Billionaire Jim Ratcliffe’s first year at Man United has not gone to plan

Billionaire Jim Ratcliffe’s first year at Man United has not gone to plan
Man United’s Portuguese midfielder Bruno Fernandes lifts the trophy to celebrate their victory at the end of the English FA Cup final between Man City and Man United at Wembley stadium, on May 25, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 18 February 2025
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Billionaire Jim Ratcliffe’s first year at Man United has not gone to plan

Billionaire Jim Ratcliffe’s first year at Man United has not gone to plan
  • Ratcliffe said his investment was “just the beginning of our journey to take Manchester United back to the top of English, European and world football”
  • “Fans should not be paying the price for previous bad ownership & bad management,” Manchester United Supporters Trust posted on X

MANCHESTER: It’s been a year since one of Britain’s richest men bought into its most famous soccer team and vowed to bring the good times back.
So far, it hasn’t gone to plan for Manchester United or Jim Ratcliffe.
The record 20-time English champion are languishing in the bottom half of the Premier League, losing vast sums of money every year and facing fan unrest.
Even head coach Ruben Amorim said recently that this might be the worst team in the club’s storied history.
That’s not all on Ratcliffe, the billionaire owner of petrochemicals giant INEOS, but it has been a rocky start since he paid $1.3 billion for an initial 25 percent stake in United and assumed control of their soccer operations.
There have been high profile hirings and firings, brutal cost cutting, a hike in ticket prices and new lows on the field for a team that had been in decline for more than a decade before he became minority owner.
While there was triumph in the FA Cup last year, that success has been overshadowed by supporter protests, job losses, unconvincing transfers and humbling defeats.
Bold plans
Ratcliffe said his investment was “just the beginning of our journey to take Manchester United back to the top of English, European and world football.”
Those ambitions feel further away now than they have in decades, with United 15th in the standings and closer to the relegation zone than the top six after a woeful campaign. Sunday’s 1-0 loss to Tottenham was the 12th in the league this season and an eighth under Amorim, who only took charge in November.
Amorim said: “I have a lot of problems, my job is so hard, but I am here to continue my job to the next week with my beliefs.”
Major overhaul
He was one of a number of key hires made as part of Ratcliffe’s overhaul of United’s soccer operations.
Omar Berrada was lured away from Manchester City to become CEO and Dan Ashworth left Newcastle to take up the role of sporting director. Jason Wilcox, formerly director of City’s academy, became technical director.
Key figures at Ratcliffe’s Ineos Sport, Dave Brailsford and Jean-Claude Blanc, were appointed to the board and Amorim became the final piece of a new leadership team after former manager Erik ten Hag was fired in October.
But that restructuring has been far from a smooth process.
Ten Hag was fired three months after being handed a one-year contract extension with United having lost four of their opening nine league games.
Ashworth left the club less than six months after taking up his role, and after months of negotiations to take him away from Newcastle.
They were expensive missteps.
In total it cost United 10.4 million pounds ($13.09 million) to pay off Ten Hag and his staff and another 11 million pounds ($13.85 million) to trigger Amorim’s release from Sporting Lisbon.
It was reported it cost between 2 and 3 million pounds ($2.5-3.78 million) to hire Ashworth, who spent five months on gardening leave during negotiations with Newcastle.
Cost cutting
Those numbers make uncomfortable reading at a time when United has implemented cost-saving initiatives that they said included staff redundancies of around 250 roles. More could be on the way, according to reports.
In October it emerged that managerial great Alex Ferguson was not beyond the reach of those measures. He will step down from his lucrative role as club ambassador at the end of the season.
In addition to cuts, United raised their lowest-priced tickets to 66 pounds ($81) partway through the season, up from 40 pounds ($49).
They defended that decision by telling fans it could not sustain their current financial losses and were in danger of breaching league rules if they did not act. United reported losses last year of 113.2 million pounds ($140 million).
“We will get back to a cash positive position as soon as possible and we will have to make some difficult choices to get there,” they said in a letter to fans.
Fan protests
That explanation has not gone down well with supporters.
“Fans should not be paying the price for previous bad ownership & bad management,” Manchester United Supporters Trust posted on X. “The supporters bring far more value than the simple collective ticket revenue.”
Supporters spent years trying to drive out the American Glazer family, which is still majority owner, and there continues to be anger toward them after Ratcliffe’s investment.
There have been jeers for the team while United’s performances on the field have continued to slide.
New lows
Ratcliffe’s first season as co-owner saw United endure their worst league campaign in 34 years when they finished in eighth place.
The end of his first full season could be even worse.
The last time they lost 12 of their first 25 games in a league season was in the 1973-74 campaign when they were relegated from the top flight.
Transfer strategy
United have spent around $260 million on players in the two transfer windows under Ratcliffe, but the squad still looks well short of the quality required to challenge for the title.
Forward Joshua Zirkzee has struggled to adapt to the Premier League and defender Leny Yoro missed a large part of the season through injury.
The pressure of complying with the league’s financial rules has placed uncertainty on United’s ability to spend big in the summer to bring in players to suit Amorim’s preferred system, and there is unlikely to be a quick fix.
Stadium rebuild
Ratcliffe wants a world class stadium, either by way of redeveloping United’s iconic Old Trafford or building one from new.
His plans, which include an ambitious redevelopment of the surrounding area, have been backed by the UK government. Financing them, however, is another issue and it is not yet clear where that money will come from.
The modernization of United’s Carrington training ground is well underway after 50 million pounds ($63 million) of investment.
The future
United haven’t lifted the league title since Ferguson’s last season in 2013 and behind the scenes the focus is on winning it for a record-extending 21st time. But with Liverpool on course to equal United’s haul of 20 this season, it is the club’s great rival from Merseyside that could set that new bar first.
Ratcliffe is a hugely successful businessman but, as he is discovering, that does not guarantee success in soccer.


Cavaliers crush Knicks in battle of NBA East elite

Cavaliers crush Knicks in battle of NBA East elite
Updated 22 February 2025
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Cavaliers crush Knicks in battle of NBA East elite

Cavaliers crush Knicks in battle of NBA East elite
  • Donovan Mitchell scored 27 points to lead six Cavs players to score in double figures
  • Cleveland out-scored the Knicks 66-38 in the paint and held a 23-6 edge in fast-break points

LOS ANGELES, United States: The Cleveland Cavaliers boosted their NBA-best record with a 142-105 romp past the New York Knicks on Friday, tightening their grip on the Eastern Conference lead with an all-around dominant display.
Donovan Mitchell scored 27 points to lead six Cavs players to score in double figures, connecting on five of seven three-pointers as Cleveland drilled 19 from beyond the arc.
Cleveland out-scored the Knicks 66-38 in the paint and held a 23-6 edge in fast-break points, pushing their lead to as many as 42 on the way to a sixth straight victory.
Evan Mobley added 21 points and Jarrett Allen scored 10 before departing in the third quarter with a right hand injury.
Cleveland guard Darius Garland took a hard fall in the first half, striking his head on the court, but stayed in the game.
Jalen Brunson scored 16 of his 26 points in the first quarter for the Knicks but was held scoreless in the second period as the Cavs roared to a 77-50 halftime lead.
Karl-Anthony Towns scored 23 points for New York, who are in third place in the East but fell to 0-6 this season against the three teams with the league’s best records: Cleveland, Boston and Oklahoma City.
“I think the biggest thing was just try to set the tone early,” Mitchell said, adding that the determination to dominate had nothing to do with the Knicks’ first-round playoff win over the Cavs two seasons ago and everything to do with the fact that they could yet meet in this post-season.
“For us, it’s about how do we continue to build and get better – we may see them in the playoffs,” Mitchell said. “So we’re trying to measure ourselves, continue to do what we’ve been doing.”
It came down to the wire in Orlando, where Memphis star Ja Morant drove for a layup that tied it at 104-104 with 1:50 remaining and Desmond Bane delivered the decisive free-throw in the Grizzlies’ 105-104 victory over the Magic.
Morant scored 23 points while Bane and Jaren Jackson Jr. added 16 apiece for the Grizzlies, with Jackson blocking a potential game-winner by Orlando’s Paolo Banchero at the buzzer.
Milwaukee’s trade-deadline acquisition Kyle Kuzma scored 19 points to lead the Bucks to a 104-101 victory over his former team, the Washington Wizards.
Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo was limited by foul trouble and scored 18 points before fouling out with 3:37 left to play.
Khris Middleton, who arrived in Washington in the four-team deal that sent Kuzma to Milwaukee, scored 12 points against his former team in his Wizards debut.
Down by 10 with 4:53 to play, the Wizards cut the deficit to 102-101 on Middleton’s three-pointer with 1:01 remaining.
But Brook Lopez made a pair of free-throws and blocked a Middleton layup, with Middleton coming up empty again on a last-gasp three-point attempt.


Champions Spain fight back in Women’s Nations League opener, England held

Champions Spain fight back in Women’s Nations League opener, England held
Updated 22 February 2025
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Champions Spain fight back in Women’s Nations League opener, England held

Champions Spain fight back in Women’s Nations League opener, England held
  • The Netherlands were indebted to two goals from Lineth Beerensteyn for a 2-2 draw with Germany in Breda
  • France, runners-up to Spain in 2024, edged out Norway 1-0 in Toulouse thanks to a 73rd-minute goal from Marie-Antoinette Katoto

PARIS: Spain kicked off their Women’s Nations League title defense by fighting back to snatch a thrilling 3-2 win over Belgium on Friday while European champions England were held to a 1-1 draw in Portugal.

In Valencia, Mariam Toloba gave Belgium a surprise early lead against 2023 World Cup winners Spain and Tessa Wullaert struck a second in the 72nd minute.

Spain, who will be among the favorites at Euro 2025 this summer, where they will face Belgium again, pulled a goal back through Claudia Pina to spark their comeback.

Lucia Garcia levelled in stoppage time and Benfica’s Cristina Martin-Prieto blasted home with virtually the final touch of the game to complete the job.

Spain were without injured two-time Ballon d’Or winner Alexia Putellas, as well as World Cup star Jenni Hermoso, whom coach Montse Tome did not call up.

The 34-year-old won her sexual assault case against disgraced former Spanish football federation chief Luis Rubiales this week.

Belgium coach Elisabet Gunnarsdottir was taking charge of her first match at the helm, in which she could not have asked for a tougher challenge.

In Euro 2025 qualifying last year Spain thumped Belgium 9-0 across the two games.

“I’m very happy, the group deserved it. We had to get the three points here,” said Spain’s match-winner Martin-Prieto, who was a late call-up after Amaiur Sarriegi was injured.

In the same section, England and Portugal finished level at 1-1 in Portimao.

Alessio Russo gave England a 15th-minute lead with a close-range tap-in from a cross by Lucy Bronze.

However, they were pegged back with 14 minutes left when substitute Kika Nazareth deservedly equalized after beating Grace Clinton before curling the ball into the corner of the net.

“They scored a great goal but we could’ve done better there,” said England coach Sarina Wiegman whose team will defend their European title in Switzerland later this year.

“I’m not thinking about the Euros. I’m just thinking about next Wednesday against Spain. It will be a tough game and we’ll try to win it.”

In a repeat of last year’s third place playoff, the Netherlands were indebted to two goals from Lineth Beerensteyn for a 2-2 draw with Germany in Breda.

Germany won the playoff in 2024 by 2-0 to qualify for the Paris Olympics where they went on to secure the bronze medal.

On Friday, Beerensteyn, who plays club football in Germany for Wolfsburg, saw her 15th-minute opener equalized by Lea Schueller on the stroke of halftime.

Sjoeke Nuesken edged Germany in front five minutes into the second period after being set-up by Jule Brand before Beerensteyn, the top scorer in last season’s tournament, made sure of a point for the Dutch in the 66th minute with a header from Chastity Grant’s cross.

France, runners-up to Spain in 2024, edged out Norway 1-0 in Toulouse thanks to a 73rd-minute goal from Marie-Antoinette Katoto.

The match saw Eugenie Le Sommer come off the bench to equal Sandrine Soubeyrand’s record of 198 caps for France.


Andreeva downs Rybakina in Dubai to become youngest WTA 1000 finalist

Andreeva downs Rybakina in Dubai to become youngest WTA 1000 finalist
Updated 22 February 2025
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Andreeva downs Rybakina in Dubai to become youngest WTA 1000 finalist

Andreeva downs Rybakina in Dubai to become youngest WTA 1000 finalist
  • Andreeva is the youngest player to beat multiple Grand Slam champions at a tournament of this level, having ousted Iga Swiatek, Marketa Vondrousova, and now Rybakina, en route to the final
  • She will face Clara Tauson in Saturday’s final after the Danish world No. 38 moved past Karolina Muchova 6-4, 6-7 (4/7), 6-3 in a two-hour 52-minute tussle

DUBAI: Teenager Mirra Andreeva toppled another seed at the Dubai Championships, upsetting Elena Rybakina on Friday to become the youngest player to reach the final of a WTA 1000 tournament.

The Russian 17-year-old fought back from 1-3 down in the deciding set to beat sixth-seeded Rybakina 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 and move into the first WTA 1000 final of her career.

Andreeva is the youngest player to beat multiple Grand Slam champions at a tournament of this level, having ousted Iga Swiatek, Marketa Vondrousova, and now Rybakina, en route to the final.

She will face Clara Tauson in Saturday’s final after the Danish world No. 38 moved past Karolina Muchova 6-4, 6-7 (4/7), 6-3 in a two-hour 52-minute tussle.

“Honestly, it’s crazy because at first I was not very positive before coming to Dubai. I was like, ‘Okay, well, I’m just going to play’,” said Andreeva.

“As always, when you don’t think about how you’re going to play, you just play your best tennis. In the end, it’s one of your best tournaments.”

Tauson, 22, is enjoying a banner week that saw her knock out world number one Aryna Sabalenka. She is now through to the biggest final of her career, and fifth overall.

Tauson has collected a tour-leading 15 victories so far this season, one more than Swiatek and Australian Open champion Madison Keys, who each have 14.

“Muchova is such a great player. I don’t know what to say, I don’t know how I won today. I tried to keep my cool and play some good tennis,” said Tauson, who was on the receiving end of a stunning tweener lob winner struck by Muchova midway through the deciding set.

In the first semifinal of the day, a punishing backhand return from Andreeva earned her the first break of the match in game five and despite Rybakina’s immediate response, the young Russian got back in front and closed out the opening set on the 46-minute mark.

Having already saved six match points in her win over Paula Badosa in the round of 16, Rybakina looked ready to put up a fight against Andreeva and the second set was a tight affair.

The pair remained neck and neck until Rybakina found an opening when Andreeva double-faulted to face two set points at 4-5. Andreeva bounced the ball off the ground in frustration and received a code violation warning for ball abuse.

Moments later, former Wimbledon champion Rybakina took the match into a decider on a long defensive forehand from her opponent, as Andreeva dropped her first set of the tournament.

Rybakina made the first move in the third, breaking for a 3-1 advantage but Andreeva reacted and swept the next five games to wrap up the win in two hours and 15 minutes.

Andreeva will rise to a career-high No. 11 in the world by virtue of reaching the final and could become the first 17-year-old to break the top 10 since Nicole Vaidisova achieved that feat in 2007 if she lifts the trophy on Saturday.

She made her tour debut less than two years ago but has quickly positioned herself as a star in the making with a great deal of pressure on her shoulders.

“Now I have some kind of pressure that people are expecting some things from me. People are saying, ‘She’s going to be No. 1, she’s going to win the Slams. She’s going to be great’,” explained Andreeva.

She says she’s been working with her psychologist to adopt the right mentality when dealing with such pressure.

“It’s easier for me to think these people are saying this because probably they are afraid of the way I play,” added Andreeva.

“It helps me to go on the court with kind of anger, not to prove to everyone that I really can do it, but to prove myself that I’m strong enough to handle the pressure and to really win these high-quality matches.”


Rublev in third Qatar Open final, faces Draper for title

Rublev in third Qatar Open final, faces Draper for title
Updated 22 February 2025
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Rublev in third Qatar Open final, faces Draper for title

Rublev in third Qatar Open final, faces Draper for title
  • Rublev: It took everything. It was super tough today
  • Left-handed Draper will be seeking his third career title but will have to overturn a losing 3-0 head-to-head record to depose the Russian

DOHA: Russia’s Andrey Rublev reached his third Qatar Open final on Friday after a “super tough” three-set triumph over Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada.

Fifth-seeded Rublev, the 2020 champion at the Gulf tournament, battled to a 7-5, 6-4, 7-6 (7/5) win over Auger-Aliassime, who fired down 21 aces in the two-hour, 47-minute semfinal.

“It took everything. It was super tough today,” said Rublev whose most recent final appearance was in Montreal last August.

“I felt like there was not much I can do if he is serving like that. I just needed to be really lucky to break him. He was serving well and I was just saying, ‘Okay, I cannot do much, this is one of the best servers on Tour. I just need to try to guess and when I have a moment, just go for it’.”

Rublev, who was also a runner-up in Doha in 2018, secured victory on Friday on a fourth match point. In his quarterfinal dismissal of second seed Alex de Minaur on Thursday, he had needed twice as many.

The Russian won the last of his 16 ATP titles on clay in Madrid in May 2024.

On Saturday, the 27-year-old will tackle British eighth seed Jack Draper for the title.

Draper defeated Carlos Alcaraz’s conquerer Jiri Lehecka of the Czech Republic 3-6, 7-6 (7/2), 6-3 on the back of 14 aces to reach his fifth final.

Left-handed Draper will be seeking his third career title but will have to overturn a losing 3-0 head-to-head record to depose the Russian.

The 23-year-old is already assured of attaining the best ranking of his career after this week.

A US Open semifinalist in 2024, Draper will rise from 16 in the world to 11 if he wins the Qatar title and 12th as runner-up.


RB Kingmaker claims Al-Mneefah Cup crown in thrilling finish at Saudi Cup meet

RB Kingmaker claims Al-Mneefah Cup crown in thrilling finish at Saudi Cup meet
Updated 22 February 2025
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RB Kingmaker claims Al-Mneefah Cup crown in thrilling finish at Saudi Cup meet

RB Kingmaker claims Al-Mneefah Cup crown in thrilling finish at Saudi Cup meet
  • The grey purebred Arabian delivers a determined performance under Cristian Demuro after several tough defeats in recent months
  • Sees off late challenge from Christophe Soumillon on Nabucco Al Maury, who also made a strong charge but fell just short

RIYADH: RB Kingmaker showcased his class and determination as he claimed victory in the $1.5 million Al-Mneefah Cup, presented by the Ministry of Culture, at the King Abdulaziz Racecourse on Friday, the opening day of Saudi Cup weekend.

The six-year-old gray purebred Arabian, trained by Helal Alalawi and ridden by jockey Cristian Demuro, surged widest of all in the home stretch, fending off a late challenge from Nabucco Al Maury to win the 2,100 meter contest on turf by a length, in a time of 2 minutes 20.298 seconds. Home hope Asfan Al Khalediah was another half-length back in third.

Breaking from post 12 in a 13-runner field, RB Kingmaker was kept wide throughout the race but finished with a powerful late surge to secure his second career Group 1 victory. His previous top-level win came in February 2024 at the President Cup in Abu Dhabi.

Friday’s win was a triumphant return to form for the horse after a series of tough defeats in recent months, including a runner-up finish to Al Ghadeer in the Qatar Arabian World Cup on Arc Day at ParisLongchamp in October, and a failed defense of his title this month in the The President Cup.

For trainer Alalawi, who heads the National Stables in the UAE, the victory marked a breakthrough after several near-misses in elite company.

“There are no words to tell you how I’m feeling,” said an emotional Alalawi as he reflected on the significance of the win. “To be honest, this has been a dream that has now come true.

“It’s been a hard situation for our stable this season. As you’ve seen, we keep finishing second in the World Cup and third in the Emir’s Sword, and we lost the President Cup in Abu Dhabi. It’s not easy for a local stable like us.

“Today is one of the biggest achievements we have in our career. Cristian executed the race exactly how we asked him to and was perfect. He knows the horse and, as you saw, we saw the real Kingmaker today.”

Demuro, who has ridden RB Kingmaker throughout his career, delivered a perfectly judged ride, anticipating the moves of his rivals before striking late.

“He finished second to Al Ghadeer in the Qatar Arabian World Cup on Arc Day,” Demuro said. “He is not an easy horse but today he had the perfect race.

“I anticipated the moment they would quicken, as I know the Al Khalediah horses. So I always had my eye on them. If you don’t attack, they always get away. I surprised them a little and my horse responded well.

“He is a horse I have always ridden and I know him well. It is fabulous to win this race. It is a Group 1 race and this also opens the doors for Dubai and elsewhere.”

Runner-up Nabucco Al Maury also made a strong late charge but fell just short. Jockey Christophe Soumillon praised his mount’s performance.

“I saw that Cristian was going really easily when we entered the straight and so I rode him to finish second. My horse finished the race really well … and he was very courageous. We are very happy with him,” he said.

RB Kingmaker’s victory cements his place among the top purebred Arabians in the world and opens the door to further elite-level opportunities, with Dubai now a potential next stop for the talented grey.

The two-day Saudi Cup meet concludes on Saturday.