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Palace majority share sale works for everyone

New York Jets owner Woody Johnson is set to become the largest shareholder in Premier League club Crystal Palace after agreeing a deal to purchase Eagle Football’s 43 per cent stake in the south London club. Johnson will become the fourth general partner — subject to approval by the Premier League and Women’s Super League — with Eagle’s chairman John Textor relinquishing his role by selling to the 78-year-old. Since December 2015, Palace’s ownership structure has been complicated. Originally, chairman Steve Parish was joined by U.S. businessmen Josh Harris and David Blitzer when they bought into Palace and a general partnership structure was formed. That left the three with equal rights over decision-making. In 2021, with Palace seeking new investment to help complete their £30million ($41m) academy redevelopment and pay off debt accrued during the Covid-19 pandemic, John Textor bought a 40 per cent share for £87.5m. That shareholding was later increased to 45 per cent and th...
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More good news for Palace as Lyon relegated

The ongoing threat to Crystal Palace’s participation in the Europa League next season may have evaporated after Lyon, the French side which had been part of the same multi-club ownership model, were relegated to Ligue 2 because of serious financial issues. It was the fact that 43 per cent of Palace belonged to Eagle Football Holdings, a company run by US businessman John Textor and also the owners of Lyon, that amounted to a breach of Uefa competition rules. Even after it was announced on Monday that Textor had agreed the sale of his stake to American billionaire Woody Johnson, it became clear that Palace’s participation remained under threat because Uefa’s rules do not appear to allow for any flexibility for ownership changes after the March 1 deadline. But the news of Lyon’s relegation, announced on Tuesday night, should now resolve the situation unless the French club can respond with a successful appeal. With demotion to the second tier, their sixth-place finish in L...

Bale consortium targets Cardiff

Gareth Bale is leading a consortium that has made an approach to buy Cardiff City, reports The Athletic. Bale’s group sent a letter of intent to Cardiff owner Vincent Tan last month, which expressed their desire to purchase the Welshman’s hometown club and included financial numbers. The proposal was rejected but interest from the former Real Madrid winger in Cardiff remains strong — whereas he is not in the frame to acquire Plymouth Argyle, despite recent press reports. Cardiff declined to comment. The Welshman’s potential involvement in Cardiff comes after his former Tottenham Hotspur and Madrid team-mate Luka Modric became a co-owner of their south Wales rivals Swansea City earlier this month. Bale, who announced his retirement as a player in January 2023, would be the latest big name to attach themselves to an ownership group of a team in the English Football League. “We are interested in getting Cardiff,” Bale told Sky Sports .  “It’s my home club, it’s where I grew up...

All clear for Palace

Normally reliable French sources are reporting that John Textor sold his 45 per cent stake in Cryst al Palace yesterday, clearing the way for the Eagles to claim their place in the Europa League:  https://www.getfootballnewsfrance.com/2025/lyon-owner-john-textor-completes-sale-of-his-45-share-of-crystal-palace/

'Darkest period in history' for Accies

The following statement has been issued by the Accies Supporters Association: 'It’s agonising to have confirmation that we are once again in the wilderness after 25 years back at home in Hamilton. This is a situation that no one wanted. We are devastated – but we won’t give up. The fight to get Hamilton back in Hamilton has already begun. We need everyone’s support. Many fans will drift away, and we ask that people don’t judge anyone who chooses to boycott or to attend Broadwood [Cumbernauld], but those who do stick around were here long before the current board and we plan to outlast them. However, our overriding concern is that there will be no club to come back to Hamilton. We know how close Accies came to extinction during the previous seven homeless years, and we do not trust the board to deliver a second stadium in Hamilton. In fact, the only promise they have delivered on throughout their stewardship has been the catastrophic decision to take our club out of our home. ...

City fined for late kick offs

Manchester City have been fined more than £1million ($1.34m) by the Premier League over multiple breaches of their kick-off and restart obligations for the 2024-25 season. City have accepted and apologised for nine breaches of Premier League rule L.33, relating to late kick-offs throughout the campaign, with the fine for each individually breach incrementally increasing, adding up to £1.03m ($1.38m). It comes one year after City were fined more than £2m after breaching L.33 on 22 separate occasions, eight times in 2022-23 and on 14 occasions in 2023-24. City’s home match against Manchester United on December 15, 2024, saw delays at both kick-off and resuming after half-time, totalling three minutes and 42 seconds. Some think that the delays were relatively trivial, others have pointed out that the fans are not going to hit City hard.