logo
US Owners See Value in English Football: Gary Neville

US Owners See Value in English Football: Gary Neville

Bloomberga day ago
Gary Neville, broadcaster, businessman and part owner of lower league football team Salford City, says American owners see real value in English clubs and will continue to buy in and invest in them. 'Americans look at the price tags that are associated with clubs and actually it is very good value,' Neville tells Bloomberg Television. The American insurance giant AIG has taken a minority stake in Salford. (Source: Bloomberg)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Manchester City begin title quest with convincing win against Wolves
Manchester City begin title quest with convincing win against Wolves

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Manchester City begin title quest with convincing win against Wolves

Erling Haaland and new signings Tijjani Reinders and Rayan Cherki combined as Manchester City thrashed Wolves 4-0 in their Premier League opener. Haaland struck twice either side of a fine effort from Reijnders, and substitute Cherki added a late fourth, as City began their quest for a seventh title in nine years in convincing fashion at Molineux. Reijnders also had a hand in both of Haaland's goals in what was a particularly impressive introduction to life in the English top flight. Whilst it may be premature to suggest City have found the ideal replacement for Kevin De Bruyne, it was a very promising showing from the Dutchman. His presence brought dynamism to a City side that also raised eyebrows in other areas. Most notably, goalkeeper James Trafford was handed a debut and Ederson – described as 'number one' by manager Pep Guardiola this week despite speculation over his future – was missing from the squad altogether. The club, however, later confirmed the Brazilian's absence was due to illness, with the 31-year-old suffering from gastroenteritis. John Stones returned in defence for his first appearance since February and another new recruit, Rayan Ait-Nouri, featured against the club he left in the summer. It was an emotional occasion for Wolves as they paid a series of tributes before and during the game to Diogo Jota, their former striker who died last month following a car accident. The visitors assumed control early on but did not create a clear-cut opening until the 19th minute when captain Bernardo Silva crossed for Haaland but the Norwegian, having to stretch too much, headed over. City had some moments of alarm as Wolves got behind the defence. Marshall Munetsi thought he scored when he headed past Trafford from a Matt Doherty cross but he was clearly offside. A chance also appeared to open up for Jean-Ricner Bellegarde but again the flag was raised. City took charge of the game after two moments of brilliance from Reijnders in the space of three minutes. The Netherlands international, whose outings at the Club World Cup may have helped him settle, played a delightful lob over the defence for Rico Lewis and his pull-back presented Haaland with a simple tap-in. Moments later the former AC Milan midfielder applied the finishing touch himself with a superb low strike across goal after Andre Gomes lost possession to Oscar Bobb. Jorgen Strand Larsen spurned a good chance to pull one back after the break when he side-footed narrowly wide and the same player also forced Trafford to palm over. Haaland increased City's lead just after the hour following more incisive work from Reijnders, who received a long ball from Trafford and exchanged passes with Bobb on the right. He continued his run and pulled back for Haaland to sweep home from the edge of the area. Cherki, having been on the field just eight minutes, added to Wolves' woes when he drove in from distance nine minutes from time after combining with Nico O'Reilly.

📸 Brawl in Mallorca?! Barça match descends into pub fight
📸 Brawl in Mallorca?! Barça match descends into pub fight

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

📸 Brawl in Mallorca?! Barça match descends into pub fight

What happens in Mallorca outside the Schinkenstraße? Exactly, the same in green. The first half between Mallorca and FC Barcelona was completely wild. As so often, both teams went at it right from the start. After just 33 minutes, Mallorca's Manu Morlanes was sent off with a yellow-red card. Only six minutes later, Vedat Muriqi saw a straight red. The striker hit Barça's new signing Joan Garcia in the face with his foot. Don't worry, the Catalans retaliated: Raphinha came in way too late against the former Dortmund player Morey and completely took him down in injury time. To the disbelief of the hosts, he only saw yellow for brawl-like atmosphere continued even after the final whistle. As they headed to the locker room, several players clashed before the break finally came. If you're in the mood for a good boxing match – enjoy the second half. This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇩🇪 here. 📸 Alex Caparros - 2025 Getty Images

Fan arrested after alleged racial abuse at Bradford City game
Fan arrested after alleged racial abuse at Bradford City game

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Fan arrested after alleged racial abuse at Bradford City game

A FAN in the away section has been arrested after an allegation of racist abuse at the University of Bradford stadium today. City confirmed that one of their players was targeted and police swiftly removed the individual in question from the Luton section at Valley Parade. A club statement said: 'Bradford City AFC strongly condemns racism and discrimination in all forms. We have a zero tolerance policy to such, unacceptable behaviour. 'We will fully cooperate with all ongoing police investigations.' Bantams boss Graham Alexander said: 'We saw it last night in the Liverpool game. It's got to be zero tolerance. 'There's no excuse for it at all, whoever says it. There's no place for it. 'I think the football world is handling that quite well and quite strictly and rightly so. 'Fingers crossed, it does get stamped out eventually by everybody. It's a societal problem. 'I'm sure it will be dealt with in the right way. I had a conversation with the referee straight after the game so hopefully that will be sorted. 'There's no place for it and I think it's a bad look on any club. It's nothing to do with Bradford City or Luton Town, it's one person saying the wrong thing in a wrong way.'

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