logo
Gareth Bale reveals 'brand new offer' to buy Cardiff City FC from Vincent Tan

Gareth Bale reveals 'brand new offer' to buy Cardiff City FC from Vincent Tan

The Star11-07-2025
LONDON: Gareth Bale has revealed that an investment group he is working with has tabled a new offer to take full control of Cardiff City Football Club.
The 35-year-old former Wales, Tottenham Hotspur and Real Madrid star believes he is the right person to lead the League One club back to the Premier League.
Speaking on Front Office Sports Today, Bale said the group has a brand-new offer on the table, which has recently just gone in.
"We think it's a great offer. We are very happy. We think it is very fair, if not more than fair, and it's something that we hope the current owners will seriously consider.
"We would love them to accept so we can take full control and get on with what we want to do and create Cardiff into the club that we know it can be," said Bale.
A source close to the former Wales captain told the PA news agency last month that Bale would not be content to be a bit-part player in any takeover.
Asked what sort of role Bale might take on, the source said it would be a very significant one.
"He is not going to be a bit-part player. This is a guy who has been super-successful and doesn't need to put his name to something just for the sake of it.
"He would be heavily involved. He believes he is the right person for this.
"Cardiff is the only club he wants to do a deal for. Now's the time, with the club in the doldrums, to put some TLC into the club and get them back to the Premier League," said the source.
The Bale consortium is believed to feature both British and American investors.
However, it is understood Bale's camp accepts the decision to sell ultimately rests with Cardiff owner Vincent Tan.
"If (Tan) is willing to sell it, there is no better person as far as custodianship, and with the correct intentions for the place, than Gareth," the source close to Bale said.
The PA news agency has approached Cardiff for comment. – Bernama/PA Media/dpa
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nippon Paint tycoon and Singapore's wealthiest man Goh Cheng Liang passes at 98
Nippon Paint tycoon and Singapore's wealthiest man Goh Cheng Liang passes at 98

Daily Express

timean hour ago

  • Daily Express

Nippon Paint tycoon and Singapore's wealthiest man Goh Cheng Liang passes at 98

Published on: Tuesday, August 12, 2025 Published on: Tue, Aug 12, 2025 By: Malay Mail Text Size: Goh Cheng Liang, who held a majority stake in Japan's Nippon Paint Holdings, had an estimated net worth of US$13 billion, according to Forbes. SINGAPORE: Goh Cheng Liang, founder of Wuthelam Group and Singapore's richest person, died today at the age of 98, his family said, according to a report published in The Straits Times today. According to Forbes' 2025 ranking of the world's billionaires, Goh topped the list for Singapore with an estimated net worth of US$13 billion (RM55 billion). Advertisement He held a majority stake in Japan's Nippon Paint Holdings, which he helped build into a global coatings powerhouse. Born in 1927, he grew up in a rented shophouse room in River Valley and was sent to Johor during World War II, where he helped sell fishing nets. In 1949, he bought surplus paint from a British army auction and began making his own Pigeon Brand paints using a Chinese dictionary to decipher chemical names. His business boomed during the Korean War when imports were restricted. He later became Nippon Paint's distributor in Singapore and founded Wuthelam Holdings in 1974, building it into a multinational company with nearly 60 per cent of Nippon Paint. Goh's other ventures included developing and later selling the former Liang Court mall and Mount Elizabeth Hospital. Known for avoiding publicity, he told The Business Times in 1997 that he preferred private companies to public ones. Through the Goh Foundation, he funded cancer research, treatment facilities and scholarships, and supported welfare agencies in Singapore as well as roads, schools and sanitation systems in Chaozhou, China. A cancer survivor himself, he also backed the Goh Cheng Liang Proton Therapy Centre at the National Cancer Centre Singapore. He is survived by three children, eight grandchildren and a great-grandchild. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia

Calls to boycott American goods grow in India
Calls to boycott American goods grow in India

New Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • New Straits Times

Calls to boycott American goods grow in India

FROM McDonald's and Coca-Cola to Amazon and Apple, United States-based multinationals are facing calls for a boycott in India as business executives and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's supporters stoke anti-American sentiment to protest against US tariff. India, the world's most populous nation, is a key market for American brands that have rapidly expanded to target a growing base of affluent consumers, many of whom remain infatuated with international labels seen as symbols of moving up in life. India, for example, is the biggest market by users for Meta's WhatsApp and Domino's has more restaurants than any other brand in the country. Beverages like Pepsi and Coca-Cola often dominate store shelves, and people still queue up when a new Apple store opens or a Starbucks cafe doles out discounts. Although there was no immediate indication of sales being hit, there's a growing chorus both on social media and offline to buy local and ditch American products after President Donald Trump imposed a 50 per cent tariff on goods from India, rattling exporters and damaging ties between New Delhi and Washington. McDonald's, Coca-Cola, Amazon and Apple did not immediately respond to Reuters queries. Manish Chowdhary, cofounder of India's Wow Skin Science, took to LinkedIn with a video message urging support for farmers and startups to make "Made in India" a "global obsession", and to learn from South Korea whose food and beauty products are famous worldwide. "We have lined up for products from thousands of miles away. We have proudly spent on brands that we don't own, while our own makers fight for attention in their own country," he said. Rahm Shastry, chief executive officer of India's DriveU, which provides a car driver on call service, wrote on LinkedIn: "India should have its own home-grown Twitter/Google/YouTube/WhatsApp/FB — like China has." To be fair, Indian retail companies give foreign brands like Starbucks stiff competition in the domestic market, but going global has been a challenge. Indian IT services firms, however, have become deeply entrenched in the global economy, with the likes of TCS and Infosys providing software solutions to clients world over. On Sunday, Modi made a "special appeal" for becoming self-reliant, telling a gathering in Bengaluru that Indian technology companies made products for the world but "now is the time for us to give more priority to India's needs". He did not name any company. Even as anti-American protests simmer, Tesla launched its second showroom in India, with Monday's opening attended by Indian commerce ministry officials and US embassy officials. The Swadeshi Jagran Manch group, which is linked to Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party, took out small public rallies across India on Sunday, urging people to boycott American brands. "People are now looking at Indian products. It will take some time to fructify," said Ashwani Mahajan, the group's co-convenor. "This is a call for nationalism, patriotism." He also shared with Reuters a table his group is circulating on WhatsApp, listing Indian brands of bath soaps, toothpaste and cold drinks that people could choose over foreign ones. On social media, one of the group's campaigns is a graphic titled "Boycott foreign food chains", with logos of McDonald's and many other restaurant brands. In Uttar Pradesh, Rajat Gupta, 37, who was dining at a McDonald's in Lucknow on Monday, said he wasn't concerned about the tariff protests and simply enjoyed the 49-rupee coffee he considered good value for money.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store