The Mail on Sunday

ARSENAL ARE UP FOR SALE

Kroenke quoted £1.7bn to buyer... 2 years ago!

- By Nick Callow

ARSENAL are for sale just days after Stan Kroenke insisted he would not entertain any offers for the club.

Swedish Spotify billionair­e Daniel Ek last week threw his hat into the ring and said he is preparing a bid for control of Arsenal.

And word on the internatio­nal investment circuit is that Arsenal have effectivel­y been on the market — for about two years.

The Mail on Sunday understand­s it is less then two years since Kroenke’s Denver- based holding company Kroenke Sports and Entertainm­ent (KSE) received an approach from an internatio­nal financial consortium.

Rather than rebuff talks, as previously had been the case with the Russian oligarch Alisher Usmanov and Nigerian billionair­e Aliko Dangote, the interested party were told K SE would entertain bids in the region of £1.7billion. A deal could not be made on that occasion but it did show that everyone has a price, despite what Kroenke said last week.

In a statement the Kroenke family said: ‘We remain 100 per cent committed to Arsenal and are not selling any stake in the club. We will not entertain any offer.’

Arsenal supporter groups have called on the club’s fans to assemble outside the stadium for a second ‘Kroenke Out’ protest this Thursday, before the club’s Europa League semi-final second leg against Villarreal. Manager Mikel Arteta, meanwhile, insists he does not fear the sack going into the biggest week of his short managerial career but admits everything that could be going wrong is going wrong.

The Spanish coach takes his battlewear­y squad to a rejuvenate­d Newcastle today, with reversing a 2-1 deficit in Thursday night’s Europa League semi-final second leg against Villarreal the obvious priority. Arteta has defended the club on all fronts in recent weeks, with fan protests against American owners morphing from Kroenke Out into Arteta Out.

Hi s team are struggling in midtable and facing their worst season in 26 years but, when asked if he fears the sack, Arteta said: ‘Well, I don’t want to think that way. I want to think that we are going to be in that [Europa League] final and then we are going to have really positive consequenc­es after that game.

‘Consistenc­y in results in the Premier League is very different to the Europa League, where we have been very consistent. We try to be as clear as we can in our messages.

‘There are some games where we have started really well and not finished that well. I don’t think there has been a pattern over the season.’

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