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Spurs stadium troubles affect United fans

Manchester United supporters have now been affected by the consequences of the delays in opening the new Tottenham Hotspur stadium at White Hart Lane.

Because Spurs have moved their match against Manchester City to October 29th, United's televised game with Everton that weekend has been switched from Saturday lunchtime to Sunday afternoon.

United supporters' trust, MUST, claim thousands of fans are now out of pocket after making travel arrangements and booking hotels (evidently they must live some way from Manchester). They are demanding compensation from Sky and the Premier League.

They have accused them of 'naked commercial opportunism at the expense of match-going fans.' Well, yes, but everyone knows that the Premier League and their broadcasting partners are more interested in the global television audience than domestic fans.

Spurs could have been more realistic about the time it takes to complete a complex building project. The construction industry is unique in terms of its reliance on sub-contractors, meaning that project management is very challenging. If one sub-contractor is behind schedule, it has a knock on effect on others who can't undertake their work.

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