The Guardian (USA)

Newcastle get rival £350m takeover bid from US businessma­n Henry Mauriss

- Louise Taylor

Another twist in Newcastle United’s seemingly interminab­le takeover saga has seen Henry Mauriss, an American television executive, make a late, £350m bid to buy the club from Mike Ashley.

Given that is £50m more than the price a consortium comprising Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, Reuben Brothers and Amanda Staveley has agreed with Newcastle’s owner, Mauriss’s offer is being regarded with a degree of scepticism.

With Ashley and the largely Saudifunde­d consortium having exchanged contracts and the retail tycoon receiving a non-refundable £17m deposit, the new bid remains, for the moment at least, academic.

The only way Mauriss’s offer could succeed is if the Premier League vetoes the deal it has been considerin­g for the best part of three months and the Saudi-led group then opt not to initiate legal action against the league.

Should their attempted buyout end up failing the Premier League’s owners’ and directors’ test and the consortium walk away, Mauriss – the 56-year-old, Los Angeles-based chief executive of

Clear TV who is understood to believe he could take control at St James’ Park as early as September – would be free to finalise an agreement to end Ashley’s 13-year ownership of Newcastle.

Yet considerin­g Ashley has signed an exclusivit­y deal with PIF, Reuben Brothers and Staveley, Mauriss’s September deadline seems ambitious. Legally, he will not be permitted to begin due diligence while hopes of a Saudi buyout are alive.

Even so, the emergence of this 11thhour backup plan increases the pressure on Richard Masters, the Premier League’s chief executive, to finally make a highly contentiou­s and complex decision.

Masters’ dilemma is that the Saudi involvemen­t is shrouded in controvers­y, prompting objections from human rights groups including Amnesty Internatio­nal and concerns about television broadcast piracy. On Tuesday a World Trade Organisati­on report found damning links between the kingdom and the facilitati­on of such piracy.

Although there was no specific reference to Newcastle or PIF, Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s position as PIF’s chairman dictates the Premier League has been investigat­ing any links between it and intellectu­al property theft, namely the illegal streaming of Premier League matches.

As Qatar’s beIN Sport has a £500m overseas broadcast rights contract with England’s top tier the issue is particular­ly sensitive and has delayed the league’s verdict.

The WTO report found that “prominent Saudi nationals” promoted illegal broadcasts by the pirate network beoutQ, contradict­ing the king

dom’s previous claims that the platform, which used beIN footage, operated outside its sphere of influence.

Meanwhile Clear TV Ltd, establishe­d in California six years ago, operates a portfolio of television channels servicing airports, hospitals and social media outlets. Earlier in his career Mauriss establishe­d a credit card company, Credit America Corporatio­n, but his exact wealth is unclear and he has never been involved in sport.

Ashley is believed to have establishe­d contact with Mauriss through the retail tycoon’s longstandi­ng associate Justin Barnes, a lawyer turned corporate fixer who has been heavily involved in attempts to sell Newcastle.

With the UK government having, albeit discreetly, made encouragin­g noises about the Saudi-spearheade­d takeover and the Premier League privately offering the consortium grounds for optimism at various points, sources close to the deal remain optimistic Masters will approve it in the fairly near future.

 ?? Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images via Reuters ?? The only way Henry Mauriss’s offer to buy Newcastle could succeed is if the Premier League vetoes the Saudi-led takeover deal.
Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images via Reuters The only way Henry Mauriss’s offer to buy Newcastle could succeed is if the Premier League vetoes the Saudi-led takeover deal.

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