Man Utd Jim Ratcliffe Sir Jim Ratcliffe Usa Manchester United soccer on Man Utd Jim Ratcliffe Sir Jim Ratcliffe Usa

Manchester United to consult Ineos on January transfers and Erik ten Hag future

breakingnews.ie

Manchester United must consult with Ineos over any January transfer deals or a move to sack manager Erik ten Hag prior to the Premier League ratifying its deal to purchase 25 per cent of the club’s shares.

United announced on Christmas Eve that an agreement had been reached with Ineos and its chairman Sir Jim Ratcliffe, a boyhood Red Devils fan, which will give Ineos responsibility over football operations once the regulatory approval process is complete.

That is expected to take four to six weeks and run beyond the end of the January transfer window. However, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing related to the deal contains a provision guaranteeing that the company will be consulted on football matters in the interim.

This includes “appointing, dismissing or accepting the resignation of any director of football or first team manager of the company” as well as entering into or continuing any discussion concerning the purchase or sale of any player.

Related News
Just hours after Sir Jim Ratcliffe had sat down with Manchester United supporters to discuss his vision for the future, the Glazers were slapping hands with line-backers of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers more than 3,000 miles away.
Tottenham twice pegged back Manchester United to deny Erik ten Hag's men victory as Jim Ratcliffe attended his first match since agreeing a partial takeover of the club.
Tottenham twice pegged back Manchester United to deny Erik ten Hag’s men victory as Sir Jim Ratcliffe attended his first match since agreeing a partial takeover of the club.
Manchester United are planning to return to the United States for their pre-season tour and are expected to spend part of it back in San Diego.
When Manchester United lock horns with Wigan Athletic in the FA Cup on Monday evening, Amad will be targeting his first competitive start in almost eight months.
Golfer and Manchester United supporter Rory McIlroy does not believe the 'toxic culture' at Old Trafford will change until the Glazers have left the club.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.