The Guardian (USA)

Saracens complete £32m takeover with Francois Pienaar among investors

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Saracens’ £32m takeover by a consortium including World Cup-winning captain Francois Pienaar has been completed.

The Premiershi­p club announced the takeover in October with Saracens owner Nigel Wray agreeing to sell his controllin­g stake in the club. A club statement said on Wednesday: “The board of Saracens Group Holdings Limited is pleased to announce the completion of the previously announced transactio­n regarding the refinancin­g of the group and the acquisitio­n of a controllin­g stake in the group by Kimono House Limited.

“This follows the receipt of the various approvals required (including from the RFU, PRL and the London Borough of Barnet). The group includes Saracens Rugby Club, Saracens Mavericks Limited (the owner of the Saracens Mavericks netball team), and Saracens

Copthall LLP (the owner of the StoneX Stadium). Kimono House is owned by a consortium of investors including Dominic Silvester, Neil Golding, Nick Leslau, Paul O’Shea, Francois Pienaar and Marco Masotti.”

Pienaar led the Springboks to victory at the 1995 World Cup on home soil, famously receiving the trophy from South Africa president Nelson Mandela. The former flanker made 44 appearance­s as a player-coach for Saracens between 1997 and 2000.

Wray, who first invested in the club in 1995 and took full ownership in 2018, has been looking to reduce his stake for some time.

Five-time champions Saracens returned to the Premiershi­p for the start of the 2021-22 season after a year in exile. The London club were relegated in 2020 as a result of salary cap breaches, but managed to retain the services of England stars Owen Farrell, Maro Itoje, Mako and Billy Vunipola and Elliot Daly.

 ?? Laurence Griffiths/Allsport ?? Francois Pienaar, seen here playing for Saracens against Leicester in 1998, is one of six named investors in the consortium. Photograph:
Laurence Griffiths/Allsport Francois Pienaar, seen here playing for Saracens against Leicester in 1998, is one of six named investors in the consortium. Photograph:

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