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    Man Utd scouts watch Yann Sommer after David de Gea blunders but face transfer rejection and could turn to Tim Krul

    MANCHESTER UNITED are homing in on a move for Switzerland international keeper Yann Sommer — as they look for a safe pair of hands.United scouts watched the experienced Sommer claim a clean sheet for Borussia Monchengladbach on Friday night.
    Yann Sommer is being eyed by Manchester UnitedCredit: Getty
    Tim Krul is also an option Manchester United are consideringCredit: Alamy
    Sommer, 33, is emerging as the top candidate to provide competition for faltering No 1 David de Gea.
    But it will be hard to tempt him to sign as cover when he needs to play to stay in the national side.
    The Red Devils would have to convince Sommer he would play in enough games to make the move worthwhile for him.
    The Old Trafford vacancy is proving a nightmare to fill with United even considering Norwich’s Tim Krul, 34, as a No 2 option.
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    Watford’s Austrian international goalkeeper Daniel Bachmann, 28, is also a live alternative — but Sommer seems to be the hot choice right now.
    Meanwhile, United’s 21-year-old James Garner — who has never started a Premier League game for them — is of interest to Tottenham, Leeds and Southampton.
    But none are willing to meet the £14million price-tag the Red Devils have slapped on the midfielder, who has been loaned out three times.
    Erik ten Hag’s club are willing to let him go despite turning down previous offers this summer with Aston Villa and Newcastle also interested.
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    While Manchester United are desperate to bring in new faces before the window closes, they also have the looming fixture with bitter rivals Liverpool.
    They go into the match at Old Trafford on the back of two defeats. More

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    Crystal Palace lining up late transfer swoop for £17m flop Boubakary Soumare from cash-strapped Leicester

    CRYSTAL PALACE are ready to swoop for Leicester’s forgotten man Boubakary Soumare.Patrick Vieira is a fan of the midfielder, 23, who has struggled since signing from Lille for £17million last year.
    Leicester are willing to sell Boubakary SoumareCredit: Getty
    The French star may be swapped for Monaco winger Sofiane Diop but Palace will move if that does not happen.
    But they do not want a bidding war and may ask for a loan deal with a view to a permanent signing.
    The Foxes are in a fight to keep hold of other stars but Soumare is one of the few they are willing to let go for the right fee.
    Soumare made 19 Premier League appearances in his first season at Leicester but failed to find the back of the net.
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    Palace are also eyeing Lyon midfielder Houssem Aouar as they try to fill a hole left by Conor Gallagher’s return to Chelsea.
    The Eagles also know Blues’ Ruben Loftus-Cheek is unlikely to be available on loan.
    The midfielder spent a hugely successful spell at Selhurst Park during the 2017-18 season and would be welcomed back by fans.
    As would Gallagher, but he looks set to stay with Chelsea having been involved in Thomas Tuchel’s first team this season.
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    Vieira is keen to bolster his ranks but will be relieved after Crystal Palace picked up their first win of the season.
    The Eagles beat Aston Villa 3-1 at Selhurst Park on Saturday. More

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    Man Utd midfielder James Garner wanted by Spurs, Leeds and Southampton in transfer scramble as Red Devils demand £14m

    MANCHESTER UNITED’s 21-year-old midfielder James Garner — who has never started a Premier League game for them — is of interest to Tottenham, Leeds and Southampton.But none are willing to meet the £14million price-tag the Red Devils have slapped on the midfielder, who has been loaned out three times.
    James Garner is free to leave Manchester United – at the right priceCredit: Getty
    Erik ten Hag’s club are willing to let him go despite turning down previous offers this summer with Aston Villa and Newcastle also interested.
    Garner has featured just twice in the Prem for Manchester United – both as a substitute and with the most recent coming during the 2019-20 season.
    In total he’s made seven appearances.
    He went on loan to Watford for the first half of the 2020-21 season, where he made 20 appearances in the Championship.
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    The Merseyside born star then spent the second half of the season at Nottingham Forest.
    He extended his stay at the City Ground, making 41 appearances the following term and helping them get promoted to the Premier League.
    Playing in a central defensive role, Manchester United clearly see little hope of him making his way into the first team.
    That view will only have intensified with the £70m arrival of Casemiro from Real Madrid.
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    He has two years remaining on his contract.
    Manchester United’s more pressing concern is their upcoming clash with bitter rivals Liverpool on Monday night.
    They go into the Old Trafford clash off the back of two defeats from their first two games of the season. More

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    How much do Premier League referees get paid?

    PREMIER League referees have one of the hardest jobs in football, making split-second judgements that can affect the results of games.But how much are they paid, and who is the biggest earner in the league?
    How much are Premier League referees paid?
    Despite what they go through on and off the pitch, ref’s pay packets are considerably lower than the Premier League’s top stars.
    Premier League refs will take home up to around £70-£200k per year, according to Sporting Free.
    Referees earn a match fee in addition to their basic salary which is thought to be £1,500 for official referees and £850 for assistant referees and video assistant refs.
    Mike Dean, who retired last season was thought to be the highest paid referee in the league.
    Referees responsibilities include enforcing the laws of the game, and providing the relevant authorities with match reportsCredit: Alamy
    A study by Sportekz found that Dean had an annual salary of £200,000.
    Who are the Premier League referees?
    Referees responsibilities include enforcing the laws of the game, controlling the match as part of a team with other match officials, and providing the relevant authorities with match reports.
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    Decisions are based on the opinion of the official and they have the discretion to take action within the framework of the Law of the Game.
    The current season began on August 5, 2022, and by the competition’s end, 380 matches will have taken place.
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    Sixteen referees will be overseeing matches during the 2022/23 season.
    They are:

    Simon Hooper
    Robert Jones
    Michael Oliver
    Anthony Taylor
    Paul Tierney
    Stuart Attwell
    Peter Bankes
    John Brooks
    David Coote
    Darren England
    Jarred Gillett
    Tony Harrington
    Andy Madley
    Andre Marriner
    Craig Pawson
    Graham Scott

    Who are the most famous former Premier League referees?
    The league has had some iconic refs over the years, trusted with the league’s highest pressure clashes.
    Here are just some of them:
    Howard Webb
    Howard Webb officiated the top-flight from 2003-14.
    The former police officer also served as a FIFA international referee from 2005-14, and oversaw a World Cup final.
    He’s listed among the best referees ever by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics.
    Mark Clattenburg
    Mark Clattenburg is another well known name to Prem fans, having reffed 297 matches in the competition from 2004 to 2017.
    He’s also been in charge of a fair few high profile matches on the international stage, including the UEFA Euro 2016 Final and the Champions League Final in the same year.
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    Graham Poll
    Poll was one of the league most high-profile managers, and had a domestic career spanning 1,544 games.
    He also refereed at two World Cups, the 2000 European championships and the 2005 UEFA Cup Final. More

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    Manchester United and the Mounting Cost of Failure

    The problem at United is not, and never has been, a lack of money. It is the lack of a plan.Manchester United’s problem has never been money. Not a dearth of it, anyway. Even now, in what may prove to be the twilight of the Glazer family’s 17-year ownership of the club, as prospective suitors and self-appointed saviors circle, great torrents of money continue to flow through Old Trafford.Enough, certainly, for the club to end a week that started with Gary Neville railing against the Glazers’ chronic parsimony by submitting not only a bid worth $60 million for a 30-year-old midfielder, but a contract offer sufficiently generous that the midfielder, Casemiro, reportedly indicated to his Real Madrid teammates that he could not, in good conscience, turn it down.There could have been more of it, of course. Since the Glazers’ arrival, United has in effect paid out somewhere in the region of $1.2 billion for the privilege of being owned by the family: a billion or so in interest payments, and a couple of hundred million in dividends, the majority of them paid to the Glazers themselves.All of that — the bottomless bounty generated by United’s relentless commercialism, the unstinting riches brought in by the Premier League’s broadcasting appeal — could have been invested in the squad, had circumstances been different, had the Glazers not effectively placed the club in debt bondage to itself all those years ago.But even without it, even with all of that money seeping away, Manchester United has never had to go without. The Glazers have, according to one estimate, spent around $1.7 billion in transfer fees alone since the family patriarch, Malcolm, took control at Old Trafford. The team broke the British transfer record to sign Paul Pogba. It made Harry Maguire the most expensive defender in history. It made Cristiano Ronaldo the highest-paid player in England.Cristiano Ronaldo is merely the most high-profile bad fit in Manchester United’s squad.Lindsey Parnaby/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesAnd while precise figures are difficult to obtain, it pays just as well as its rivals, both domestically and in Europe. United’s salary roll is not drastically different to Manchester City’s, or Liverpool’s, or Chelsea’s: sometimes a little more, and sometimes a little less, but always among the highest in the world.No, as easy and as accurate as it is to berate the Glazers for what they have cost Manchester United, blaming the club’s demise on a lack of investment is to misunderstand what has gone wrong at Old Trafford, and to misrepresent the solution for any new owner. The problem is not, and never has been, a lack of money. It is that there has always been rather more money than sense.The last decade, since Alex Ferguson’s retirement, has brought any number of illustrative examples — trying to sign Thiago and Toni Kroos but deciding, in the end, that Marouane Fellaini served just as well; watching 804 right-backs and choosing Aaron Wan-Bissaka — but it is hardly necessary to strain the sinews of memory. There have been plenty of fresh examples this summer. There have been quite a few in the last week.The looming signing of Casemiro, say. It is a coup, without doubt, for United to bring in a player who has won five Champions League titles, and established himself as one of the finest exponents of his subtle art in the world in the process. But Casemiro is 30. He is being offered a four-year contract.He is also a very different sort of player than United’s primary target, the one the club spent much of the summer pursuing, the deep-lying Barcelona playmaker Frenkie de Jong. He is also hardly a straight swap for Adrien Rabiot, the player United identified as an alternative, once it became clear — after months of wasted time — that de Jong was not prepared to spend a season in exile from the Champions League.United never found a way forward after Alex Ferguson delivered its last title in 2013.Action Images/Action Images Via ReutersIt is possible, of course, that United reassessed its plans once it realized Casemiro might be obtainable. His arrival would, by any measure, make Erik ten Hag’s team more resilient, more obdurate, at least in the short term.But it still leaves a question hanging in the air: If ten Hag was adamant that he required a player of de Jong’s ilk to play the way he prefers, does being presented with Casemiro mean he now has to reimagine his whole approach? Is Manchester United doing what it has done for some time: acquiring players, or even coaches, and then figuring out how everything will fit together later?That, after all, is the abiding impression of the squad the club has built. It is not, despite appearances, stocked with bad players. It is, instead, littered with disparate — but high-quality — parts, a patchwork of ideas and concepts and impulses, rather than a cogent, coherent whole.Ten Hag, for example, wants to build play from the back, but finds himself with a goalkeeper, David de Gea, who might be among the finest shot-stoppers in the world but is far less comfortable with the ball at his feet. He wants to play an intense, high-pressing game, but is slowly confronting the reality that he — like both of his predecessors — will have to do so while incorporating a striker, Ronaldo, who has shown precious little inclination to buy in to such an approach.Erik ten Hag spent the summer chasing one kind of midfielder. After two losses, he wants something completely different.David Klein/ReutersThis is the failure that has held Manchester United back for the last decade. This is the failure that means the club is about to pass a decade without winning — or even, really, challenging for — a Premier League title. Neville, and the Glazers’ many other critics, are right to assert that United might have spent more if the club could only keep the money it generates. There is, sadly, precious little evidence that they would have spent it well.This, as much as anything, is the Glazers’ great failing, the shortcoming that has allowed United to drift: an absolute, and somewhat baffling, inability to staff their business adequately, to allow those charged with running it on their behalf to do so in such a haphazard, thoughtless fashion. Accountability, like money, flows up, after all.And it is this that any new owner, whoever they might be, must address. Quite what clubs want from those who buy them is indicated by the breathless way the various contenders for United are described: the billionaires and the magnates, the tycoons and the titans. That is the great dream of the modern fan, after all: to have a bigger, wealthier owner than everyone else.The experience of Manchester United and the Glazers, though, rather disproves that idea. Money has never been the problem at Old Trafford, and money, most likely, is not the solution, either. It is not how much of it you have. It is, instead, what you do with it that counts.The Super League Is HereMatheus Nunes traded a place in the Champions League for one at Wolves.Jose Sena Goulao/EPA, via ShutterstockMatheus Nunes should, logically, have stayed where he was. European soccer runs according to a strict, structural hierarchy, in which smaller domestic leagues feed into larger ones, and they, in turn, send their best and brightest — or at least their richest — to the Champions League. That is where players aspire to be. That, strictly speaking, is the aim.At 23, Nunes had made it. Last season, he was a key part of the Sporting Lisbon team that reached the Champions League knockout rounds. Sporting had qualified again; around this time next week, Nunes would have been waiting to discover whether he would have been visiting the Bernabeu, or the Camp Nou, or the Allianz Arena in this season’s competition.Instead, Nunes left. He did not leave, as the hierarchy would dictate, for a team with a better chance of winning the Champions League, or one with a realistic hope of making the semifinals, but for Wolves, last seen finishing 10th (creditably) in the Premier League. Wolves might, conceivably, reach the Europa League this season, but it is a safe bet that Nunes will never appear in the Champions League in an Old Gold jersey.He is not the only player to have inverted the hierarchy this summer. His erstwhile teammate, João Palhinha, traded Sporting for Fulham, for whom a 17th-place finish in the Premier League this season would be a success worth celebrating.Remo Freuler swapped Serie A for Nottingham Forest.Denis Balibouse/ReutersRemo Freuler, a cornerstone of the effervescent Atalanta team that has been a European fixture for the last few years, now plays for Nottingham Forest. He may yet be joined by Houssam Aouar, a quick-witted, inventive playmaker from Lyon. Forest’s relationship with Europe has long roots, but it is not likely to bloom any time soon.Moves like these are easily lost amid the thunderstorm of the transfer market. The eye, after all, is drawn much more easily to what Chelsea or Manchester United or Barcelona are doing than to whatever is happening amid the Premier League’s aspirants and also-rans.But their moves are, perhaps, the most significant transfers of the summer, not just because these clubs can afford these players, but because the players themselves, having made it to the Champions League, appear to be happy to remove themselves from it in order to scrap for survival in the Premier League.That speaks volumes for the status of European soccer, not simply in terms of its finances but in terms of its balance of power, too. The Premier League, it would appear, is just as much of a draw — if not more so — than the Champions League. Ambition always flows upward, and that suggests that the hierarchy no longer holds.CorrespondenceLet’s start this week with a clarification. “The Premier League doesn’t seem far off the Bundesliga or Ligue 1,” wrote Cristian Ardelean, referring to last week’s newsletter on European soccer’s lack of competitiveness. “Manchester City won four of the last five titles. Some were more thrilling than others, but the trend is very similar.”This, as it happens, is a position I agree with wholeheartedly, and was one I hoped was conveyed last week. Yes, the Premier League has more variety than the Bundesliga and Ligue 1, but no, it’s not by much. And yes, you can make a case that the form of oligopoly in play in England is actually more corrosive than its equivalent in Germany or France, by virtue of the fact that access to the Champions League has been cut off to all but a few, too.You’ll recognize this photo as one of a series.Toby Melville/ReutersMike Connell is on the same page as me on another matter, too. “This team dominance is why an N.F.L.-style league will be in place within five years, or at least after the 2026 World Cup,” he wrote. “Not aligned with FIFA, and owned by the clubs. Everything is in place.” My only caveat here would be that I suspect it will not, for now, include teams from the Premier League. As an idea, it makes more sense for the continental European teams than anyone is really prepared to admit.And finally, on the same subject, Tim Connor has kindly volunteered to further my baseball education (which currently extends to knowing that there is a team called the “Tampa Bay Rays.”)The subject of competitiveness, Tim wrote, made him “reflect on the days when the Yankees were unquestionably dominant in the American League, and there was an all-but-overt conspiracy to keep them so. The owners kept the Yankees on top because it was great for ticket sales when the team everyone loved to hate came to town. I’d like to think that unpredictability makes for more interest, but maybe people like to know in advance how the story is going to end.”The fact that the global explosion in popularity in the Premier League came at a time when the story always seemed to end with a late Manchester United winner in a strangely extended period of injury time would certainly support that thesis, Tim, so you may be on to something. More

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    Premier League prize money: How much can each term earn in the 2022/23 season?

    THE Premier League is the most lucrative league in the world and all 20 clubs are guaranteed to earn huge sums from simply just being in the division.But how much can each team get in the 2022/23 season?
    Premier League prize money explained
    The league has not made prize money public since halfway through the previous decade but the breakdown is known and that means estimates can easily be calculated.
    And teams will take home even more this season, with the broadcast pot rising from last term’s figure of around £2.5billion.
    The team that become champions will bag over £160m, but even teams that finish in the bottom three and drop out of the division will make over £100m from prize money alone.
    The league is able to do so part in thanks to the Premier League’s enormous international fanbase and the fortunes made in TV rights agreements.
    The team that become champions will bag over £160m in prize money, but even teams that finish in the bottom three stand to make over £100mCredit: Alamy
    Premier League prize money position breakdown
    Unsurprisingly, the teams at the top of the table took home the most prize money in the 2021/2022 season, with champions Manchester City banking £161.3m, while close runners-up Liverpool received £159.8m, the Mirror reported.
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    But as the following list shows, all 20 teams in the English top flight made an an absolute mint just by taking part in the season.

    Manchester City £161.3m
    Liverpool £159.8m
    Tottenham £152.1m
    Chelsea £151.7m
    Arsenal £151.6m
    Man United £150.2m
    West Ham £142.1m
    Leicester £134m
    Newcastle £131.5m
    Brighton £130.6m
    Wolves £128.2m
    Crystal Palace £124.3m
    Aston Villa £123.3m
    Brentford £121m
    Everton £120.4m
    Leeds £116.1m
    Southampton £113.3m
    Burnley £106.1m
    Watford £104.6m
    Norwich £100.3m.

    How much do Premier League clubs get paid for being on TV?
    The Premier League is the most watched league in the world and has billions of worldwide viewers annually.
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    Its popularity has meant the league has been able to negotiate huge TV deals that benefit clubs throughout the division.
    Every team in the league gets an equal TV rights base payment.
    Last season this was reportedly around £84m.
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    Teams will then get additional payments depending on how often they’re chosen to appear on TV.
    Alongside this, a merit payment system reflects where each team finishes in the table, which each place thought to be worth around £2.2m. More

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    The Manchester United Sale Rumors Are False. For Now.

    The Glazer family isn’t soliciting bids for United. But selling a piece of the team could set the price for all of it.Manchester United is not for sale. But it kind of is, in the same way that everything is for sale if the offer is high enough.The rumors started this week with a tweet, a bad joke by a billionaire that he quickly shot down himself. But almost as soon as Elon Musk walked away, the sharks were circling.Jim Ratcliffe, a British billionaire, was first out of the blocks, saying he would be interested in buying the team if it was, in fact, for sale. An American private equity firm, Apollo Global Management, was reported to be in talks about acquiring a minority stake. Money would not be an issue. Ratcliffe, the chairman of Ineos, is one of the world’s richest men. Apollo has roughly half a trillion dollars under management.But lost in the swirl of breathless reports seemed to be an important caveat: Manchester United wasn’t actually for sale.Or was it?These would not seem like top-of-the-market times at United. The team is in last place in England’s Premier League, off to its worst start to a season in more than a century. It employs a squad of players who inspire more ridicule than reverence. Its fans now hold weekly protests against the team’s Florida-based owners, the Glazer family. Yet, despite its struggles, there may not be a more coveted sports franchise anywhere on earth than Manchester United.Manchester United is last in the Premier League after a 4-0 defeat at Brentford on Saturday.David Klein/ReutersIt is one of the biggest teams anywhere that can be owned outright. It plays in the most popular soccer league in the world. Its reach extends to every corner of the earth. Quite simply: There are few brands in any sector as powerful as Manchester United.But assets that rare are famously hard to value through traditional market fundamentals. United’s share price, for example — it is listed on the New York Stock Exchange — would suggest the club is worth $2.23 billion, a figure well below the record $3 billon a group led by the California-based fund Clearlake paid this spring for its Premier League rival Chelsea F.C.But Chelsea is not Manchester United, not in any meaningful sense. Yes, it has been successful. Yes it also employs some of the world’s top players. But in terms of global reach, popularity and brand power, the club does not compare with United. What Chelsea’s sale price proved, though, is that when it comes to elite soccer club valuations, what is on the balance sheet rarely counts.Chelsea lost more than $1 million a week under its former owner, the Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich. It needs a new stadium and will require tens of millions more in spending each season to keep its roster competitive. Its purchase price followed a highly public auction that drew interest from around the world.For Manchester United, the list of suitors will be even longer, and even more public. Ratcliffe and Apollo may have been the first. They will not be the last.The British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe said he would be interested in buying United “if it was for sale.”Eric Gaillard/ReutersThe Manchester United co-chairman Avram Glazer and his siblings have given no hint they plan to sell.Toby Melville/ReutersRatcliffe’s approach is perhaps the most instructive of what is likely to come. He appears to have made no effort to contact the Glazers directly, or even reach out to their bankers. Instead, he went straight to the news media, and suggested he would be open to buying even a piece of United, with an eye on one day acquiring it all.“We are interested in the club, if it is up for sale,” is all a spokesman for Ratcliffe was willing to tell The New York Times on Thursday. The tactic unleashed a groundswell of popular support, and heaped a new round of abuse on the current owners.For the Glazers, who have been under siege for most of their tenure, selling a minority might make sense. It might allow them to soothe growing fan hostility — many supporters have never forgiven the Glazers for heaping debt on the previously debt-free club in their 800-million-pound leveraged buyout in 2005 — while simultaneously bidding up the team’s overall valuation. That figure is almost certainly going to be higher than United’s share price might suggest.Despite nearly a decade of underperformance, United still earns more than nearly every other team in world soccer. Revenue has tripled under the Glazers, reaching a high of 627 million pounds ($756 million) in 2019. If Chelsea is worth $3 billion on the open market, United, because of its fame, its earning potential and its iconic status, is worth far more, perhaps even double, some experts contend.At the same time, the scale of the negative sentiment among Manchester United supporters toward the Glazer family is hard to overstate. For more than a decade, fans have rallied against them at matches and in street marches; once, they even burned an effigy of the family’s late patriarch, Malcolm Glazer. And when the club flirted with joining a proposed European Super League last year, United fans broke into the team’s stadium and protested on the field.But through it all — for almost two decades — the Glazers have hung on, keeping hold of what in many ways is as an asset as rare as a priceless painting, thrilled to watch the value of their investment go skyward and with the cachet that comes with owning one of the most famous teams in the world.United fans at a protest in April. Ed Sykes/Action Images Via ReutersIt is unclear if all six Glazer siblings who were parceled ownership of the team by their father when he died share the same commitment to owning Manchester United. The brothers Joel and Avram are the most hands on, directly involved in the team’s decision making. But a partial sale might allow less-invested family members to cash out at a premium price, and leave those that remain with a valuation that is almost certain to be the highest price ever paid for sports franchise.For the moment, the Glazers, as has been their custom for nearly two decades, have not uttered a word publicly about their plans. A Manchester United spokesman declined to comment on Thursday.And now, at least officially, Manchester United is not for sale. The Glazers’ banker, the 200-year-old London-based advisory Rothschild & Co., is not actively soliciting bids. But neither was Abramovich, even as he spent years quietly directing offers that arrived to the New York banker, Joe Ravitch, who ultimately sold Chelsea this spring.That is very likely how things will go at Manchester United. There will come a moment when the time and the price are just right, for the most unpopular owners in English soccer history to cash out of what will go down as one of the most profitable deals in sports history.It has already cost Manchester United more than one billion pounds — in interest, debt repayments and dividends — for the right to be owned by the Glazer family. Most fans will consider billions more, this time in the form of one final check, a price worth paying to be rid of them. More

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    Man Utd ‘in talks to sell minority stake in club to US private equity firm’ as fan anger with Glazers hits boiling point

    THE GLAZERS are in talks to sell a minority stake in Manchester United to private equity firm Apollo, according to reports.It comes as pressure mounts on the United owners to sell up, with fans planning a protest at the next home game against Liverpool.
    Avram (left) and Joel Glazer will retain a controlling stake in Manchester UnitedCredit: Getty
    Sir Jim Ratcliffe is hoping to buy the club outrightCredit: Alamy
    The backlash has reportedly prompted some family members to put their shares up for sale – though brothers Avram and Joel are set to retain a controlling stake.
    According to MailOnline American private equity firm Apollo are interested in purchasing a stake in the club – so far only preliminary discussions have taken place.
    But the proposed deal almost certainly will not be completed before the transfer window closes at the end of the month.
    As part of the deal Apollo could bring in other investors, though that is unlikely to include Sir Jim Ratcliffe or former Red Devils director Michael Knighton.
    READ MORE ON MAN UTD
    The British pair are both interested in buying the club, with Knighton plotting a “hostile” takeover bid.
    Knighton is getting a consortium of investors together but it could cost more than £5billion to buy the club.
    That is why he is hoping for Ratcliffe’s support.
    The INEOS CEO is a United fan and is keen to own one of Britain’s biggest clubs having failed in his bid to buy Chelsea earlier this year.
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    Ratcliffe – who is believed to be worth around £15bn – would even want to purchase the entire club outright if the Glazers decided to sell completely and is ready to pay what is required to overhaul the squad and modernise Old Trafford.
    A spokesperson said: “If the club is for sale, Jim is definitely a potential buyer.
    “If something like this was possible, we would be interested in talking with a view to long-term ownership.
    Read More on The Sun
    “This is not about the money that has been spent or not spent.
    “Jim is looking at what can be done now and, knowing how important the club is to the city, it feels like the time is right for a reset.” More