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Newcastle, the Mecca of Football?

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bluebell

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Newcastle United talks on Saudi Arabia takeover at 'advanced' stage
By Dan RoanBBC sports editor
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Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
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Image captionMike Ashley has owned Newcastle since 2007
Talks on the potential £340m takeover of Newcastle United by Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund are "advanced".

Negotiations between the Arab state's Public Investment Fund (PIF) and Newcastle owner Mike Ashley have been in progress for several months.

The chances of an agreement are now "high" according to one source familiar with the discussions.

But they also warned that the talks were "complicated" and a deal could still collapse.

"Ashley does not need to sell, and he is unpredictable," said the source.

Businesswoman and financier Amanda Staveley is understood to have approached the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman about buying the Premier League club.

Staveley failed to purchase the club two years ago after Ashley said he wanted to bring 10 years of ownership to an end.

She is thought to want a 10% stake in the club if a deal can be agreed with PIF, which would be the majority partner.

The Bin Zayed Group, representing UAE billionaire Sheikh Khaled bin Zayed Al Nahyan, was thought to have agreed terms for a takeover at Newcastle last year but it failed to materialise.

The takeover would be Saudi Arabia's latest venture into sports investment.

Rival Premier League club Sheffield United are owned by Saudi Prince Abdullah bin Mosaad bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, who took full control from Kevin McCabe last year.

Businessman Turki al-Sheikh, the chairman of Saudi's General Entertainment Authority, has also bought Almeria in Spain's second division.

Any deal for Newcastle would require approval by the Premier League, and would inevitability be controversial.

Global sports organisations have been accused of being complicit in what is seen as the country's attempt to 'sportswash' its human rights record. Football authorities have also become infuriated with a Saudi website's illegal piracy of Qatari-based sports TV coverage.

Human rights organisation Amnesty International says Saudi Arabia has "an appalling record on LGBT rights, women's rights, extra-judicial killings, beheadings, the murder of journalist Jamal Kashoggi, and their involvement in the ongoing conflict in Yemen".

Saudi Arabia has recently been making efforts to present itself as more liberal, and to open itself up to the wider world as a place to do business, watch sport and go on holiday.

Last year the country staged heavyweight boxing's rematch between Anthony Joshua and Andy Ruiz Jr and has just unveiled detailed plans for a new race track that is poised to host a Formula 1 grand prix from 2023.

Earlier this month the Spanish Super Cup was also staged there.

Felix Jakens, Amnesty International UK's Head of Campaigns, said: "Given the deluge of investment in sport we've seen from Saudi Arabia recently, a takeover of Newcastle United wouldn't come as a major surprise.

"It's not for us to say who should own Newcastle United, but players, back-room staff and fans alike ought to see this for what it is - sportswashing, plain and simple."

Staveley helped broker the purchase of Manchester City by Sheikh Mansour in 2008 and it was reported that she led Dubai International Capital's £400m bid for Liverpool in 2008.

Ashley, 55, has been a divisive figure at St James' Park, with some supporters regularly protesting about the way the businessman has run the club.

He bought Newcastle for £134.4m in 2007.

The club have been relegated twice from the Premier League during Ashley's 10-year reign.

Newcastle United, Staveley, and PIF have all declined to comment.
 
I mean this has been a saga for years, no? He's about as likely to sell Newcastle as Pep is to get a hair transplant
 
Great.

They can have Lovren, Lallana, Harry Wilson and a couple of the loanees at Rangers at the end of the season for £150m quid.

Hopefully they’ll invite Mike Ashley to one of their embassy’s for negotiations.

The one in Turkey seems like a reasonable mid-way point.
 
Great.

They can have Lovren, Lallana, Harry Wilson and a couple of the loanees at Rangers at the end of the season for £150m quid.

Hopefully they’ll invite Mike Ashley to one of their embassy’s for negotiations.

The one in Turkey seems like a reasonable mid-way point.
Doner meat will be plentiful then?
 
Is Saudi money that different to Qatar money. Arsenal took money from Rwanda. Football has little morals when it comes to money.
 
I'm sure Staveley wishes she could somehow negotiate these deals without Mike Ashley. He's a trader at heart with a genius for negotiation, but he's also about as predictable as a hyperactive toddler on a sugar rush, easily bored and has no interest or respect for "traditional" business and "how things should be done". Plus he has no huge desire or need to sell.

I'm sure half these deals collapse because Ashley gets bored and irritated and tells them to fuck off.
 
I wonder what would LFC fans feel if the Saud Royal Family stumped up the $2.5bn to buy LFC, and then invested another few hundred million into the transfer funds?
 
He bought for £135m in 2007 and is trying to sell for £340m in 2020.

If he'd invested in bonds or some other reasonably safe investment how much would his £135m be worth now? I'm not sure he's making that much on this deal even now

[Edit: OK he is doing ok that represents 7%]
 
I wonder what would LFC fans feel if the Saud Royal Family stumped up the $2.5bn to buy LFC, and then invested another few hundred million into the transfer funds?
And lose the 'dirty oil money' higher ground on City? We don't need it with Klopp managing and Edwards bossing the deals.
 
Yep. I would have taken dirty oil money a decade ago. And maybe a decade from now. But not at the moment.
Precisely.

I mean, we were all getting super excited at the idea of becoming the puppet of the Chinese state at one point, lapping up the red synergies between Liverpool and China, but we were in the midst of the H&G years. It was allowed.
 
He bought for £135m in 2007 and is trying to sell for £340m in 2020.

If he'd invested in bonds or some other reasonably safe investment how much would his £135m be worth now? I'm not sure he's making that much on this deal even now

[Edit: OK he is doing ok that represents 7%]
Tv rights. The revenue in (assuming premier league status) has increased year on year until last year, & other football revenue is still steadily increasing.

If you can get away with huge investment, a Premier league club is a helluva investment, or at least has been for the last couple of decades, the future is less than certain, but our owners are amongst many who believe that devolved tv rights will happen at some point & that will be a big cash cow to clubs with larger fan bases.
 
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