The takeover of Manchester City has led to a boom in shirt sales and season ticket purchases.
The takeover of Manchester City has led to a boom in shirt sales and season ticket purchases.

Takeover met with open arms



After enduring three decades of glaring underachievement, Manchester City fans can be excused their new-found exhilaration, the feeling that all the disappointment of recent times will soon be forgotten as the takeover by an Abu Dhabi investment group transforms perennial also-rans into world beaters. Less than a month ago, the City faithful were in their customary preseason state of depression; a discussion at one fans' website, Blue Moon, repeated rumours of imminent financial meltdown under the heading "Administration within a fortnight".

But the acquisition of the club by the privately owned Abu Dhabi United Group for Development and Investment (ADUG) has inspired an extraordinary feel-good spirit, its effects including a boom in replica kit and season ticket sales and even increased productivity in at least one workplace. To the delight of City fans, much of the British press has devoted substantial column inches to speculation about the stars now assumed to be within City's reach because of the expected injection of funds.

However, a note of caution is being sounded by sources close to ADUG. The group is only now beginning the process of examining the club's accounts amid concern that talk of unlimited cash for transfers could lead to crazily inflated fees being demanded. "There has been a lot of talk about which players we will sign and how much money we will spend on them," The National has been told by one figure with intimate knowledge of the takeover. "We now have to be practical, calm things down a bit and get on with the real business of running a football club."

Sources in Abu Dhabi have been at pains to counter western reports suggesting that the deal is a government initiative, pointing out that ADUG is a private equity group headed by Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed. The City manager, Mark Hughes, has also warned against unrealistic expectations about who will be arriving at the club's Eastlands stadium when the English Premier League's so-called transfer window opens on Jan 1. "There are exceptionally talented players around that we would bring to the club if they were made available," said Hughes.

"The difficulty will be getting the clubs to release those players. We obviously are talking about players whose clubs are involved in the Champions League. They may not be very receptive to losing those players midway through a Champions League season." Only City fans in their 30s or older were alive when the club last won a senior trophy - and even that triumph, in 1976, was in the relatively unglamorous League Cup.

But there has been an unmistakable surge of optimism in recent days as fans dream of a serious bid to break the Big Four dominance of Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool and, above all, City's bitter rivals Manchester United. Boxes of unsold team shirts, left over from Christmas, have been dusted down and sold. Vicky Kloss, City's acting head of communications, said the 800 season tickets sold since the announcement of the deal was greater than sales during the whole of the previous month.

There is also enormous interest in the next Man City game, coincidentally a home match against Chelsea, the big-spending club City beat to the £32.5 million (Dh211m) signature of the Real Madrid forward Robinho. With Chelsea sponsored by Etihad Airlines, the fixture on Saturday is inevitably being billed as the "Abu Dhabi Derby". Etihad also stands to gain from the takeover. A sharp rise in bookings on its Abu Dhabi to Manchester route would not surprise airline executives.

"If it follows the typical pattern, then we would expect some boost," said Tom Clarke, a spokesman. "Any increase in the global profile of Abu Dhabi tends to encourage more visitors." One City season-ticket holder, Keith Grahams, spoke for many when he said fans had at last been given a reason to be cheerful. "I work in a factory not far from Eastlands," said Mr Grahams, 38. "There are lots of City fans and all we have been talking about is how the new owners are going to change things.

"It has been years since we have won everything and to be honest it is hard to get out of bed and go to work on a Monday morning when we have been beaten at the weekend. But now we are walking round with smiles on our faces. The boss is delighted; he has never seen us working so hard." In the UAE interest has also been strong, with the local supporters' club inundated with inquiries from people eager to watch Man City in action on television and at matches.

Karl Roe, a member of the Manchester City Supporters' Club Dubai, said interest had grown "a thousandfold". "Our website has gone from tens of hits to thousands of hits in days," he said. Mr Roe said he had also received dozens of telephone calls about the takeover - some from unexpected sources. "It's been Man United fans, Chelsea fans, and, apart from the Chelsea fans, everybody has been positive," he said.

But he echoed the view of long-suffering fans now looking for an instant turnaround in the team's fortunes. Now that it had the spending power to match the biggest clubs, he said, an improvement on last season's ninth place was a minimum demand for this season, with a top four finish the aim for 2008-2010. "The guys in Abu Dhabi have got to keep on investing," he said. "They have got to become members of the Manchester City family and culture, and we've got to accept them.

"Everybody wants to see somebody else break the mix of the big four. If it's going to be anyone, it's going to be Man City." Mark Lynch, the Dubai supporters' club chairman, said many people wanted to know where they could watch Man City games on television. Arabs, Indians, Pakistanis and westerners had all shown interest, he said. "It's been quite phenomenal for the past four or five days - it's quite exciting," he said.

Dr Sulaiman al Fahim, who will sit on the Manchester City board on behalf of the new owners, is expected to attend the Chelsea game and, on Thursday, a press conference to present Robinho as a City player. Some supporters are already suggesting possible chants in Dr Fahim's honour. They have been less enthusiastic about talk of luring Cristiano Ronaldo from their Manchester rivals, United. Subscribers to an online fan site reacted with horror to the idea of him appearing in City's sky blue colours, though one offered his own compromise, designed to stop him scoring goals for United: "Buy him and then have him selling programmes."

@email:dbardsley@thenational.ae

The White Lotus: Season three

Creator: Mike White

Starring: Walton Goggins, Jason Isaacs, Natasha Rothwell

Rating: 4.5/5

Picture of Joumblatt and Hariri breaking bread sets Twitter alight

Mr Joumblatt’s pessimism regarding the Lebanese political situation didn’t stop him from enjoying a cheerful dinner on Tuesday with several politicians including Mr Hariri.

Caretaker Culture Minister Ghattas Khoury tweeted a picture of the group sitting around a table at a discrete fish restaurant in Beirut’s upscale Sodeco area.

Mr Joumblatt told The National that the fish served at Kelly’s Fish lounge had been very good.

“They really enjoyed their time”, remembers the restaurant owner. “Mr Hariri was taking selfies with everybody”.

Mr Hariri and Mr Joumblatt often have dinner together to discuss recent political developments.

Mr Joumblatt was a close ally of Mr Hariri’s assassinated father, former prime minister Rafik Hariri. The pair were leading figures in the political grouping against the 15-year Syrian occupation of Lebanon that ended after mass protests in 2005 in the wake of Rafik Hariri’s murder. After the younger Hariri took over his father’s mantle in 2004, the relationship with Mr Joumblatt endured.

However, the pair have not always been so close. In the run-up to the election last year, Messrs Hariri and Joumblatt went months without speaking over an argument regarding the new proportional electoral law to be used for the first time. Mr Joumblatt worried that a proportional system, which Mr Hariri backed, would see the influence of his small sect diminished.

With so much of Lebanese politics agreed in late-night meetings behind closed doors, the media and pundits put significant weight on how regularly, where and with who senior politicians meet.

In the picture, alongside Messrs Khoury and Hariri were Mr Joumbatt and his wife Nora, PSP politician Wael Abou Faour and Egyptian ambassador to Lebanon Nazih el Nagari.

The picture of the dinner led to a flurry of excitement on Twitter that it signified an imminent government formation. “God willing, white smoke will rise soon and Walid Beik [a nickname for Walid Joumblatt] will accept to give up the minister of industry”, one user replied to the tweet. “Blessings to you…We would like you to form a cabinet”, wrote another.  

The next few days will be crucial in determining whether these wishes come true.

At a glance

Global events: Much of the UK’s economic woes were blamed on “increased global uncertainty”, which can be interpreted as the economic impact of the Ukraine war and the uncertainty over Donald Trump’s tariffs.

 

Growth forecasts: Cut for 2025 from 2 per cent to 1 per cent. The OBR watchdog also estimated inflation will average 3.2 per cent this year

 

Welfare: Universal credit health element cut by 50 per cent and frozen for new claimants, building on cuts to the disability and incapacity bill set out earlier this month

 

Spending cuts: Overall day-to day-spending across government cut by £6.1bn in 2029-30 

 

Tax evasion: Steps to crack down on tax evasion to raise “£6.5bn per year” for the public purse

 

Defence: New high-tech weaponry, upgrading HM Naval Base in Portsmouth

 

Housing: Housebuilding to reach its highest in 40 years, with planning reforms helping generate an extra £3.4bn for public finances

The biog

Name: Dhabia Khalifa AlQubaisi

Age: 23

How she spends spare time: Playing with cats at the clinic and feeding them

Inspiration: My father. He’s a hard working man who has been through a lot to provide us with everything we need

Favourite book: Attitude, emotions and the psychology of cats by Dr Nicholes Dodman

Favourit film: 101 Dalmatians - it remind me of my childhood and began my love of dogs 

Word of advice: By being patient, good things will come and by staying positive you’ll have the will to continue to love what you're doing