.
    Scholes launched a scathing attack on Man Utd’s owners on Thursday eveningCredit: EPA
    “I don’t think the fans will ever have a connection with these owners.””They are greedy, and just use this club as a toy to make money.”No holding back from Paul Scholes.#UEL pic.twitter.com/T5S776m1PC— Football on BT Sport (@btsportfootball) April 29, 2021

    Joint chairmen Avram Glazer (left) and Joel Glazer (right) are coming under increasing pressureCredit: PA
    And while chief executive Ed Woodward has announced his departure amid the fallout of the ESL controversy, Scholes feels it is also time for the Glazers to leave Old Trafford.
    Speaking to BT Sport, he said: “I’m not sure there ever will be a connection with these owners.
    “I don’t think that’s just this club, I think it’s every club that started with billionaire owners that we brought into here for them to have a toy to make money with.
    “This is a great club as well to actually have that connection with the owners – the young players this club has, the young local lads coming through the academy, there’s a great chance for that connection, but as long as these billionaire owners, from America and other countries, there’s never ever going to be a connection.
    “Look at Manchester City, Arsenal, Tottenham, Liverpool – is there a connection there? I don’t think there is, I don’t think there ever will be. I think we need to stop pining for that.
    “The most important thing for the fans now is what happens on the football pitch and if you look at the last four or five years at Manchester United; the resources, the money that this club has had, and it’s not won a trophy for four years. It’s absolutely ridiculous.
    “The Glazers chose a man to represent them, to run the football club, who is brilliant at making money, funnily enough, that’s exactly what they want, but has the football side been neglected through that?
    “I don’t think that Ed [Woodward] was a football man, I think David Gill was great at making money, commercial, but he was a football man, he knew what the club needed.
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    “We’ve had five or six years since the manager went, of choosing the wrong managers, not giving them time to produce teams, choosing the wrong type of players for this football club which has been disappointing and it’s all down to the ownership. They’re billionaire owners, who are greedy and just use this club as a toy to make money.”
    Another of the Premier League ‘Big Six’, Arsenal, have recently had an approach from Spotify owner Daniel Ek about a possible takeover of the club.
    But Scholes does not feel Gunners fans should be excited about the prospect of the club changing hands even if it does go ahead.
    He continued: “I don’t think Arsenal fans should celebrate. He’s getting interest by mentioning Bergkamp, Vieira, Henry, it’s the same. It won’t be any different, he’s a money man, he’s a businessman, he wants to make money and this is what they’ll do.
    “They’ll come to clubs like Arsenal, but where are Arsenal? Tenth in the league? Ridiculous. Look at this club [Man United], not won anything for four years, okay, they’re getting on the right track now I hope.
    “They’re almost getting to where they should be, they’re not too far away. It masks a lot when the football is alright, the team are winning trophies, who cares who your owners are?”
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    European Super League collapsed as out-of-touch elitists did not respect the history of football

    EVER since I was a young boy in Boston, Massachusetts, my favorite sports league was what has been known since 1992 as the Premier League.Not only was I a huge fan of football – which is called “Soccer” over here in the States while the name “Football” is claimed by a sport which rarely touches a ball with a foot – but especially a fan of the teams within the United Kingdom.
    Chelsea fans protest outside Stamford Bridge after the club attempted to join the European Super LeagueCredit: AP
    In the Boston of that time, very few children cared about football with basically zero ever having heard of the then “Football League.”
    For them, it was all about imagining playing for either the Boston Red Sox in Major League Baseball, or the Boston Celtics of the National Basketball Association.
    Flash ahead to today and ironically, you have the principal owner of the Boston Red Sox — John Henry — as one of the ignorant and entitled elites behind the creation of what was laughingly called the “European Super League.”
    Henry was behind it because he also happens to be the principal owner of Liverpool in the Premier League.
    Apparently, being wealthy and entitled means you never have to ask your fan base, your players, or local or government officials how they feel about a new league which would not only compete with the Champions League, but adopt a more “American” format while surely inflicting great damage upon domestic competition.
    As the new “Super League” collapsed before the eyes of the world, it was most amusing to watch out-of-touch elitists such as Henry and JP Morgan Chase chairman Jamie Dimon (who intended to fund this failure) backpedal as fast as humanly possible once they realized what a massive unforced-error they had created.
    An error made all because they did not check with the true fan-base and did not respect the history of the game.
    Gary Neville, a former defender for Manchester United may have put it best when he described the greed which was being put before history, tradition, and sacrifice.
    Said the also commentator for Sky Sports: “They have nothing to do with football in this country. There are 100-odd years of history in this country from fans that have lived and loved these clubs and they need protecting.”
    Neville especially gave voice to the feelings of the “working-class communities” which have long and loyally supported the clubs.
    A sentiment which spoke most loudly to me. As that child in Boston, I grew up in abject poverty, was homeless often, and literally lived in cars.
    During that time, a beloved uncle gave me a “football” and I quickly turned every alley or parking lot into a pitch where I could practice alone for hours at a time for…free.
    Which is also part of the point here. Football has long been the most popular sport in the world precisely because it can be played by the world’s poorest populations. Which, if any of the billionaire elites behind the “European Super League” care to check, represent the majority of the people on the planet.
    Arsenal fans protest against owner Stan Kroenke after the failed launch of a European Super LeagueCredit: Reuters
    The European Super League collapsed as out-of-touch elitists did not respect the history of football, writes Douglas MacKinnonCredit: Getty
    Who speaks for them? Who gives them a voice?
    Years after my childhood and years after working in the White House and the Pentagon, I finally got to fulfill my dream of attending a Premier League game in person.
    It exceeded every expectation I had and then some.
    That first game I attended was between Crystal Palace and Manchester United played at Selhurst Park (Glad All Over!) While I remain a fan of all the teams in the Premier League, because of their incredibly loyal working-class fan base, I adopted Crystal Palace as “My Team.”
    So much so, that I featured the team in a Christmas novel I published in the United States titled: The North Pole Project: In Search of the True Meaning of Christmas.

    Soon after it was published, I reached out to the office of Steve Parish, the Chairman of the club, and sent him a copy. I never heard back, but remain a very loyal fan.
    More than a fan of one team, to Gary Neville’s critically important point, I remain a fan of the history, tradition, and sacrifice of the sport of football as a whole. A sport which for over a century, has lifted the hopes and spirits of fans during the darkest of times.
    Now, as the world continues to battle a pandemic and its brutal aftereffects, is no time for the rich to attempt to get richer at the expense of that history or a people who have given all to support the sport.
    Even…when they had nothing to give.

    Douglas MacKinnon is a former White House and Pentagon official and an author.

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    Man Utd supremo Joel Glazer skips emergency fan forum despite claiming he wants better communication after ESL fury

    JOEL GLAZER will dodge an emergency fans forum Zoom conference despite insisting he wanted better communication with Manchester United supporters.A meeting has been set with seven fans representatives for Friday morning at 11am.
    Avram, left, and Joel Glazer, right, has refused to join an emergency Manchester United fans forumCredit: AFP
    Red Devils fans took to Old Trafford to voice their anger at the Glazer family and their ownershipCredit: PA
    The meeting used to be hosted by executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward.
    But he has decided to quit his role at the club in the aftermath of the European Super League debacle.
    The fans were hoping they could speak directly with either of the co-chairmen Joel or Avram Glazer from the club’s owning family.
    Neither, however, want to face the music and it will be now left to Group Managing Director Richard Arnold.
    He also chaired the last forum last week just days before the ESL launch was announced.
    There was obviously no mention of it then.
    Now in the wake of the outrage felt by United fans about their club’s part in the cash grab, they want answers in what promises to be a heated exchange.
    Joel Glazer issued an apology as the dirty half dozen of English clubs who were part of the ESL quickly jumped ship as fans’ outrage grew.
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    In it he insisted he wanted better lines of communication.
    His statement said: “We also realise that we need to better communicate with you, our fans, because you will always be at the heart of the club.”
    So far it has been left to manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer to field questions about the Super League which he only learned about on the day it was announced.
    He insisted he was against the plans laid by his employer and the other owners of Arsenal, Tottenham, Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester City.
    Now it will be left to Arnold to face the fans fury with anger not looking likely to subside any time soon.
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