The Hamilton Spectator

Jags owner Khan ends bid to buy Wembley Stadium

- DAVID HELLIER

The owner of National Football League’s Jacksonvil­le Jaguars franchise withdrew his bid for London’s Wembley Stadium on the grounds that the Football Associatio­n may not be ready to part with the asset.

“It appears there is no definitive mandate to sell Wembley,” Shahid Khan, a Pakistani-born American billionair­e said in a statement. “My current proposal, subsequent­ly, would earn the backing of only a slim majority of the FA Council, well short of the conclusive margin that the FA chair has required.”

Khan made an offer in April worth about 600 million pounds ($788 million) to the Football Associatio­n, according to Jaguars President Mark Lamping. The U.S. team plays in London once a season and Khan wanted to use Wembley — the 90,000-seat capacity venue that is home to England’s national soccer team — to stage more NFL games. His bid led to a public outcry and scrutiny by a parliament­ary committee.

Wembley hosts occasional concerts and club soccer matches, as well as most games for the national team. For the past season, it has been the home of soccer team Tottenham Hotspur, whose new stadium in north London will also host NFL games when it’s completed.

Under Khan’s proposal, the Football Associatio­n would have kept the income stream of 300 million pounds a year from its hospitalit­y program Club Wembley, according to Lamping. The current owner also planned to use some of the proceeds to invest in grassroots soccer clubs, people with knowledge of the matter had said in April.

“I cannot rule out revisiting the opportunit­y at another time,” Khan said in the statement. Broader support from within the Football Associatio­n is necessary.”

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