Ratcliffe has much to prove at Old Trafford with Glazers still on scene
The Guardian|December 26, 2023
New minority shareholder must win over fans and decide the futures of key figures. John Brewin outlines the challenges
John Brewin
Ratcliffe has much to prove at Old Trafford with Glazers still on scene

The beginning of the end for the Glazers or a consolidation of their hold over Manchester United? It is the key question attached to Sir Jim Ratcliffe taking a £1.3bn, 25% stake in the club and its answer may take years to shake out. For now, the main issue addressed is closing off the "full sale now" demand made by fan activists during the 11 months since the Florida family commenced "a process to explore strategic alternatives".

Was a full sale ever realistic? That depends on your faith in Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al-Thani. As the Qatari billionaire withdrew in October, more details of his thwarted plans for the club were revealed in Jim Bowen "what you could have won" fashion than had been during his courtship.

Complaints of "a fanciful and outlandish valuation" featured prominently within what became an admission Ratcliffe had "won" the process.

What followed from sources was the suggestion that taking a minority stake was his initial step towards overall control, the final price to be determined by the success of the partnership in the coming years.

Some United fans will never forgive Ratcliffe for allying with the Glazers but again, realism comes into play. How else was a deal supposed to be struck? Ratcliffe's reputation in the business world is of someone who gets things done, of being a determined, innovative negotiator.

A minority shareholding can wield significant power, as United fans may recall from the club's plc days two decades ago, when Ireland's Cubic Expression consortium and the Glazers themselves made significant waves.

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