Manchester United Minority Proprietor Slams Membership As ‘Mediocre’, Cites Poor Recruitment And Information Evaluation

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In a bombshell interview, Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the 72-year-old minority proprietor of Manchester United, has closely criticized the membership, dubbing it as “mediocre” and now not “elite.”

Ratcliffe, who owns a 27.7% stake within the membership after spending £1.3 billion, stated United “has become mediocre” and is “not supposed to be one of the best football clubs in the world.” He said that the membership “has drifted for a long period of time, a decade or so.”

The petrochemicals billionaire cited the membership’s “very poor” knowledge evaluation and recruitment as main points, saying United is “still in the last century on data analysis” in comparison with their rivals.

Ratcliffe stated the membership must have “the best recruitment in the world” to attain “elite status” once more.

Signings just like the £82 million spent on Antony and the £70 million on Casemiro have been held up by Ineos as examples of United’s flawed recruitment technique. Ratcliffe steered the rebuild will “take years” to repair.

The minority proprietor’s feedback come as United have struggled on the pitch, with new supervisor Ruben Amorim going through an enormous activity to show the membership round. Ratcliffe warned followers that “major change” is required for United to regain their elite standing.

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