caughtoffside
·20. Oktober 2024
caughtoffside
·20. Oktober 2024
Some of Manchester United’s longest-serving staff members are unhappy following the arrival of Sir Jim Ratcliffe.
The INEOS CEO won the race to become the Red Devils’ new minority shareholder, beating Qatar banker Sheikh Jassim to the £1.4 billion investment opportunity at the start of the year.
Now in charge of United’s sporting operations, Ratcliffe, along with right-hand man Sir David Brailsford and sporting director Dan Ashworth, are looking to restore the fallen giants back to their former glories.
Doing so is proving a lot easier said than done though.
The 72-year-old British billionaire has already made some tough decisions, including cutting 250 staff members and stopping Sir Alex Ferguson’s yearly ambassador salary.
Consequently, with some major shake-ups happening behind the scenes, unsurprisingly, morale among remaining staff members is worryingly low.
Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty Images.
Speaking live on air, journalist and reporter Alex Crook explained how some of United’s longest-serving members of staff have been left feeling disheartened and downbeat by the recent changes.
“I’m told, actually, morale among long-serving staff members is not brilliant as a result of those changes.”
The next big decision Ratcliffe could face is deciding Erik Ten Hag’s future. The Dutch manager, despite coming back from one-nil down to beat Brentford 2-1 on Saturday, remains under huge pressure.
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