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“I can have a look at it:” Sir Jim ready to reconsider deeply unpopular cost-cutting decision that has fans fuming

Sir Jim Ratcliffe shed light on his tenure at Manchester United in an in-person interview with Gary Neville, with things becoming heated as the topic of cost cuts.

From axing hundreds of Man United staff members to cutting portion sizes at the club’s canteen, INEOS have been on a mission to reduce the club’s spending as a means of balancing the books.

But while this may be an understandable measure aimed at improving United’s financial position, some of the more questionable cost cuts in have enraged United fans.

One particularly controversial decision was the suspension of funding to the Association of Former Manchester United Players. Not only does the organisation provide assistance to players who never earned the wealth that many modern players enjoy, but the £40,000 a year that was given to the association is minor when considering the full context of the club’s financial position.

Understandably, Neville ripped into Ratcliffe over this questionable decision during their interview on The Overlap.

“£40,000 was taken away from the Former Players’ Association. Now that’s not the players that played under Sir Alex Ferguson or even in the last ten years,” Neville stated. “They’re players from the 1960s and 70s. I look at that and I’m a little bit annoyed with the club.”

“I just look at that and I think it’s £40,000 for players who are giving a lot back to, sort of, the local community, they’re obviously big supporters of United. Why not look at that 40,000 and put Harry Maguire and Bruno in a dinner, sell 1,000 tickets for 30, 40, 50 quid, raise the money through a dinner, maybe do a raffle, an auction, give the ex-players their money and do it in a way whereby you’re not looking like it’s a cruel decision, which it is,” Neville explained.

“Why would that decision be made?” he finally asked Ratcliffe.

“Well, nobody suggested that,” Ratcliffe revealed. “Because I would have supported that.”

Clearly lost for words, Neville broke Ratcliffe’s silence by once again suggesting ways to fund the association: “Why don’t the current players put a grand each in for them? These guys have been putting so much time into the club over so many years. Why can’t we reinstate that?”

“Well, maybe we can. I don’t know. I can have a look at it,” Ratcliffe softly replied. “Gary, I’m not aware of that level of detail to be honest with you.”

To hear Neville stand up for former players who did not rake in massive wealth is encouraging for fans. Of course, Ratcliffe’s openness to exploring the funding issue is refreshing as well, especially given the Glazers’ general refusal to answer to fans in interviews such as this.

Still, Ratcliffe will need to act fast if he hopes to regain favour with United fans, particularly as other cost-cutting measures are put in place.


Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

A faithful Manchester United supporter, Mathew has worked as a football writer and analyst for SB Nation, FanSided, and now The Peoples Person. Mathew’s heroes include David Beckham, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Sir Alex Ferguson, all of whom played their part in creating some special childhood memories.

Match preview: United (1) v Real Sociedad (1)

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Match preview: United (1) v Real Sociedad (1)

Tuesday 11 March 2025 12:38

Manchester United host Real Sociedad on Thursday, in the crunch second leg of our Europa League round-of-16 tie.

The sides are level at 1-1 after last week’s meeting in San Sebastian, with Joshua Zirkzee opening the scoring for the Reds and Mikel Oyarzabal equalising from the penalty spot.

Both sides have added motivation to continue on the road to Bilbao, as United seek Champions League football next term and La Real bid to win a first continental trophy at the ground of regional rivals Athletic Club.

Here’s what you need to know ahead of what is sure to be an intense European occasion at Old Trafford…

90 in 20: Real Sociedad v United Video

90 in 20: Real Sociedad v United

EXTENDED HIGHLIGHTS | Spend 20 minutes viewing the standout moments from Real Sociedad v United…

HOW TO WATCH AND FOLLOW

There are a limited number of tickets still available to buy, so what are you waiting for? Act now and secure your seat for an important European night in M16.

The game kicks off at 20:00 GMT and will be shown live on TNT Sports in the UK. Fans can discover exclusive pre-match and post-match coverage on MUTV, as our ‘Match Day Live’ programme gets under way at 18:55 GMT, just after the teams have been announced.

The United App is the place to be during the game, for a second-screen experience, as we’ll bring you live radio commentary, plus stats and updates.

If you miss the action, you can catch the highlights across our platforms from midnight on Friday.

WHAT’S THE TEAM NEWS?

Manuel Ugarte could return to the Reds’ line-up after a two-game absence, although Leny Yoro requires assessment after being withdrawn at half-time in Sunday’s 1-1 draw with Arsenal. Ayden Heaven came on for the Frenchman and performed well. 

Altay Bayindir, Amad, Jonny Evans, Tom Heaton, Harry Maguire, Kobbie Mainoo, Lisandro Martinez, Mason Mount and Luke Shaw have all been out due to injury.

Chido Obi is ineligible for this competition, but Patrick Dorgu can play, despite currently being suspended in domestic football.

Martin Zubimendi looks likely to return for the visitors after missing the first leg due to illness. The Euro 2024 winner was involved as a substitute in Sunday’s defeat to Sevilla, as Imanol Aguacil made eight changes to his starting XI.

Luka Sucic was absent due to a muscle injury, with Aritz Elustondo banned. Alvaro Odriozola, Jon Pacheco and Arsen Zakharyan continued their spells on the sidelines.

PAST MEETINGS

This will be La Real’s fourth visit to Old Trafford and the previous three games have furnished just two goals. Inigo Martinez scored past his own goalkeeper to settle a 2013 Champions League meeting, before a goalless Europa League draw in 2021 – Oyarzabal missing a penalty – confirmed a United victory over two legs, by a 4-0 scoreline.

The Basque outfit’s most recent trip to M16 came in unique and sombre circumstances, as our Europa League group game in September 2022 kicked off just an hour or so after the death of Queen Elizabeth II was announced.

A low-key affair was played out and it was Brais Mendez who proved to be the matchwinner for the La Liga side, as he successfully converted a second-half spot-kick.

DID YOU KNOW?

That 1-0 reverse under Erik ten Hag is the only defeat we’ve experienced in our 28 most recent Europa League outings at Old Trafford. We’ve won 21 and drawn six of the other fixtures played here since losing 3-2 to Marcelo Bielsa’s Athletic Club in March 2012.

Bruno Fernandes has been directly involved in more goals than any other United player in the competition (20 – 10 goals, 10 assists).

Real Sociedad have only won one of their nine matches against English sides in European competition (D3 L5), scoring just three goals overall, across those nine outings.

Thanks to Opta.

RIVALS WATCH

Here are the other ties which are concluding on Thursday, along with the scores from last week’s first-leg encounters…

Athletic Club 1 v 2 Roma (17:45 GMT)
Eintracht Frankfurt 2 v 1 Ajax (17:45 GMT)
Lazio 2 v 1 Viktoria Plzen (17:45 GMT)
Olympiacos 0 v 3 Bodo/Glimt (17:45 GMT)
Lyon 3 v 1 FCSB (20:00 GMT)
Rangers 3 v 1 Fenerbahce (20:00 GMT)
Tottenham Hotspur 0 v 1 AZ Alkmaar (20:00 GMT)

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    FULL 90 | Watch every kick from United’s Europa League last-16 first leg at the Reale Arena…

Tuesday 11 March 2025 12:38

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Neville slammed as he ‘failed’ to push ‘arrogant’ Ratcliffe on ‘obvious point’ in Man Utd interview

Sir Jim Ratcliffe exposed himself as ‘borderline incompetent’ and ‘arrogant’ in that Man Utd interview, but Gary Neville ‘failed’ to make an ‘obvious point’.

Send your thoughts to theeditor@football365.com.

A £2billion punchline
Can I be the first to applaud the architects for United’s new stadium and their unique vision.

A big tent perfectly epitomises the clown show running the joint and on the pitch.

Bravo.
Tom, Leyton

The mixed messaging regarding a new stadium for Man United is so United it’s unbelievable

Yesterday:  We were running out of money

Today: We are spending a billion on a new stadium
Andrew S (It’s a real clown show there so the big top inspired design is apt though)

Drowning in hubris
You’ll be bombarded, no doubt, with letters about Jim Ratcliffe. So in case anyone else doesn’t make the obvious point that Gary Neville failed to make:

It’s not an unreasonable excuse, and really only proven with the benefit of hindsight for Ratcliffe to stand by ETH in the close season. It was perhaps too early for them to make that decision. However, it was also too early to be renewing his contract. A baffling decision then, and even more incomprehensible one now as they sack loyal club servants to fill the gap created by paying off Ten Hag £10m.

He’s not honest, he’s arrogant, out of touch and as is often the case with these rich old men, he completely insults the intelligence of all those around him.

United are doomed.
Mat (will happily lose to PSG and Newcastle if it means we win the league)

He’s basically Trump, isn’t he? Twisting facts, downright lying, completely out of touch, has his own selfish agenda, couldn’t give a flying fork about ordinary working people. Yes, he has that English smarm/charm (take your pick) and isn’t as deranged, but his rhetoric is straight out of the Trump playbook. And the comments on the myriad articles are illuminating, and explain why we are all so f***ed.

I said in the last email that he is insulting the intelligence of all those around him, but I appear to have given them way too much credit.

You can’t expect a billionaire to behave properly, and why even should he, seems to be the gist. What, you expect billionaires to put their hands in their own pockets and invest in the clubs that they are incredibly privileged to have as a hobby? What are you, some sort of idiot? So what if owners of smaller clubs have done that? That’s because they have a small club mentality.

His mental gymnastics about wage bills is utter misdirection to the point of being downright dishonest, and people are actually defending his use of “logic”, and this, in a nutshell, is why Donald Trump is the President of America, and why the rest of us are his playthings, having our lives in his whimsical hands.

I realise that football ain’t wot it used to be, that it’s a money machine these days and large clubs are merely businesses etc etc but watching so many fans (and not all United fans who would get a little grace as they all have Stockholm Syndrome at this point) roll over, part their cheeks and grit their teeth while billionaires make merry with them is a sight to behold.

United certainly are doomed, but I think that we all are at this point. Rich white men will f*** us all. They’re doing it right now and people are queuing up to be their fluffers.
Mat (God it’s all so depressing, we are a race of lemmings)

MORE ON THE RATCLIFFE INTERVIEWS ON F365
👉 ‘Do you?!’ – Neville baffled by Ratcliffe’s Amorim assessment amid Man Utd ‘salary bill’ whataboutery
👉 Six Manchester United stars ‘suit’ Amorim philosophy but some ‘key players are choosing not to’
👉 Sir Jim Ratcliffe: Fact-checking the Man Utd co-owner’s interview bull

A pivotal moment for United
It was really interesting to see Sir Jim and  Gary ‘Harry Potter’ Neville discussing Man United’s future on The Overlap. The biggest take away for me was that right now United need to be run by someone who understands finance.

Discussing the team, performances, decision making and treatment of club employees made Sir Jim look borderline incompetent.

But the opposite was true when it came to finances. Sir Jim was very open about the dire financial situation: MUFC  losing £330m in the last four years, being previously at risk of running out of cash by November ’25, £35m/a year servicing the debt and £89m to be paid this summer on transfer installments for existing players.

It was clear that while Sir Jim might not fully understand football he does have a very firm grip on the handle when it comes to the finances and what needs to be done.

The real masterplan and masterstroke however is the stadium/south manchester development. If United get to build a cross between the Camp Nou and the Westphalenstadion and have the biggest football club stadium in the world while getting their finances in order over the next 3 to 5 years, it will be a major transformation. Annual match day income alone could potentially rise by up to £100m.

It’s gonna be a bumpy ride. United are a car crash on the pitch and even more disastrous off it. However, Sir Jim does offer a realistic strategic vision to solve many of United’s structural problems. He may not understand football but he does have an achievable vision to secure United’s big club status which wouldn’t have survived another decade of Glazer mismanagement.

United have 5-7 years to completely revamp the club. If they fail, they’ll lose their position in the top 3 clubs globally and will be overtaken by Liverpool, City, Chelsea, Arsenal and maybe even Newcastle in England as new generations of fans switch to teams that actually win football matches. This is a pivotal moment in United’s history and what they need more than anything is an effective masterplan to guarantee their future. Regardless of what you think about the Dan Ashworth debacle, hiring a manager whose tactics dont fit the squad or treatment of employees, this is what Sir Jim is offering.
Ben

Arsenal and a silly narrative
The narrative around the title race and Arsenal’s injury crisis or lack of a striker being the only reason they didn’t walk to a title needs to be revisited. As does the idea that Arsenal have been great challengers or even a great premier league team.

This is a team that has been praised beyond belief by this and other websites and pundits. While they’ve improved and have challenged man city in recent years, they’ve failed to break 90 points. After a quick google, I see that 13 teams have done this in the premier league era. However, I don’t want to criticize them not achieving a high standard like that.  I want to criticize the coverage in the same way I used to critique how this website and others presented King Kevin De-Cline as the best midfielder in premier league history even though no body chooses him over Keane, Gerard Lamprd or Scholes in an all time eleven or that City were better with him out of the team and Bernardo dominating  the league before De-Cline returned next season, won POTS even though city had dropped about 30 points.

Arsenal are being bailed out by the media with injuries. However, this league was lost before they gained injuries. When Saka was injured against Palace, Liverpool were 3 points ahead with two games in hand. They won the next day to go 6 ahead and a game in hand. That lead has stayed the same up until it looked like the pressure was on Liverpool a few weeks ago and Arsenal decided to implode. Granted they’ve had injuries, but Arteta’s negative tactics and focus on winning corners rather than games has meant that Arsenal have weirdly performed no worse with injuries. They have 35 points after 17 games which is on course for 78 points. They now have 55 from 28 which is on course for 74 points. However their form from Saka injury to the west ham game (9 games- 18 points) was on course for 76 points.

They have dropped slightly but it’s clear the problems with this team were there before the injured and Arteta has developed a system that no matter full or partial squad will gain you 76 odd points a season based on this year. To me Arsenal can play great football and with  a full team, could beat Liverpool on any day. But the mentality from the top down is why they are underperforming so much. The sense of entitlement from the fans and manager about being in a title race against teams that have done it in the past is a major problem. The celebrations of the players when they win a big game shows a weak mentality. While Carragher is insufferable he was right last year when Ode was out with the camera. Behaving like a team that is romping to the league and setting new standards in football even though they’ve been beaten in every competition bar an FA Cup 5 years ago with a squad that wasn’t his.

This is a manager and a club that has been backed. They chose to sign a left back, centre mid and sterling last summer. It is not an excuse that they didn’t sign a striker. Just like Liverpool chose to sign Chiesa only and not play him. The underperformance of Arsenal should be compared to the predictions of squads at at the start of the year. Liverpool on paper were the third best squad last season having had a successful  rebuild by klopp that ran out of steam. One failed signing and we’ve outperformed Arsenal in almost every metric. Arsenal were tipped to win the league as it was their ‘time’, wasted more money and now get to blame injuries and the decision to not have a striker.

Last season when Liverpool won the cup with kids and the squad burnt out and imploded, the media and fans  went out of its way to say that injuries are no excuse. For some reason, this Arsenal team doesn’t abide by that. Instead of taking a long hard look in the mirror or at the Photograph (taken by their captain 🤣) they use excuses. Mocking Halaand for stay humble when he was completely correct about the mentality sums it up. Lewis Skelly mocking his celebration showed that even when they’re winning a game to keep title race alive they are more focused on setting the media narrative. Same with Rice rushing to shush the fans when he scored an equalizer in a game where they were 16 points behind a team that no one thought would get top 4.

I might have found Kevin De-Cline to be overrated but I always respected his attitude and behaviour. (Except when this website and others said he focused too much on technique and tried to place it too much when he sent a penalty wide 🤣). I feel the same about Cold Palmer, excellent player, getting crazy media hype. However this Arsenal team has never felt excellent. It feels like a team that has a chip on the shoulder and wants to be respected as the best premier league team without ever actually being it. Arsenal should take a long hard look at the table and reflect on how to improve. Actually maybe they should take a photo, it’ll last longer. I know a certain underperforming captain who could take it.
Sean 

A Gooner defence
Howard, happy to help, as I imagine many people are pretty sick of ‘injuries’ given as boilerplate excuse with no context by us Arsenal fans.

The issue with Arsenal injuries this season isn’t limited to Saka in particular, but with the constant change throughout the year across the team – something that in the positional play Arteta favours creates productivity through interplay and in particular triangles.

Now Arsenal of the last two whole seasons from an attacking standpoint can best be understood as the development of attacking triangles – in 2022/3 the balance on the left between Martinelli, Xhaka and Zinchenko and on the right with Saka, Odegaard and White and then in 2023/4 how it became focused on the right.

2022/23

Left side: 23 goals, 14 assists
Right side: 31 goals, 24 assists

This was very balanced and basically led to Arsenal having the incredibly hot start that was derailed by Jesus’ injury, the World Cup and eventually the bottom falling out of our defence in a harrowing game against Sporting in EL (my last game at the Emirates…) with Tomiyasu and Saliba going out.

In 2023/24, this became even more concentrated on the right. In 35 games played together, 38 goals, 23 assists were generated between Saka, White and Odegaard. Whole gameplans involved getting players on the other side of the pitch open for types of cross we could put in by creating space/overloads on the right.

Now the 2024 summer transfer market was supposed to rebalance the team – the left side had taken a big step back in creativity with Xhaka leaving and Havertz not taking his place, but instead becoming the CF. So Calafiori and Merino came in and this was supposed to unlock Arsenal’s potential as a balanced force again.

What happened instead was a complete disintegration of the right side due to revolving injury.

Saka, White and Odegaard have played 5 games together this season. Saka and Odegaard, Arsenal’s two elite creators have only played 9 games together. In total this season, the three collectively have 7 goals and 14 assists.

Simultaneously, the left has never truly developed. Calafiori has been in and out with injury, Merino got a freak shoulder injury that meant he missed 2 months at the start of the season and Martinelli has struggled for fitness and missed several games. But the new signings can also just be seen as a bit underwhelming – no doubts there.

Injuries have forced players into positions they’re less comfortable in – Partey has played far too much at RB (full stop if you ask me) and Timber for a while played on the left to cover injury (before we knew MLS could play) which limited our overlapping.

You haven’t seen a fully functioning Arsenal all season basically – I think the win against Villa at the start of the season is maybe the high point from a team availability standpoint? Compare this to Liverpool who again have had more or less their full attacking roster fully available for Slot to work with (and Salah having an all world season) and you can pretty easily understand the gulf in production.

Now, does this mean it’s all just bad luck? No, we have definitely seen some of the limitations of Arteta’s style and I don’t disagree that Arsenal could have more flexibility to change things up in game, but I think there has not been enough availability to draw too many conclusions about Arteta’s managerial ceiling for example.

Squad construction can definitely be questioned – you would definitely feel like Berta’s first job as DoF is aggressively cutting the dead weight and maybe being a bit less sentimental about players whose body’s can no longer be relied upon (Tomiyasu and Jesus I would try and get anything back for ASAP for example).

This is also why any real further analysis of this season for Arsenal is a bit of a waste until Saka is back – it’s not that mysterious why Arsenal are struggling to create/convert chances when Odegaard is a one man band, trying to set up a DM playing CF. Nwaneri will flash intermittently because he’s 17 years old. Maybe with Martinelli back, Trossard can come back into the centre and we’ll have a bit more balance, but I wouldn’t count on it.
Tom, Leyton

Is Mo Salah the greatest Premier League player ever?
It’s a simple question, is Mohammed Salah the greatest Premier League player of all time? Immediately you’ll be tempted to dismiss it, especially given the names in the list but it’s not ridiculous.

To decide this I think you have to break it down into a few categories; longevity, consistency, talent and achievements.

Longevity – he’s been here for a while now, almost a decade, and he’s actually having the best season of his career at 32 in the hardest league in the world. Can you name me another player for whom that would be true? Of the people at the top of this list you could argue shearer, giggs and Rooney are probably above him as players who were here a long time ago the top of their game

Consistency – multiple golden boots, guaranteed min 20 goals per season andn double digit assists..there’s actually only rooney who’s done that and Salah recently broke his record. It’s fair to say he’s extremely consistent. He’s also a big game player scoring against literally every big team he’s ever come across and outright bullies some of them.

Talent – I think we can all agree he’s an extremely gifted player who can dribble, shoot, and in the last couple of years has added passing, crossing (trivela style) and superb vision to his game as well as having a ridiculous battery and injury resistance. He’s genuinely equal to any other player talent wise and better than most.

Achievements – won more trophies than shearer but less than the other names in the top 5 all time scorers (shearer, kane, Rooney, cole, aguero/salah) but he has won every single trophy available except the balon dor and it was a crime he didn’t win it when he broke records the first time, he surely deserves it this year?

For context, he’s scored more goals than all but four players in the history of the premier league, has more assists than any other member of the top 5 except Rooney. Is injured less than anyone in the top 5, and has won more trophies than the top 2 (strangely everyone has won more than the top 2)

Henry is often lauded as the greatest foreigner to play here but Salah has more goals, more assists, more trophies. In my opinion the only person in the top 5 who is comparable is Rooney. Sure shearer, cole and aguero were better goalscorers , but better players? Not for me.

Even if you disagree he’s the best player to ever play in the premier league this surely has to be the best individual season a player has had?

27 goals, 17 assists in 29 games is frankly bullshit and I think there’s really only Messi who posts better goals and assists numbers at the same time. That’s extremely rarified company, even if mo isn’t the same level then fact only these two have done this is pretty wild.

I also think the reason he doesn’t get spoken about in the same legendary fashion as other players is because he’s from Egypt. If he were french or Brazilian he would have a very different rep.
Lee

READ NEXTNot even Ratcliffe’s ‘furious rant’ can keep ‘angry’ clash between Liverpool pair out of the news

LIVE: Man Utd unveil new 100,000-seater stadium plan. Rate it or slate it…

Manchester United have announced their intention to build a new 100,000-seater stadium. See the plans and have your say…

Around 16 hours after Sir Jim Ratcliffe proclaimed that United would have run out of money by November had he not intervened with cost-cutting measures, the club’s part-owner has been in London to unveil new plans for a brand-spanking home.

A new 100,000 arena will be built as part of the regeneration project in south Manchester.

Ratcliffe and all United’s big-hitters have had their say, and you can have yours too.

Tell us what you think: an iconic new home for the Red Devils, or a circus tent more befitting of Dubai than Greater Manchester?

“I can have a look at it:” Sir Jim ready to reconsider deeply unpopular cost-cutting decision that has fans fuming

Sir Jim Ratcliffe shed light on his tenure at Manchester United in an in-person interview with Gary Neville, with things becoming heated as the topic of cost cuts.

From axing hundreds of Man United staff members to cutting portion sizes at the club’s canteen, INEOS have been on a mission to reduce the club’s spending as a means of balancing the books.

But while this may be an understandable measure aimed at improving United’s financial position, some of the more questionable cost cuts in have enraged United fans.

One particularly controversial decision was the suspension of funding to the Association of Former Manchester United Players. Not only does the organisation provide assistance to players who never earned the wealth that many modern players enjoy, but the £40,000 a year that was given to the association is minor when considering the full context of the club’s financial position.

Understandably, Neville ripped into Ratcliffe over this questionable decision during their interview on The Overlap.

“£40,000 was taken away from the Former Players’ Association. Now that’s not the players that played under Sir Alex Ferguson or even in the last ten years,” Neville stated. “They’re players from the 1960s and 70s. I look at that and I’m a little bit annoyed with the club.”

“I just look at that and I think it’s £40,000 for players who are giving a lot back to, sort of, the local community, they’re obviously big supporters of United. Why not look at that 40,000 and put Harry Maguire and Bruno in a dinner, sell 1,000 tickets for 30, 40, 50 quid, raise the money through a dinner, maybe do a raffle, an auction, give the ex-players their money and do it in a way whereby you’re not looking like it’s a cruel decision, which it is,” Neville explained.

“Why would that decision be made?” he finally asked Ratcliffe.

“Well, nobody suggested that,” Ratcliffe revealed. “Because I would have supported that.”

Clearly lost for words, Neville broke Ratcliffe’s silence by once again suggesting ways to fund the association: “Why don’t the current players put a grand each in for them? These guys have been putting so much time into the club over so many years. Why can’t we reinstate that?”

“Well, maybe we can. I don’t know. I can have a look at it,” Ratcliffe softly replied. “Gary, I’m not aware of that level of detail to be honest with you.”

To hear Neville stand up for former players who did not rake in massive wealth is encouraging for fans. Of course, Ratcliffe’s openness to exploring the funding issue is refreshing as well, especially given the Glazers’ general refusal to answer to fans in interviews such as this.

Still, Ratcliffe will need to act fast if he hopes to regain favour with United fans, particularly as other cost-cutting measures are put in place.


Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

A faithful Manchester United supporter, Mathew has worked as a football writer and analyst for SB Nation, FanSided, and now The Peoples Person. Mathew’s heroes include David Beckham, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Sir Alex Ferguson, all of whom played their part in creating some special childhood memories.

United star’s demand causes “tension” at club, PL rival ready to take advantage with ambitious bid – report

Chelsea are prepared to make an ambitious move to sign Manchester United midfielder Kobbie Mainoo, as per reports.

United’s financial predicament has raised question marks over the long-term futures of highly-rated talents like Alejandro Garnacho and Kobbie Mainoo.

Garnacho was the subject of interest from Napoli during the winter window and Mainoo has attracted interest from Chelsea.

United are understood to be open to listening to offers for the England midfielder, who has just over two years left on his current deal to run.

According to Fichajes, Mainoo is in a “difficult contractual situation” at Old Trafford.

His representatives are looking to bag a significant pay rise for the 19-year-old who currently takes home around £20,000-a-week.

United, meanwhile, are determined to not overpay as they look to trim their wage bill amid financial fair play concerns. The situation has reportedly led to “tensions with the club’s leadership.”

Chelsea are keeping an eye on Mainoo and it is claimed that the Blues are “determined to pull out all the stops” to sign the United academy product.

As per the Spanish outlet, Chelsea are preparing to launch a £79 million bid for the dynamic midfielder.

The London outfit’s pursuit has been accelerated due to concerns over Romeo Lavia’s fitness. Further, they consider Mainoo to be a midfielder capable of adding much-needed creativity and balance to their midfield.

Mainoo is yet to nail down a place in Ruben Amorim’s midfield but United aren’t too keen on losing their promising talent. However, their stance could soften if negotiations over a new contract don’t progress as expected.

Meanwhile, it is suggested that Mainoo prefers to move abroad instead of joining a rival Premier League club, owing to his connection to his boyhood club.

Feature image Michael Regan via Getty Images


Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

Vishal has covered football for over five years. Currently a writer at The Peoples Person. Big fan of ball-playing center-backs!

The new neighbourhood

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See a glimpse into the future of the Old Trafford area.

Man Utd reveal new 100k-seat stadium Ratcliffe hails as ‘world’s greatest’ after 115 years at Old Trafford

Manchester United have announced their intention to build a new 100,000-seat stadium next to the current Old Trafford site, in what will be the “world’s greatest stadium” as per Sir Jim Ratcliffe, and will also boost the local economy.

United have spent 115 years playing football at Old Trafford, but for one of the country’s most successful clubs, the stadium does not match. Videos often circulate online of masses of water flowing through the roof into the stands, leaving the matchday experience somewhat hindered.

But that may not be the case for long, as United have today announced plans for a new 100,000-seat stadium, as the ‘centrepiece of the regeneration of the Old Trafford area’.

The report states: ‘The stadium, and wider regeneration project, have the potential to deliver an additional £7.3bn per year to the UK economy which brings large-scale social and economic benefits to the community and wider region, including the possible creation of 92,000 new jobs, more than 17,000 new homes as well as driving an additional 1.8 million visitors annually.’

United chairman Ratcliffe feels United will be brought back up alongside the biggest clubs in the world in terms of their infrastructure when the new stadium – with the target for completion in 2030 – is built.

“Today marks the start of an incredibly exciting journey to the delivery of what will be the world’s greatest football stadium, at the centre of a regenerated Old Trafford.

“Our current stadium has served us brilliantly for the past 115 years, but it has fallen behind the best arenas in world sport. By building next to the existing site, we will be able to preserve the essence of Old Trafford, while creating a truly state-of-the-art stadium that transforms the fan experience, only footsteps from our historic home.

“Just as important is the opportunity for a new stadium to be the catalyst for social and economic renewal of the Old Trafford area, creating jobs and investment, not just during the construction phase, but on a lasting basis when the stadium district is complete.

“The Government has identified infrastructure investment as a strategic priority, particularly in the north of England, and we are proud to be supporting that mission with this project of national, as well as local, significance.”

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Conceptual images of the stadium which have been posted show high beams supporting a canopy around the stadium structure itself, almost giving a look of a circus tent. At the moment, such a location seems fitting for 14th in the Premier League United.

But the suggestion that new jobs will be created is ideal, given United have undertaken cost-cutting measures, which have included laying off staff in a number of areas.

READ MORE: Gary Neville gives honest assessment of Man Utd’s huge Old Trafford project

Sir Jim Ratcliffe confirms plan for next season’s ticket prices at United, fans will be fuming

Manchester United co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe has admitted that ticket prices at the club are set to rise yet again during a face-to-face interview with Gary Neville.

This comes after the latest price hike by Ratcliffe and his company INEOS was met with a barrage of outrage from loyal Man United supporters.

INEOS’ price hike decision also sparked a protest by fan group ‘The 1958’ during the 1-1 draw against Arsenal at Old Trafford on Sunday.

Despite the enormous backlash experienced by the club owners, Ratcliffe revealed during his interview with Neville on The Overlap that fans can expect ticket prices to rise once again.

When Neville brought up fans’ frustration over ticket prices and proceeded to ask if further hikes would be implemented next season, Ratcliffe bluntly replied: “A little bit, yes, we will. But not a lot.”

Neville then asked how much the price rise would be, to which the INEOS founder responded: “We’ll know in a couple of weeks.”

Remaining determined in his quest for answers, Neville asked for clarity on how price increases are determined, particularly given the frustration that fans have had and the further anger they are bound to feel.

“My guidance to the management team is that we have to look after the faithful supporters,” Ratcliffe explained, identifying them as the season ticket holders who go to all games, regardless of the calibre of the opposition.

“The ticket pricing has to be fair and it has to be affordable to the local people and there are different people,” he continued. “Some people live in Manchester, some people come across from Hong Kong or come up from London or something, they’re a different group of people in a way.”

“I think the ticket pricing can be different depending on who we’re targeting,” Ratcliffe confirmed, explaining that the structuring of ticket prices is needed.

Finally, the United minority owner gave his explanation as to why ticket prices need to increase.

“If you look at the income for Manchester United, it comes from three places. It comes from TV revenues, it comes from merchandising – selling shirts, all that type of stuff, and sponsorships – and it comes from ticketing. And you have got inflation,” he clarified.

Still, Ratcliffe revealed that discussions are in place over making exceptions to price increases, such as freezing the cost for under 16s.

While the reasoning for price hikes may potentially be justified given the club’s financial position, Ratcliffe will indeed be walking a fine line should a ticket price increase be announced early next season, potentially damaging his reputation in the eyes of fans who have already been infuriated by the Glazers’ rule at the club.


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A faithful Manchester United supporter, Mathew has worked as a football writer and analyst for SB Nation, FanSided, and now The Peoples Person. Mathew’s heroes include David Beckham, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Sir Alex Ferguson, all of whom played their part in creating some special childhood memories.

Pictures: United officially announce 100,000 seater stadium, unveil mind-blowing photos of how it will look

Manchester United have announced their plan for a magnificent new 100,000 seater stadium to replace Old Trafford.

According to the club’s official website, “The stadium, and wider regeneration project, have the potential to deliver an additional £7.3bn per year to the UK economy which brings large-scale social and economic benefits to the community and wider region, including the possible creation of 92,000 new jobs, more than 17,000 new homes as well as driving an additional 1.8 million visitors annually.”

Part owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe said “Today marks the start of an incredibly exciting journey to the delivery of what will be the world’s greatest football stadium, at the centre of a regenerated Old Trafford.”

CEO Omar Berrada said that “Our long-term objective as a club is to have the world’s best football team playing in the world’s best stadium.”

Sir Alex Ferguson is quoted as saying “Manchester United should always strive for the best in everything it does, on and off the pitch, and that includes the stadium we play in. Old Trafford holds so many special memories for me personally, but we must be brave and seize this opportunity to build a new home, fit for the future, where new history can be made.”

Sir Jim has already confirmed that while United’s owners will fund the new stadium, it must be part of a complete redevelopment of the surrounding area, completely transforming this part of Manchester into one of the country’s finest destinations.

The architects of the stadium are Foster and Partners. Their founder Lord Norman Foster described it as “one of the most exciting projects in the world today, with incredible regional and national significance.

“The stadium is contained by a vast umbrella, harvesting energy and rainwater, and sheltering a new public plaza that is twice the size of Trafalgar Square.

“It is a mixed-use miniature city of the future.”

The plan is to complete the stadium within five years, i.e. by 2030, with 2032 as the maximum deadline. Lord Foster says this will be achieved by pre-building blocks of the stadium and then assembling them “like Meccano”(TM).

The images released of how the new stadium will look are jaw-droppingly impressive:

Photos from X.com

Featured image Alex Livesey via Getty Images


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Red Billy is the managing editor of The Peoples Person, author of three books and totally obsessed with football’s transfer market. Billy still insists Matteo Darmian and Alex Telles could have made it at United given half a chance.