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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


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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.

“You have to set an objective”: United owners give staunch defence of ambitious project that fans will love to hear

Sir Jim Ratcliffe and Omar Berrada have one again claimed that Manchester United can win the Premier League by 2028.

It was relayed by The Peoples Person last month that Sir Dave Brailsford had unveiled an ambitious plan called “Mission 21” that is a blueprint to deliver the Premier League title, under the umbrella Project 150 which is a direct reference to the club’s 150th anniversary in 2028.

Some have felt that this is overambitious when you consider the scale of work needed at the club.

United lie in 14th position in the league and are a depressing 36 points behind leaders Liverpool at the top of the Premier League.

Nonetheless both Ratcliffe and CEO Berrada reaffirmed the club’s ambitions to win the league in such a short time span.

Speaking to The Times on whether or not the ambition to win the league so soon was realistic Berrada stated, “you have to set an objective right? So you focus everybody’s minds on where you’re trying to get to and it can’t just be open ended.”

“We’re going to try to win the Premier League. We want to do it within a certain time frame and we want to focus all of our efforts and energy on trying to achieve that. That’s ultimately the point.”

Ratcliffe added “we have to test ourselves don’t we?”

The owner also pointed to great rivals Liverpool as an example of what can be achieved in a rather short space of time.

He highlighted the fact that the club made great strides from 2015 until 2019 because they had the right manager and correct people above him.

“Liverpool is quite a good example on timing, where Jurgen Klopp arrived in 2015 and they had Michael Edwards and Ian Graham.”

“The process of rebuilding the squad in Liverpool started in the summer of ’15, they rebuilt the squad in ’15, ’16, ’17 and ’18 and then in the next three years they won everything.”

United fans may find it difficult to envision the club challenging for the highest honours in just three years but things can change rapidly in football. Just two years ago Erik ten Hag had the side in 3rd position in the league and fans will be happy to hear such lofty ambitions from the ownership.

Featured image Michael Regan via Getty Images


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Alex is a huge Manchester United fan, inspired by greats of his homeland such as George Best, Harry Gregg and Norman Whiteside. Proud owner of such niche shirts such as Kleberson, Eric Djemba-Djemba and Gary Neville. Grew up pretending to be Ruud van Nistelrooy and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer in the back garden, with little success.

‘The stadium can be built in five years’

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Tuesday 11 March 2025 10:47

This has to be one of the most exciting projects in the world today.

It starts with the most famous football club in the world, with a billion followers globally.

So it starts with the fans and it starts with the idea of making something which is so intense, it brings you close to the pitch.

Acoustically, it cultivates the roar as you move away from the stadium.

It’s not a fortress surrounded by a sea of cars. It’s open and it’s contained by an umbrella that harvests solar energy, harvesting rainwater.

But it’s protective, and it encloses arguably the largest public space in the world.

It’s welcoming, it’s open. It’s at the very heart of a new neighbourhood. And then it’s part of the city of Manchester, the fastest-growing city in the United Kingdom, a city, again, like no other.

It’s a powerhouse steeped in history.

Trafford Park was the industrial heartland of the nation, a heritage which I have a personal connection to.

My father was a factory worker at Metropolitan-Vickers and then the three masts, the Trident, visible from 40 kilometres, 200 metres high.

So this becomes a global destination.

Normally, a stadium would take 10 years to build. We half that time. Five years.

How do we do that?

By prefabrication. By using the network of Manchester Ship Canal. Bringing it back to a new life. Shipping in components, 160 of them, Meccano-like.

And then we rebuild the Old Trafford station and that becomes the pivot, the processional way to the stadium, welcoming and at the heart of a new sports-led neighbourhood. It’s walkable.

It’s well served by public transport. It’s endowed by nature. It learns from the past. It creates streets. It’s a mixed-use mini-city.

So what makes a global destination? What makes something so special? It’s teamwork. It’s the best brains. The civic leaders, the owners, the consultants, the engineers, the architects, the fans.

The list is so long. It’s a team effort that is at the heart of the success of this project.

Lord Norman Foster is a world-renowned English architect and designer, who founded the Foster + Partners architecture firm.

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‘The world’s best stadium’

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Take a look at nine conceptual images of our proposed new home, courtesy of Foster + Partners.

United confirms ambition to build a new stadium

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by

Communications Department

Tuesday 11 March 2025 09:54

Manchester United has thrown its support behind the Government’s growth agenda by announcing its intention to pursue a new 100,000-seater stadium as the centrepiece of the regeneration of the Old Trafford area.

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.
 
Conceptual images and scaled models of what the new stadium and surrounding area could look like were unveiled on Tuesday by Foster + Partners, the architecture group appointed to design the stadium district. These will provide a masterplan for more detailed feasibility, consultation, design and planning work as the project enters a new phase.

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Sir Jim Ratcliffe, co-owner of Manchester United, 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.   
 
“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.”

Omar Berrada, chief executive of Manchester United, said: “Our long-term objective as a club is to have the world’s best football team playing in the world’s best stadium. We are grateful for the feasibility work done by the Old Trafford Regeneration Task Force exploring options for the future of Old Trafford.

“We have carefully considered its findings, together with the views of thousands of fans and local residents and concluded that a new stadium is the right way forward for Manchester United and our surrounding community. We will now embark on further consultation to ensure that fans and residents continue to be heard as we move towards final decisions.”

Visuals courtesy of Foster + Partners

Sir Jim Ratcliffe says

“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.”

The most successful manager in English football history, Sir Alex Ferguson, said: “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.”

Lord Norman Foster, Founder and Executive Chairman, Foster + Partners, said: “This has to be one of the most exciting projects in the world today, with incredible regional and national significance. It all starts with the fans’ experience, bringing them closer than ever to the pitch and acoustically cultivating a huge roar.

“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. The outward-looking stadium will be the beating heart of a new sustainable district, which is completely walkable, served by public transport, and endowed by nature. It is a mixed-use miniature city of the future – driving a new wave of growth and creating a global destination that Mancunians can be proud of.” 

Visuals courtesy of Foster + Partners

Omar Berrada says

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

Lord Sebastian Coe, chair of the Old Trafford Regeneration Task Force, said: “Today marks an important step forward in what I firmly believe can be the biggest and most exciting urban regeneration project in the UK since the 2012 London Olympics. I am proud to have helped lay the groundwork as chair of the Old Trafford Regeneration Task Force over the past year and would like to thank my fellow members for their contributions.

“Our exploratory work is now complete, and we will hand over responsibility to Manchester United for delivery of the stadium, and the Mayoral Development Corporation to drive forward the wider regeneration.” 

Visuals courtesy of Foster + Partners

Sir Norman Foster says

“This has to be one of the most exciting projects in the world today, with incredible regional and national significance. It all starts with the fans’ experience, bringing them closer than ever to the pitch and acoustically cultivating a huge roar.”

Andy Burnham, mayor of Greater Manchester, said: “Our common goal on the Task Force has been to try to unlock the full power of the club for the benefit of its supporters and for Greater Manchester as a whole – creating thousands of new homes and jobs. If we get this right, the regeneration impact could be bigger and better than London 2012. Manchester United could, and indeed should, have the best football stadium in the world.

“To me, that means a stadium that is true to the traditions of the club, affordable to all, with nobody priced out, and a stadium that sets new standards in the game globally. I believe this vision can be realised, and if so, the benefits for Greater Manchester, the north west and the country will be huge.”

Visuals courtesy of Foster + Partners.

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Tuesday 11 March 2025 09:54

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Gary Neville gives first verdict on Old Trafford redevelopment plans

Gary Neville has described plans for a regenerated Old Trafford as “spectacular” as Manchester United look to improve their worn-out stadium.

Old Trafford has gone from one of the finest grounds in the country to being infested with rats as the Glazer family neglected the club’s home but improving Old Trafford has been a key goal of Sir Jim Ratcliffe since his Ineos company took over a minority share in February 2024.

Man Utd co-owner Ratcliffe set up a task force, chaired by World Athletics president Lord Sebastian Coe, to focus on improving Old Trafford with Gary Neville also part of the discussion.

Neville, who has a number of properties in Manchester, described plans for the new Old Trafford as “spectacular”

“I sat on the last task force committee meeting on Friday and I had a glimpse of what is coming and it looks absolutely spectacular,” Neville said during an interview with Ratcliffe.

The club has appointed architect Lord Norman Foster to oversee the plan which will improve not just the stadium but the surrounding area as well.

The club is supported by the UK government who backed the plans but Ratcliffe said any public money will be used on the area around the stadium rather than Old Trafford itself.

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As to why a renovation is key, the 72-year-old believes if Manchester United have aspirations to be the greatest club in the world, they need a stadium to match it.

“If you take the view that it’s the greatest football club in the world, then if it’s going to build a new stadium it should be a new stadium that’s befitting the greatest club in the world.

“And also a stadium that befits the greatest league in the world because the Premier League is the greatest league in the world.

“And at the moment, if you look at the Premier League, we’ve got some great stadiums, but we don’t have a Bernabeu, do we? And we don’t have the new Nou Camp. We don’t have that in the Premier League, although it’s the greatest league in the world.

“And also, if you look at the north of England, the north of England has won 10 Champions League finals and London has won two, so there’s quite a few reasons there to have the world’s most iconic football stadium in the north of England at the world’s greatest club.”

On architect Foster, whose company designed the renovation of Barcelona’s Camp Nou, Ratcliffe said the fellow United fan was the best in the world.

“I won’t say much more but Norman Foster, who also is a Mancunian and is the world’s greatest architect in my view, has really created the most iconic [design].

“It would be marvelous if Manchester United could go down that road and in five years’ time or six years’ time have that stadium. It would be fabulous.”