David Sullivan could be forced to sell his stake in West Ham United by the football regulator, following allegations that he abused his power to prey on women for sex. The Independent Football Regulator (IFR) said it was in contact with the club after The Times and BBC Panorama revealed claims about Sullivan’s behaviour from seven women. It said it was seeking “urgent information” from Sullivan after the 77-year-old was accused of sexually exploitative and predatory behaviour dating back to the 1980s. Sullivan categorically denies the claims. England’s new football regulator could make Sullivan sell his stake in West Ham, where he remains the largest shareholder with 38.8 per cent of the club, despite resigning as co-chair on Saturday. The IFR, introduced under last year’s Football Governance Act, is an independent watchdog and oversees its owners, directors and senior executives regime for clubs across the Premier League and English Football League. It h...
Florentino Pérez’s re-election on Sunday as president of football club Real Madrid revives what sounds like one of the world’s least enticing investment opportunities. Pérez aims to sell 5 per cent of the world’s richest club, through a new subsidiary, subject to a referendum of its 100,000 or so owner-members, or socios. His defeated challenger Enrique Riquelme had attacked that plan as a “privatisation”, as though Real Madrid is a public good as vital as, say, fresh water. But Pérez explained to the FT last week that the investment would be more like a sponsorship: “In other words, there are people who associate themselves with Real Madrid without expecting anything.” The 79-year-old, who first took the presidency in 2000 when the club was under financial strain, is a shrewd interpreter of what supporters want. Steven Mandis, an adviser to football governing body Fifa and author of two books on Real Madrid, told the Financial Times he has “never seen a management team so relentle...