Gary Neville about Manchester United, Salford City and Football Regulator tikitaka News

tikitaka News

Football News

Gary Neville about Manchester United, Salford City and Football Regulator

Neville spoke one day after the announcement of the second division’s outfit with BBC Sport by Salford City’s Moor Lane Ground that only 50-year-old and long-time friend David Beckham as minority shareholders from the famous class of 92 ‘, which had bought the club in 2014, will remain as minority shareholders.

Salford announced itself with a series of documentary film series by Fly-on-the-Wall, which recorded her remarkable progress from the eighth stage of the English pyramid to the football league.

It was a concept similar to that that has recently been used by Wrexham’s Hollywood owners.

While Salford has stayed in the second division since 2019 and has remained her latest chance to make the play-offs on May 3. When they did not win the victory they needed with already outdated Carlisle, Wrexham has passed them and is now celebrating the promotion for the championship.

The local rival Stockport County also passed them, and Neville admitted that the recent recruitment of Salford was not good enough.

“We have accepted in the past five years, we have not achieved success on the field that we should have,” he said. “That is a fact.

“There is no cathedral of it.”

It became apparent that not only the class of 92 members reached the end of the investment that they could make, the businessman of Singapore and Valencia owner Peter Lim came to the same conclusion.

Lim has banked the club in the past 11 years due to losses of 28 million GBP after finding that the “class of 92” should be responsible for the operation of the Moor Lane.

This season, Neville and Beckham would be a consortium of nine prominent investors in a number of industries this season, which were obtained about the reputation damage through initial talks about a potential takeover that the English defender had obtained about the reputation damage.

“This is” protection of our reputation, “said Neville.

“A potential multi-club partner reported, but I realized that we were used as a machine to hand over players.

“I thought ‘close’ that was not for me. I will not watch Salford City over the next five years to serve other clubs with players.

“I had the feeling that I became a slave for another majority owner and do what they wanted. I would come to this floor and almost feel like a stranger in my own house.

“I didn’t want that. I can’t feel that way in my life at that time.”



more…

LEAVE A RESPONSE

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *