Freshly relegated from the Premier League, West Ham United are entering the most crucial summer in their recent history. They will do so with a potentially damaging power vacuum at the top of the club: they have no permanent chief executive, no director of football; in April, Baroness Brady departed as vice-chairwoman; and on Saturday David Sullivan, the co-chairman, resigned too. Sullivan, 77 — who jointly bought a 50 per cent share in West Ham with the late David Gold in 2010 for £50million — is still the biggest shareholder at the club, with 38.8 per cent. He resigned claiming that “serious historic allegations” about him, allegations he “categorically denies”, were about to be made public. He has said that he may sue the BBC, who propose to broadcast the allegations, for defamation. The Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky has a 27 per cent stake in the club and could increase his influence and shareholding in the coming months, but for more than 15 years, Sulliv...
The FT’s Lex column takes a sceptical look at the Pink Un’s interview with Real Madrid supremo Florentino Pérez a few pages away. What’s the biggest prize in football? Many fans would point to the golden trophy awaiting the winners of the World Cup, which kicks off next week. Real Madrid president Florentino Pérez, however, reckons there’s an even more prestigious honour: owning a piece of his club. Pérez wants the fan-owned club to sell a stake to outside investors for the first time. But, to allay fears among existing members, he insists any new owners won’t actually have real ownership. “It would be like a sponsorship,” he said in an interview with the FT this week. In some respects, Pérez — the architect of Real Madrid’s so-called Galácticos strategy of signing the world’s most famous players — is in tune with the times. Investors in Elon Musk’s rockets-meet-social-media conglomerate SpaceX have practically no say over governance, but the excitement surrounding its impending ...