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Hull City benefits from a more benevolent owner

Some highlights from the Swiss Ramble's authoritative analysis of Hull City's finances.  An exhaustive analysis can be found on his Substack page. Hull have lost money in all three of the seasons since Ilıcalı bought the club, adding up to £34.3m. In fact, they have now posted losses in four of the last five years.    This is in marked contrast to the preceding period, where the Allams’ tight-fisted/sustainable approach (delete as appropriate) led to the club posting profits six years out of seven. A key element of the club’s business model is to make money from player trading, so the £57m generated in the last three seasons has been very important. This marked a “return to form”, as their profit only amounted to £5m in the preceding 2-year period. Hull’s revenue has grown by an impressive £10.4m (68%) in the last three years, rising from £15.4m to £25.8m. This is easily the club’s highest revenue outside the Premier League in a season without parachute payments. It w...
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Relegation threat in Europe spooks US investors

European football clubs have been left on the sidelines of a deals boom that has highlighted soaring valuations for US sports franchises and underlined the challenges facing Europe’s team owners. Investors argue that a failure to get a grip on costs, as well as the constant threat of relegation, has kept a lid on European interest even as a flurry of deals in the US has underscored rising valuations in several sports. Valuations of the top men’s football teams, which are concentrated in Europe, have stagnated at just 4.2 times revenue. M&A activity in European football has dropped sharply since a spate of record-breaking takeovers in 2022, according to figures from governing body Uefa. Apollo Global Management agreed to buy a controlling stake in Atlético Madrid, Spain’s third-biggest football club, at a valuation of between €2bn and €2.5bn in 2025. The lower end of that range implies a valuation of 4.9 times its 2024 revenue. According to the most recent figures from Uefa, more t...

Football is now contested off the pitch

Football is now as much a financial and legal contest as a sporting one and who better to review the past year and possible future developments than football finance guru Kieran Maguire:  https://insidersport-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/insidersport.com/2025/12/29/kieran-maguire-football-man-city-court/?amp=&utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

Today's Premier League sacking: Amorim

Ruben Amorim has been sacked by Manchester United.  United have had six permanent managers since Sir Alex Ferguson retired in 2013 and have finished no higher than second in that time, achieved by both Jose Mourinho (2017-18) and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer (2020-21). The club have spent more than £50million ($67m, €57m) on removing managers since Ferguson left the role. The Portuguese’s final game of his 14-month spell as head coach was the 1-1 draw against Leeds United on Sunday that leaves them sixth in the Premier League after 20 matches. Former midfielder and current Under-18s coach Darren Fletcher will take charge on an interim basis, with his first game being away at Burnley on Wednesday night. A permanent appointment is likely to wait until the summer. The club’s leadership team, including chief executive Omar Berrada and director of football Jason Wilcox, arrived at the decision after a breakdown in relations behind the scenes. In his press conference ...

Ramos fronts Sevilla bid

Former Real Madrid and Spain defender Sergio Ramos is leading a €400million (£348.2m; $469.2m) alongside foreign investors to purchase his boyhood club Sevilla.Ramos was born in the Province of Seville and came through the club’s academy before signing for Madrid in 2005, and had a second spell with the team in the 2023-24 season. Ramos would not be the largest investor in any takeover but is spearheading the bid as its public face. According to sources briefed on the process, speaking on the condition of anonymity to the New York Times , an American fund is involved in the bid. The proposal would be for 100 per cent of the club, but is subject to an exact valuation of the club’s debt — which could be around €180m according to club sources — pending an external audit commissioned by the bidders. Club sources believe that the uncertainty over the valuation of the debt lies in whether the loan made to them by CVC Capital Partners (which was provided to other La Liga clubs as part o...

Hearts challenge Scotland's football duopoly

When I first became old enough to follow football in the early 1950s, Hearts stood out as a leading Scottish club. As we enter 2026, there is an unexpected sight in the Scottish Premiership, as Heart of Midlothian sit proudly on top of the table, ahead of the Glasgow giants. Hearts’ dramatic improvement this season owes a lot to Tony Bloom’s investment in the club in June, when the Brighton owner paid £9.86m for a 29% stake in the club in non-voting shares. This change was overwhelmingly voted through by 98.5% of Foundation Of Hearts (FOH) members. From an investor’s perspective, Hearts ticked many boxes, as the club is located in a wealthy city, attracting millions of tourists, while it has a of potential on the pitch. Following the successful completion of Bloom’s investment, Ann Budge announced that the time was right for her to stand down after an 11-year involvement. The club said that the “poor on pitch performance” had impacted the finances in 2024/25, though it had stil...

Is Maresca departure good or bad news for Chelsea?

If I was a Chelsea fan, I would be concerned about how recent events have developed, but there is also a more positive side to the story.   BTW, I support Charlton and I expect Chelsea to win the FA  Cup game by something like 3-1. Even by Chelsea’s standards, this is an extraordinary sequence   of events. On December 12, Enzo Maresca was named Barclays Manager of the Month for November. Three weeks later, he is gone. The speed of Maresca’s departure at Stamford Bridge is pretty shocking. It was only in late November that Maresca engineered one of the most impressive wins of his tenure — a 3-0 victory over Barcelona in the Champions League. Five days later and Chelsea sent out a statement that they might be title contenders by securing a 1-1 draw with Arsenal, despite being down to 10 men for nearly an hour due to Moises Caicedo’s first-half red card. They were third in the Premier League, just six points behind their London rivals. Now they are a further nin...