I'LL bet those United fans who protested about the Glazer takeover feel really stupid now.
How many times have you heard that said over the past fortnight?
Actually, those United fans who protested long and hard about the occupation of their club feel more justified than ever that they were right to stand up to what amounts to an insidious threat not just to Manchester United, but to English football, and even European football, in particular.
The fact that United have just won the Premiership in thrilling style, have splashed out on three players who could boost them from top English team to a European super-power once more, and continue to play in front of packed houses, is irrelevant.
The argument was never about that.
If you truly think that the Glazer takeover was a good thing, try asking the people who can no longer afford to go and watch their beloved team, on top of 12 per cent price increases in 2006, 14 per cent price increases in 2007, and the introduction of the compulsory automatic cup ticket scheme.
And then consider where this is leading. Talk to people in the Glazer camp and one thing becomes crystal clear - the economic cleansing of Old Trafford is not yet over.
There will be more price increases, more ways of screwing every last penny out of the support, until there is a threat of empty seats. Then the Glazer family will either ease off or cut and run.
United's response is that ticket prices still represent good value for money, and that there is a 14,000-strong waiting list for season tickets.
That last point is a sickening reminder of where United fans now stand. If you don't like it, clear off because we will find someone else to take your place.
United are no longer interested in their traditional fan base. Your average Joe from Stretford turns up at five to three, cheers on the team and then goes home for his tea and a couple of pints in his local boozer. All you get out of that particular economic unit is the price of his ticket.
But if you can get rid of him, and replace him with an economic unit called Henry from Surrey, the club also gets money from his Megastore shopping spree, dining at Red Cafe, museum visit, hotel stay and so on.
Shackles
It makes perfect business sense in the short term, get rid of the old fans, bring in McFans.
And if, or when, the football boom starts to grind to a halt as the yuppies find a new craze, it is the traditional support to whom United will turn, to find that they have discovered the joys of FC United, bird- watching, or DIY on a Saturday afternoon.
When the battle raged over the rights and wrongs of the takeover two years ago, the pro-Glazer lobby said that the family would bring a wealth of business nous, a pedigree of sporting success with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and would free the club from the shackles of reporting its every move to the Stock Exchange.
Those people are now smugly pronouncing themselves right, but that was never the issue.
The title success this season was achieved despite the Glazers, not because of them. It was entirely down to the genius of Sir Alex Ferguson and the enduring quality of the likes of Paul Scholes and Ryan Giggs.
And the money that has been splashed on Nani, Anderson and Owen Hargreaves is not the Glazers' money. They have not put a penny into Manchester United - the money the club has been spending has been from its support, is a result of last year's windfalls from the sales of Ruud van Nistelrooy and Jon Obi Mikel, and from the unexpected bonanza from the sale of overseas TV rights.
What the Glazers have done is take £44m OUT of the club, to pay some of the interest on the debts they incurred to buy United. That money could have been used to peg back prices.
It is curious that at a time which should have been one of great exhilaration for United fans, and then bringing in interesting new players, the internet was full of cries of anguish.
I wrote an article two years ago which claimed that the Glazer era might just coincide with a new era of trophy success, but that many of the club's traditional support would be left with their noses pressed against the window, watching the party going on in what used to be their house.
This is not a `told-you-so' but a warning - the situation will continue to get worse.
What do you think of the Glazer takeover now? Have your say.
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Showing comments 1 to 25 and replies | View All
Demo, Glossop (11/06/2007 at 09:49)
the alternative is for us not to go to matches and watch our beloved club collapse and be lost forever!
Jo (11/06/2007 at 10:08)
Bradley (11/06/2007 at 10:20)
Reds4ever, Entrance N410 (11/06/2007 at 10:33)
Birdy, Ireland (11/06/2007 at 10:38)
A Mancunian, Manchester (11/06/2007 at 10:41)
JonyB-), North Staffs (11/06/2007 at 10:44)
Michio, County Louth (11/06/2007 at 10:58)
Not much comfort, but some.
chris, oxford (11/06/2007 at 10:59)
Let the arguing begin... ;-)
bratasalava bob, the man for the job (he gets about you know!) (11/06/2007 at 11:00)
Ted the Red, Bolton (11/06/2007 at 11:01)
I have supported ManU for over 50 years and will still do so as they were and still are the team of excitement and skill.
I was born and grew up in Moston but where are you from Levenshulme probably?
Ted the Red
Jon (11/06/2007 at 11:05)
The fact is that the Glazers are turning the screws on the fans, pricing those out of being at Old Trafford who have in some cases had season tickets in their families for years....
Wake up. You cannot replace passionate fans with 'McFans' and expect them to remain loyal or to create an electric atmosphere at Old Trafford.
The traditional support which has made Manchester United what they are today are being pushed away and that's sickening.
Keefus, Astley (11/06/2007 at 11:06)
Reds4ever, Entrance N410 (11/06/2007 at 11:10)
bratasalava bob, the man for the job (he gets about you know!) (11/06/2007 at 11:15)
JonyB-), North Staffs (11/06/2007 at 11:20)
Seriously though - can't see how continuing this debate is going to get us anywhere other than knowing as owners they want to make money and be successful and as fans we'll have no real voice. The Edwards where the same. Only thing is they got the club on the cheap and made a hell of alot more than any owner will ever do again!!
DENNIS LAWS BACK HEEL (11/06/2007 at 11:39)
dennis tueart's lovechild, Bury (11/06/2007 at 11:44)
We got plenty of spare seats at COMS at the moment. Some of you unlucky United fans who cannot afford to go watch the 'Mighty Man U', or those of you who are disillusioned, might want to come and see City and then you might realise that life at United isnt that bad!
Get a life!
Reds4ever, Entrance N410 (11/06/2007 at 11:51)
Steve Heywood (11/06/2007 at 11:52)
Adrian Lucas (11/06/2007 at 11:55)
The football has been great for many years now, but the 'experience' of going to Old Trafford is nothing like it used to be. The cost of watching a game from 'my' seat next season - £44. The loyalty of the fans who cannot renew - Priceless. United have only looked at the first part of that equation. So much so, they force people to buy tickets for matches they cannot go to. Not me though. Next season, 'going to the match' will see me at Gigg Lane watching FC United. I suspect I will not be alone.
Utd-For-Life, marseille ex-stretford (11/06/2007 at 12:07)
I read somewhere yesterday that its even cheaper to watch AC Milan or Barcelona than it is to watch Wigan. That can't be right, no matter how the marketing boys dress it up and talk about players wages, cost of stadiums blah de blah blah.
Driving out the hardcore support and leaving no more room for them in our stadiums will just kill the atmosphere at matches and sever the links the clubs have built with their local communities.
Compare that to here in Marseille, where it cost 60 quid for a season ticket, with cheapest tickets for one off matches at 7 quid. It cost me 7 quid to watch bolton v marseille in the uefa cup last year. I laughed when i heard the price. I thought it was xmas.
Football over here is accessible to absolutely everyone. And you can see it when you go to the stadium... the atmosphere is fantastic.
Frank Old Trafford (11/06/2007 at 12:20)
Listening to Brennan I get the impression that he'd like to see OT full of flat cap wearing old men moaning about the lack of decent rancid flat mild, whose appreciation of football stretches to good crunching tackles and a good ol' hoof up the pitch. He really is a pathetic specimen!
Somebody should inform him that the 80s are well and truly over, yuppies?!!?
This Luddite rant is a disgrace to Manchester and an insult to the intelligence. His claim that the message is now clear off if you can't afford it is the same as it always has been and the same in every club. Joe from Stretford???? Henry from Surrey???? This is just xenophobic provincial rubbish!
I suppose Brennan is referring to the working man of Manchester, well I know more about them than he does having worked on several shop floors in Trafford park. For a start you'll see more Armani and CK than flat caps and hob nailed boots, not all of it from official retailers. I've seen the price of a season ticket be blown in a good weekend down the clubs and casinos. The season ticket wouldn't go very far to help pay for the 2 or 3 holidays in the Med or Disneyland either.
The world has changed, so when Brennan is in the pub with his flat cap and his pint of rancid mild reminiscing about how the Edwards family became millionaires selling dead animals to the working folk of Manchester and then fleecing them at the turnstiles, he should look up and take a good look around, and he might see the tanned people wearing strange southern looking clothes (designer) drinking alcopops and imported beers.
If people want to be miserable gits like Brennan then they can burn their season tickets to spite themselves. Anyone living in the real world will be overjoyed to have a season ticket to go and watch literally the best team in the world in excellent first class surroundings.
MUFC is exactly the same as MEN, they provide entertainment for a price. If the entertainment is not worth it then don¿t pay. If they want to stay in business they¿ll sort their act out. Either way, the debt or the profit will never be seen by the likes of me and you!
Davey Boy, Kuwait (11/06/2007 at 12:30)
Having been a old stretford ender I remember the days of being able to get in on the day, and cue for your European Cup, FA Cup tickets with you tokens out of the program stuck to a moth eaten token sheet aaaah those were the day. Remember getting my last token just as I reached the ticket window for the 1967 Euro Cup final....started the day 5 short but took the chance anyway!
Simon Smith (11/06/2007 at 12:31)