Malta Independent

Chelsea bidders reveal new details as sale process heats up

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Final bids are being prepared for European champion Chelsea and new business figures are being added to consortia as the process to end the ownership of sanctioned Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich steps up.

Four known bids are still under considerat­ion to buy Chelsea, which could be sold for 3 billion pounds ($4 billion) given the interest that has emerged since Abramovich put the west London Premier League club up for sale six weeks ago.

Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the NBA's Boston Celtics, went public for the first time on Tuesday to confirm his plans to become a Premier League team owner that could see him have to relinquish his 55% controllin­g stake in Serie A team Atalanta.

The American cannot control two clubs playing in the same UEFA-organized European competitio­n, though Atalanta is not in qualifying contention for next season.

Another bid, which is led by Chicago Cubs baseball owner Tom Ricketts, has been shrouded in criticism over Islamophob­ic comments by his father, Joe, that featured in leaked emails three years ago. The Ricketts family has been working to distance itself from the patriarch, and another business leader was announced on Tuesday as a new leading figure involved in the bid.

Karan Bilimoria, a Chelsea fan who founded the Cobra beer company in west London in 1989 and sits in the House of Lords, will become a director of the club if the Ricketts bid is successful, and serve as an ambassador.

Bilimoria is the outgoing president of the Confederat­ion of British Industry.

A rival bid features an existing

American investor in a Premier League team: Josh Harris owns a 17% stake in south London club Crystal Palace. Harris, who is also owner of the NBA's Philadelph­ia 76ers, is part of a consortium fronted by former Liverpool and British Airways chairman Martin Broughton and World Athletics president Sebastian Coe.

A fourth consortium features Todd Boehly, part-owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Swiss billionair­e Hansjorg Wyss, and Jonathan Goldstein, a Londonbase­d property investor who is CEO of Cain Internatio­nal.

Abramovich has been forced to sell Chelsea after he was sanctioned in Britain and his assets were frozen as part of a crackdown on oligarchs following Russia's invasion in Ukraine.

The government has to sign off on the sale, which is being overseen by the New York-based

Raine Group merchant bank, under the terms that allow the team to continue operating since Abramovich was sanctioned. Abramovich cannot profit from the proceeds of the sale.

Chelsea has won 21 trophies in 19 years of Abramovich ownership, relying on his lavish investment to become one of Europe's most successful clubs.

The ability of a new owner to continue significan­t funding of players could help to determine which bid prevails.

"Our first focus and goal is to make strategic investment­s to continue competing for championsh­ips and trophies," Pagliuca said. "We will support our players and managers to make sure that Chelsea are habitual winners and title contenders, whether in the Premier League, Champions League or the Women's Super League.

"In addition, we will continue to invest in the youth academy to develop the stars of the future and we would not be in this process if we did not have an exciting and inclusive vision for Chelsea."

There is a long-term need to revamp Stamford Bridge to generate more income from fans and corporate backers. Chelsea has the smallest and most dated stadium of the Premier League's most successful clubs, with plans for a rebuild of the 41,000-capacity venue put on hold by Abramovich in 2018 as BritishRus­sian diplomatic tensions deepened.

"Not only are we committed to remaining at the home of Chelsea, Stamford Bridge," Pagliuca said, "but we are inspired to renovate or redevelop the stadium. Chelsea is a world-class team, in a worldclass city, with world-class fans: it deserves a world-class stadium."

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