Irish Daily Mail

BITTER BATTLE FOR THE BLADES

Ireland duo arrive in the middle of a boardroom feud

- By MATT BARLOW

ON THE surface, Sheffield United are easing into their second season back at Championsh­ip level in sound health and good spirits.

Chris Wilder and his staff signed new contracts amid interest from Sunderland and the sale of David Brooks to Bournemout­h for £11.5million has enabled the manager to recruit. John Egan arrived from Brentford for £4m and David McGoldrick has joined on a free from Ipswich to join loan signings Dean Henderson from Manchester United and Ben Woodburn from Liverpool.

Last night they struck a deal with Manchester City to sign 21year-old Kean Bryan. The prospect of a return to the good times was stirred when nearly 19,000 packed into Bramall Lane for a friendly against Inter Milan, a night when the South Stand was renamed in honour of Tony Currie.

Sheffield United’s greatest ever player is a club ambassador and the “TC” legend could be woven more deeply into the club with an invitation to join the club’s football board and perform a role akin to Derek Dooley for many years.

It is all part of a careful process to preserve the heritage of one of English football’s most famous clubs as they prepare to start the season at home against Swansea on Saturday. Yet behind the veneer rumbles a bitter boardroom feud. Since 2013, Sheffield United has been owned equally by companies controlled by Kevin McCabe and his family (Sheffield United Ltd) and Prince Abdullah Bin Mosaad Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (Up The Blades).

Prince Abdullah paid £1 and invested £10m in return for 50 per cent of the club, then in League One, while McCabe kept the other half and full ownership of its properties, including stadium and training ground. McCabe boasted of finding the perfect investor for the Blades, a Saudi royal and sports fan with the connection­s to build a bright future.

Prince Abdullah had considered Leeds, Derby and Charlton before turning to Sheffield United but his interest seemed to drift, and he became Saudi Arabia’s minister for youth and sport in June 2014. He continued to pay his way and play a key role in the decision making process but has been spotted at Bramall Lane only twice in nearly five years and those employed to represent his interests have not made a positive impression. Moreover, in five years, the partnershi­p has failed to transform Sheffield United into anything it wasn’t before.

Although back in the Championsh­ip, the club still operates at a loss, and is propped up by the co-owners and their working relationsh­ip slowly soured before it collapsed entirely after promotion in May 2017. McCabe decided to end the partnershi­p even if this meant ending his family’s long associatio­n with the Blades.

In December, he offered to buy the Prince’s 50 per cent for a deliberate­ly low price of £5m, aware this would trigger a “Russian Roulette” clause in the original deal which meant the Prince had to accept the offer or counter it at the same price. If the counter offer was made the first shareholde­r was bound to sell.

But if the Prince bought McCabe’s share for £5m it would trigger another clause, because any one party owning 75 per cent of the club would be obliged to buy the properties owned by McCabe at their market value.

Prince Abdullah served his intention to buy at £5m but not until two days after moving 80 per cent of his own shares from to a brand new company called Up The Blades 2018. By parking shares in UTB 2018, he could take full control for £5m without breaking through the 75 per cent barrier with a single company, thus avoiding the obligation to buy properties which are currently on a long lease at a favourable rate from McCabe. When McCabe realised what had happened he refused to sign off the shares, the Prince launched legal proceeding­s against McCabe for breaking the terms of agreement and McCabe responded with his defence and a series of counter claims. As the nation feasted on the World Cup in Russia, they headed for the courtroom where Mr Justice Fancourt said the “manoeuvre” by the Prince has “caused consternat­ion and considerab­le upset for the McCabes” who felt “tricked out of their entitlemen­t”. The judge also noted “all the proceeding­s are hotly contested” and that court proceeding­s would be slow and that he could not predict who “will emerge as the person in control of Blades and so in control of the football club, if either does”. Sheffield United’s executive officers told the court the club needed an injection from its owners of £2.5m to stay solvent and a further £7.5m for transfer fees and new wages in order to satisfy Wilder and keep building towards the Premier League.

But as the two sides bickered and reached an impasse about how to provide the money – be it by way of loans or a gift – Brooks was sold to Bournemout­h with £4m up front and presented a convenient solution.

Without his sale, the Blades would have not been able to recruit. Even with the sale, recruitmen­t has been limited, and the same problem will recur until the power struggle can be resolved.

With a court date still months away it will be a testing season for Wilder and the co-owners. They may all have eyes on the Premier League but will realise this dispute must be resolved before Sheffield United can truly prosper. SEÁN MAGUIRE has vowed to come back stronger than ever after he suffered another serious hamstring injury which will rule him out of action for the next eight weeks.

The Republic of Ireland internatio­nal says he was ‘sickened’ by the news, as he will miss the start of Preston’s Championsh­ip season as well as his country’s opening Nations League game away to Wales in early September.

‘Can’t put into words how sickened I am about the injury. But there is no doubt I’ll be working twice as hard to come back stronger and fitter,’ Maguire wrote on social media. The striker suffered a similar injury last season.

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 ??  ?? New recruits: Ireland pair David McGoldrick (left) and John Egan
New recruits: Ireland pair David McGoldrick (left) and John Egan
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